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Greenwich Foot Tunnel articles

Articles on Greenwich.co.uk related to the historic Greenwich Foot Tunnel - a pedestrian crossing under the river Thames between Greenwich and Island Gardens on the Isle of Dogs.

Andrew Gilligan: Tunnel Closure: Bad News on Two Fronts

June 19, 2009 By Andrew Gilligan

GREENWICH foot tunnel will be closed to all users for ten months during its refurbishment, council officials have said.
 
Shaun Collins, director of Thames Clippers, the major ferry operator serving Greenwich, told greenwich.co.uk: "We have been asked to tender for a replacement ferry service. We have been told unofficially by Geoff Horseman [Greenwich Council official] that the period of closure will be around ten months or possibly a year. That would be the closure of the whole tunnel, not just the lifts."
 
In a separate development Peter Brookes, deputy leader of the council, has said that when the tunnel finally reopens the lifts will be "automatic," raising concerns about security and job losses. Currently the lifts are not automatic and are staffed at all times when they are open, with four attendants on duty across the tunnel and its Woolwich sister.
 
Mr Brookes claimed the refurbishment and the change to automatic lifts would lead to "better security."
 
The two tunnels are used by around 1.5 million people a year. The Greenwich tunnel is an important tourist attraction and a vital link for cyclists, used by around 250 bikes an hour at peak times.
 
As greenwich.co.uk reported earlier this year, both tunnels are to be given a "substantial refurbishment" running from September 2009 to March 2011 and costing £11.5 million. But news of the closure has horrified local traders, who say a prolonged shutdown would be "disastrous" and could drive them out of business. 

Many cyclists are also opposed and have promised to challenge the closure order. Anthony Austin, chair of Greenwich Cyclists, said: “There’s no point in closing the tunnel. It’s not clear they need to close the stairs when they are doing the lifts. We cyclists have come to use it as an absolutely essential link.”
 
Greenwich Council continued to insist today that no official decision has been taken on how long the tunnel will close. "We are still working out the period of closure," a council spokesman said.
 
However, minutes of a meeting about the refurbishment between the council and local cyclists' groups posted on greenwich.co.uk also suggest a substantial period of closure. The minutes were agreed by the council.
 
At this meeting, which took place on 12 May, Mike Freestone, the council's assistant director for transport and highways, confirmed that the lifts would be closed "for the whole [18-month] refurbishment period" although the tunnels themselves would "probably not be closed for so long."
 
 
Mr Horseman, the council official who spoke to Thames Clippers, was not present at the meeting but he is quoted by another of the participants as saying that the closure would last "six to nine months."
 
Mr Brookes, who was at the meeting, admitted that "whilst [the tunnel] is closed, there will be major disruptions." Mr Brooks rejected suggestions that the tunnel be closed only overnight for the works, saying: "If we choose contract work for nights, it may not be of value, we need to do things more economically." A "hope" was expressed that some of the closures could be phased.
 
The council says that the lifts will close in October or November and the tunnel will not close before next year.
 
When the tunnel closes, cyclists - who are banned at all times from the DLR - face an eight to ten-mile diversion to reach Canary Wharf from south London. At the meeting with cycle activists, Mr Brookes admitted that any proposed replacement ferry service would "not be frequent."
 
The DLR link will itself be closed on several weekend over the next eight months as part of the 3-car upgrade programme.
 
The council says the closure is intended to provide "state-of-the-art conditions" in the tunnels in the run-up to the Olympics. It has been widely condemned as unnecessary window-dressing.

Filed Under: Andrew Gilligan Tagged With: Greenwich Council, Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Foot Tunnels To Close For “Up To 18 Months”?

May 16, 2009 By Rob Powell

Regular readers will know that Andrew Gilligan recently raised the prospect of the Greenwich Foot Tunnel being closed whilst the Council carries out refurbishments using the £11.5million it was awarded by central government.

Tom Crispin from the Young Lewisham and Greenwich Cyclists has been in discussions with Greenwich Council and just posted this useful reply in that earlier discussion which I think is worth flagging up:

Unless local groups oppose their closure, the tunnels at Greenwich and Woolwich are going to close for refurbishment. This is likely to happen for up to 18 months between September 2009 and March 2011.

Greenwich Council is not planning any replacement service for those wishing to push bikes under the Thames (pedestrians will be able to use the DLR); they claim the cost of a ferry service will be £11,000 per week.

Some of the work to the tunnels is essential, e.g. fixing a leak in one of the stairwell/lift shafts at Woolwich. Other work is welcome, rewiring the lighting, new CCTV, emergency lighting, replacement lift mechanisms for the current mechanisms for which spare parts are, according to GC, not possible to source. Some of the work is unwelcome, renewing the footway at Woolwich, re-facing the tunnels (instead of cleaning them).

As public highways, Greenwich Council will have to consult on the tunnels’ closure. If there is sufficient opposition to the closure a public enquiry will have to be held. This will delay the works. If the works are not complete by March 2011 Greenwich Council will lose the £11.5m for the refurbishment. Unless there is a local replacement ferry service at Greenwich, or the closure at Greenwich is restricted to overnight (00.00 - 05.30 perhaps), local cycling groups are likely to oppose the closure. Therefore, Greenwich Council would be well advised to lay on a replacement ferry service at Greenwich. With the Woolwich Ferry offering an alternative, the closure at Woolwich is not as serious, though it would greatly inconvenience cyclists at times when the Woolwich Ferry is not operating, and pedestrians when the DLR is not operating.

Tom tells me that the closure could potentially be a lot less than the figure of 18 months but it is question of whether or not the tunnel interior is "refaced" that would determine if it is a lengthy closure or not.

Add your comment at the original thread here

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Cycling, Greenwich Council, Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Andrew Gilligan: Like Having the Builders Round… Forever

May 13, 2009 By Andrew Gilligan

I was struck by a comment from a reader called Paul on last week's column about Greenwich Market, and think it deserves a wider circulation. He wrote of the danger that in the run-up to that longed-for event of which we all dream, the Olympics, Greenwich will become little more than a series of building sites.

As well as the market, there's the Olympic development in Greenwich Park, the Ofer Wing of the Maritime Museum (which will also affect the park), the foot tunnel, the old Village Market site, the new pier, the Cutty Sark, Greenwich Reach. As Paul says, "no tourist will want to walk around a load of building sites for the next three years and it won't be long before word gets out that Greenwich is closed. In the rush to celebrate the Olympics fortnight, it seems that a long-term overview has been thrown out of the window."

There are plenty of places that are unattractive, provide inadequate public amenities and need lots of work doing to them. But Greenwich isn't one of them. I think (I'm biased, of course) that it's one of the nicest areas in London. It just doesn't need "regeneration," especially not the airport-terminal kind that awaits us in the market.

Naturally, there are grotty bits - in the town centre, I'd nominate that bland, faceless block which houses Somerfield. But those aren't the bits they'll be tearing down. Those are the bits they'll be copying.

So why has everyone suddenly, it seems, decided that what Greenwich needs is a complete rebuild - all at once? As Paul suggests, the Olympics must have something to do with it. One of the worst things about the Games is the way that a single fortnight has come to dominate, even monopolise, official thinking, as if it is somehow more important than all the months and years which go before it and after it.

It isn't, of course. The Olympics will be with us for two weeks. The new market could be with us for a century. But the way it's looking, the priorities of the two weeks will mean that the project for the century is rushed through the planning process without proper scrutiny, then thrown up in months - and is, as a result, far worse than it should be.

We need to stop. We need to take our time. We need to tell ourselves that in the long run, the Olympics simply do not matter. Within months of the closing ceremony, they will be all but forgotten by almost everyone. The market, however, will be in our faces for decades. The short-term goal of a shiny Olympic fortnight is not remotely a good enough reason to compromise Greenwich's long-term future.

We need to tell ourselves that even during the fortnight, the Greenwich end of the Olympics will not matter. The centre of attention will be on the athletics and the swimming, seven miles to the north. The horse events will get half an hour on TV. There won't be many Olympic-related visitors to Greenwich - they'll all be heading for Stratford. Greenwich Council may want to put on a show, but not many people will be coming.

Building white elephants at Stratford is bad enough. But at least some people will want to see them, and they will be safely out of sight of the rest of us. Building white elephants in the middle of a successful town centre is far worse - and the error is compounded by the fact that not many of the people the "improvements" are supposed to attract will even be interested.

PS: I forgot to give the address for objections to the market planning application last week. Emails should be sent to david.gittens@greenwich.gov.uk, quoting reference numbers 09/0829/F and 09/0830/C. Gittens' postal address is Crown Building, 48 Woolwich New Roas, SE18 6HQ.

Act soon - you only have until 26 May.

Filed Under: Andrew Gilligan Tagged With: Greenwich Foot Tunnel, Greenwich Market, Greenwich Park, London 2012 Olympics, National Maritime Museum, Stockwell Street

Andrew Gilligan: Greenwich Council Gets Into Another Hole

April 29, 2009 By Andrew Gilligan

LAST NIGHT, I stood at the entrance to a darkened, underground place and heard, drifting up from the depths, anguished panting and the heavy slap of rubber on metal.

No, it was not the debut of some new Greenwich sex dungeon. The inmates of this particular subterranean world do wear faintly kinky clothes - but lycra, rather than leather, and fluorescent yellow windcheaters, not dirty macs. They are cyclists, and I was listening to them heaving their bikes up the hundred steps at the southern end of the foot tunnel (the lift, as always these days, being out of action.)

"It doesn't get any easier," said one woman to her friend as she thankfully dumped her steed on the top landing. But though it may be rather a haul, it is definitely preferable to the alternative being planned by our dear friends at Greenwich Council - complete closure of the tunnel for up to eighteen months.

Greenwich Foot Tunnel

It is yet another Olympic-related blow to the area. As we know, the Games are already costing us substantial parts of our park (closed for ten months), historic trees (lopped) and a flower garden (taking on an exciting, dynamic and vibrant new role as a doormat for the Olympic cross-country course.) Now the foot tunnel is going too. In order to make it suitably shiny and modern for 2012, it is to be closed for what the council calls a "substantial refurbishment" costing £11.5 million.

I don't think the tunnel even needs "refurbishing." I like its Edwardian atmosphere, its white tiling and its wood-panelled lifts. Unlike some over-restored heritage structures, its unbuffed-up state still gives a real breath of the ordinary London of the past. Those lifts, though faithful copies of the original ones, are only 17 years old. The south lift may be broken, but could it not perhaps be, well, repaired?

After the redevelopment of the Market and the closure of the Village Market, this refurbishment could end up being just one more attack on the character of Greenwich. With our public spending deficit of £175 billion, it also strikes me as a prime example of the kind of unnecessary project that taxpayers ought to part company with.

But the real difficulty with the refurb is that the tunnel is a vital route which cannot be lost for any significant length of time. As the council's deputy leader, Peter Brooks, admits, it is "still extremely popular, even since the arrival of the DLR offering an alternative crossing option." With its sister at Woolwich, the foot tunnel is used by one and a half million people a year.

Since the DLR, the Greenwich tunnel's clientele has fallen mainly into two groups, both of whom the council claims to view as important. There are tourists, who enjoy the walk through and the view from Island Gardens. If the tunnel follows the Cutty Sark, the markets, and (in 2011/12) the park into the unavailable zone it will be another stage in the diminution of Greenwich's visitor "offer" and another blow to one of our principal industries, tourism.

The second important group is cyclists, who we are all supposed to be encouraging these days. (Declaration of interest: I am one.) The tunnel is the only way for cyclists to cross the river in the eight miles between Rotherhithe and Woolwich (or really in the ten miles between Tower Bridge and Woolwich, since the Rotherhithe Tunnel is not a pleasant or safe experience.) It is an absolutely essential link for cyclists commuting between Canary Wharf and a vast swathe of south London. And it is very heavily used. I counted.

In half an hour yesterday, between 5.55 and 6.25pm, the tunnel was used by 134 cyclists - an average of one every 13 seconds. It was used by 75 pedestrians, two and a half a minute. This would equate to around 250-300 cyclists an hour in the peak hours, so perhaps 1500- 2000 across the whole day. Many of the pedestrians, incidentally, were joggers or runners - so other fitness goals will also be damaged if we close the tunnel. And all that was without a working lift.

I spoke to some of the users. "I cycle every day from Catford to Canary Wharf," said Max Elliot. "I am absolutely horrified to find out that the tunnel might close - there is literally no other way to do the bike journey." Anthony Austin, chair of Greenwich Cyclists, told me: "There's no point in closing the tunnel. It's not clear they need to close the stairs when they are doing the lifts. We cyclists have come to use it as an absolutely essential link."

Some are asking for a peak-hour ferry replacement, but that will greatly extend the crossing time and will not, in any case, help those who travel outside peak hours. The DLR, of course, bans bikes at all times, and Cutty Sark station is too deep for bikes anyway.

Greenwich Council wouldn't deny to me last night that the tunnel will be closed. I've been trying for the last 24 hours to get an answer from them about exactly how long the closure will last - no joy so far. "I just know from experience that once Greenwich Council agrees to the closure of a footpath it will stay closed for a long time," says Anthony Austin.

But the tunnel is, as the council admits, a statutory public highway. So there will have to be some sort of legal process to close it - which offers opportunities for a fightback. At the very least, it should be argued that even if the lifts have to close, the stairs should stay open.

We have only just got the A2 back after two months of largely unnecessary chaos. And I don't know about you, but I am getting sick, sick, sick of councils and other public busybodies interfering with our town and our lives for their pointless vanity projects. This might be the one where the worm finally turns.

Filed Under: Andrew Gilligan Tagged With: Greenwich Council, Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Daily Photo 19/03/09: Greenwich Foot Tunnel Plaque

March 19, 2009 By Rob Powell

Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Just in case you've never stopped and read the plaque above the entrance to Greenwich Foot Tunnel, here's a photo: click on it to see in larger sizes.

Filed Under: Magazine Tagged With: Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Daily Photo 06/03/09: Inside Greenwich Foot Tunnel

March 6, 2009 By Rob Powell

Inside Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Filed Under: Magazine Tagged With: Daily Photo, Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Daily Photo 12/02/09: Greenwich Foot Tunnel Stairs

February 12, 2009 By Rob Powell

Foot Tunnel Stairs

Made by Thamesmead based company, Bowes Scott and Western Ltd.

Filed Under: Magazine Tagged With: Daily Photo, Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Daily Photo 29/01/09: Inside Foot Tunnel Entrance

January 29, 2009 By Rob Powell

Roof Interior of Greenwich Foot Tunnel Building

Inside the entrance of the Greenwich Foot Tunnel and looking up at the ceiling. Or as Tubbs might have put it on the BBC's League Of Gentleman: "Lines and lines and lines and lines and lines".

Filed Under: Magazine Tagged With: Daily Photo, Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Daily Photo 26/01/09: Greenwich Foot Tunnel

January 26, 2009 By Rob Powell

Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Staircase at the Greenwich side of Greenwich Foot Tunnel.

Filed Under: Magazine Tagged With: Daily Photo, Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Council Wins Funding For Tunnel Refurbishment

January 8, 2009 By Rob Powell

Greenwich Foot Tunnel

EXCLUSIVE
Greenwich Council has won funding from central Government to refurbish the Greenwich and Woolwich foot tunnels. £11.5 million has been awarded as part of the Government’s Community Infrastructure Fund which will allow for substantial improvements to both of the tunnels, which are used by 1.5 million people a year.

The century-old tunnels will benefit from

  • New lifts
  • Refurbished stairways & head houses
  • New CCTV and communications system, including help buttons
  • New lighting
  • New drainage
  • Structural repairs
  • Leak sealing
  • New signing
  • Historical information murals

Works are expected to be completed by March 2011.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Greenwich Council, Greenwich Foot Tunnel

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