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Elizabeth line - Wikipedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Railway in London, England
For other uses, see Elizabeth Line (disambiguation).

Elizabeth line
An Elizabeth line Class 345 train at Reading in January 2026
Overview
SystemNational Rail
Locale
  • Greater London
  • Berkshire
  • Buckinghamshire
  • Essex
PredecessorTfL Rail
First service24 May 2022; 3 years ago (2022-05-24)
Current operatorGTS Rail Operations (under concession from TfL)[1]
Annual ridership243 million Increase10% (2024/2025)[2] passenger journeys
Websitetfl.gov.uk/modes/elizabeth-line/ Edit this at Wikidata
Route
TerminiWest: Heathrow Terminal 4, Heathrow Terminal 5 and Reading
East: Abbey Wood and Shenfield
Stops41
Distance travelled117 km (73 mi)[3]
Technical
Rolling stockClass 345[4]
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge
ElectrificationOverhead line, 25 kV 50 Hz AC
Operating speed
  • Core section: 95 km/h (60 mph)
  • GWML, Heathrow and GEML: 145 km/h (90 mph)
Track owners
  • Transport for London (Old Oak Common–Abbey Wood and Stratford)
  • Network Rail (Pudding Mill Lane–Shenfield, and Old Oak Common–Reading)
  • Heathrow Airport Holdings (Heathrow branch)
Transport for London rail lines
London Underground
Bakerloo
Central
Circle
District
Hammersmith & City
Jubilee
Metropolitan
Northern
Piccadilly
Victoria
Waterloo & City
London Overground
Liberty
Lioness
Mildmay
Suffragette
Weaver
Windrush
Other TfL Modes
DLR
Elizabeth line
London Trams
  • v
  • t
  • e

The Elizabeth line is a railway line that runs across Greater London and nearby towns. It runs services on dedicated infrastructure in central London from the Great Western Main Line west of Paddington station to Abbey Wood and via Whitechapel to the Great Eastern Main Line near Stratford; and out parallel to the Great Eastern Main Line to Shenfield in the east, along the Great Western Main Line to Reading and Heathrow Airport in the west.

Under the project name of Crossrail, the system was approved in 2007, and construction began in 2009. Originally planned to open in 2018, the project was repeatedly delayed, including for several months as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The service is named after Queen Elizabeth II, who officially opened the line on 17 May 2022 during her Platinum Jubilee year; passenger services started on 24 May 2022.

Elizabeth line services are operated by GTS Rail Operations under a concession from Transport for London (TfL). TfL considers the line to be a distinct service, rather than part of the London Underground. It is considered to be in a class of its own and TfL's Oyster card is not valid for journeys to stations outside the TfL fare zones,[5][6] whilst a premium fare is charged to passengers travelling to or from Heathrow Airport, in line with that charged on the Heathrow Connect service which it replaced.

The line performs a similar function in London to the RER in Paris and the S-Bahn systems of German-speaking countries.[7] It reached over 200 million trips annually in its second year of operation and carries one seventh of all trips by rail in the United Kingdom.

History

[edit]
Main articles: History of the Crossrail project, Crossrail, and TfL Rail

In 2001, Cross London Rail Links (CLRL), a 50/50 joint-venture between Transport for London (TfL) and the Department for Transport (DfT), was formed to develop and promote the Crossrail scheme,[8] and also a Wimbledon–Hackney scheme, Crossrail 2. In 2003 and 2004, over 50 days of exhibitions were held to explain the proposals at over 30 different locations.[9][10][11]

2005 route development

[edit]

In 2005, ahead of Crossrail's hybrid bill submission, a number of feeder routes were considered by CLRL west of Paddington and east of Liverpool Street. It was viewed, given the 24 trains-per-hour (tph) core frequency, that two feeder routes, each of 12 tph, could be taken forward.[12]

In the west, a route to Maidenhead (later extended to Reading) and Heathrow Airport was selected. In the east, routes to Abbey Wood (curtailed from Ebbsfleet to avoid conflicts with the North Kent lines) and Shenfield were selected.

Approval

[edit]

The Crossrail Act 2008 authorising the construction project received royal assent on 22 July 2008.[13][14] In December 2008, TfL and the DfT announced that they had signed the "Crossrail Sponsors' Agreement". This committed them to financing the project, then projected to cost £15.9 billion, with further contributions from Network Rail, BAA,[15] and the City of London.[16]

Construction

[edit]
Main article: Crossrail
Construction of Crossrail at Tottenham Court Road in September 2011

Work began on 15 May 2009, when piling works started at the future Canary Wharf station.[17]

Boring of the railway tunnels was officially completed in June 2015.[18] Installation of the track was completed in September 2017.[19] The European Train Control System (ETCS) signalling was scheduled to be tested in the Heathrow tunnels over the winter of 2017–2018.[20]

At the end of August 2018, four months before the scheduled opening of the core section of the line, it was announced that completion was delayed and that the line would not open before autumn 2019.[21] After multiple delays, in August 2020 Crossrail announced that the central section would be ready to open "in the first half of 2022".[22]

In May 2021, trial running commenced.[23]

On 17 May 2022, the line was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II in honour of her Platinum Jubilee. She was not scheduled to attend the event, but decided to attend with her son, Prince Edward, to unveil the plaque commemorating the official opening.[24]

Timeline

[edit]

Though the main tunnels under central London had not yet been opened, passenger operations on the outer branches of the future Elizabeth line were transferred to TfL for inclusion in the concession – this took place over several stages beginning May 2015. During this initial phase of operation, services were operated by MTR under the TfL Rail brand. Following the practice adopted during the transfer of former Silverlink services to London Overground in 2007, TfL carried out a deep clean of stations and trains on the future Elizabeth line route, installed new ticket machines and barriers, introduced Oyster card and contactless payment, and ensured all stations were staffed. Existing rolling stock was rebranded with the TfL Rail identity.[25]

TfL Rail and Elizabeth line services
Stage Map Completion dates Notes
Schedule Actual Delay
0 Map of the first phase of Crossrail 2015 May 2015[26] 31 May 2015[27] — Existing "metro" service between Liverpool Street (main line station) and Shenfield transferred from Abellio Greater Anglia to TfL Rail
1 Map of the first phase of Crossrail 2015 May 2017[26] 22 June 2017[28] 1 month Class 345 trains start running between Liverpool Street and Shenfield in reduced length format[29]
2a[30] Map of the 2nd phase of Crossrail in 2018 May 2018[26] 20 May 2018[31] —
  • Existing service between Paddington (main line station) and Heathrow Terminal 4 transferred from Heathrow Connect
  • Existing shuttle service between Heathrow Terminals 2 & 3 and Heathrow Terminal 4 transferred from Heathrow Express, both to TfL Rail
5a[32] Map of Crossrail with Reading section —N/a 15 December 2019[33] —
  • Most stopping services between Paddington and Reading transferred from Great Western Railway to TfL Rail, operating up to 4 tph
  • The first TfL trains in public service to Reading ran on 25 November 2019 as a soft launch of the service.[34]
2b[30] Map of the 2nd phase of Crossrail in 2018 May 2018[26] 30 July 2020[35] 2 years and 2 months Class 345 trains start running between Paddington and Heathrow
4a[36] Map of the first phase of Crossrail 2015 —N/a 26 May 2021[37] — Class 345 trains in full length format start running between Liverpool Street and Shenfield[37]
3 Map of the 3rd phase of Crossrail 2018 Dec 2018[26] 24 May 2022[38] 3 years and 5 months Services between Paddington and Abbey Wood begin; this section and existing TfL Rail routes rebranded as the Elizabeth line, up to 12 tph
4b/5b Map of the 5th phase of Crossrail 2019 —N/a 6 November 2022[39] — Services begin between Paddington and Shenfield; and between Reading and Abbey Wood; and between Heathrow and Abbey Wood. The services are operated in parallel, sharing the central tunnel.
5c Map of the 5th phase of Crossrail 2019 Dec 2019[26] 21 May 2023 3 years and 5 months Full route opens, with services between Heathrow and both Abbey Wood and Shenfield; and between Reading and Abbey Wood.

Route

[edit]
See also: Crossrail § Route

The Elizabeth line runs on an east–west axis across the London region, with branches terminating at Abbey Wood and Shenfield in the east, and at Heathrow Terminal 4, Heathrow Terminal 5 and Reading in the west. There are 41 stations. In the central section, there are interchanges with London Underground, National Rail, and Docklands Light Railway lines.[40]

The Elizabeth line in the London transport network
Geographical map of London rail and tube
Geographical map
Schematic map of London rail and tube
Schematic map (interactive)
Routes of the Elizabeth line (in purple, from middle of left edge to right edge), shown with London Underground and the Docklands Light Railway connections

Design and infrastructure

[edit]
Elizabeth line roundel on a sign for Seven Kings station

Name and identity

[edit]

Crossrail is the name of the construction project and of the limited company, wholly owned by TfL, that was formed to carry out construction works.[25][41]

The "Elizabeth line" is the name of the new service that is on signage throughout the stations. It is named in honour of Queen Elizabeth II,[42][43] and colloquially called the "Lizzie line".[44][45] The Elizabeth line roundel is coloured purple, with a superimposed blue bearing white text in the same style as London Underground and other TfL services. However, unlike other services, the Elizabeth line roundel features the line name rather than the mode of transport (i.e. Underground, Overground, Buses).

TfL Rail was an intermediate brand name which was introduced in May 2015 and discontinued in May 2022. It was used by TfL on services between Paddington and Heathrow Terminal 5 and Reading, as well as trains between Liverpool Street and Shenfield.[46]

Stations

[edit]
  • v
  • t
  • e
Elizabeth line
All stations have step-free access
Legend
Reading National Rail
Twyford National Rail
Maidenhead National Rail
North sign pointing rightward
River Thames
Taplow
Burnham
Slough National Rail
Airport interchange Heathrow Express Piccadilly Line Heathrow T5
Langley
Airport interchange Heathrow T4
Iver
M25 motorway
Airport interchange Heathrow Express Heathrow T2&3
Greater London boundary
West Drayton
Heathrow Rail Link
Great Western Main Line
Hayes & Harlington
Southall
River Brent
Hanwell
West Ealing National Rail
Ealing Broadway Central line (London Underground) District Line
Acton Main Line
National Rail Old Oak Common
(under construction)
Old Oak Common depot
Crossrail
Great Western Main Line
turnback siding
Royal Oak portal
National Rail Heathrow Express
Bakerloo Line Circle line (London Underground)
District Line Hammersmith & City Line
Paddington
enlarge…
London Paddington
Central line (London Underground) Jubilee Line Bond Street
Central line (London Underground) Northern Line Tottenham Ct Rd
National Rail Circle line (London Underground) Hammersmith & City Line Metropolitan Line Farringdon
Barbican Circle line (London Underground) Hammersmith & City Line Metropolitan Line
Moorgate Northern Line Northern City Line
National Rail Weaver line
Central line (London Underground) Circle line (London Underground)
Hammersmith & City Line Metropolitan Line
Liverpool St
Windrush line District Line Hammersmith & City Line Whitechapel
Crossrail
Great Eastern Main Line
Pudding Mill Lane portal[47]
Canary Wharf tube station Canary Wharf DLR station Canary Wharf
Stratford National Rail Mildmay line Central line (London Underground) Jubilee Line Docklands Light Railway
Victoria Dock portal
Maryland
Docklands Light Railway Custom House
Forest Gate
Suffragette line
Wanstead
Park
Connaught tunnel
under Royal Docks
Manor Park
River Thames
Ilford
Woolwich Arsenal station Woolwich Arsenal station Woolwich
Seven Kings
National Rail Abbey Wood
Goodmayes
Safeguarded route
to Gravesend
Chadwell Heath
Romford Control Centre
and depot
Romford National Rail Liberty line
Gidea Park
Harold Wood
Greater London boundary
M25 motorway
Brentwood
Shenfield National Rail
Elizabeth line station information
Station Image Line section TfL service began Interchanges
Reading
Reading branch 15 December 2019 (2019-12-15)
  • National Rail CrossCountry
  • National Rail Great Western
  • National Rail South Western
Twyford
National Rail Great Western
Maidenhead
National Rail Great Western
Taplow
Burnham
Slough
National Rail Great Western
Langley
Iver
West Drayton
Heathrow Terminal 5
Heathrow Airport
Heathrow branch 9 May 2020 (2020-05-09)
  • Heathrow Express Heathrow Express
  • Piccadilly Line Piccadilly line
Heathrow Terminal 4
Heathrow Airport
20 May 2018 (2018-05-20)
Heathrow Terminals 2 & 3
Heathrow Airport
Heathrow Express Heathrow Express
Hayes & Harlington
Reading and Heathrow branches 20 May 2018 (2018-05-20)
Southall
Hanwell
Heathrow branch[a]
West Ealing
National Rail Great Western
Ealing Broadway
Reading and Heathrow branches
  • Central line (London Underground) Central line
  • District Line District line
Acton Main Line
Heathrow branch[a]
Paddington[b]
Core 24 May 2022 (2022-05-24)[c]
  • National Rail Great Western
  • Heathrow Express Heathrow Express
  • Bakerloo Line Bakerloo line[d]
  • Circle line (London Underground) Circle line[d][e]
  • District Line District line[d]
  • Hammersmith & City Line Hammersmith & City line[e]
Bond Street
24 October 2022 (2022-10-24)
  • Central line (London Underground) Central line
  • Jubilee Line Jubilee line
Tottenham Court Road
24 May 2022 (2022-05-24)
  • Central line (London Underground) Central line
  • Northern Line Northern line
Farringdon
  • National Rail Thameslink
  • Circle line (London Underground) Circle line
  • Hammersmith & City Line Hammersmith & City line
  • Metropolitan Line Metropolitan line
Liverpool Street[f]
24 May 2022 (2022-05-24)[g]
  • National Rail c2c[h]
  • National Rail Greater Anglia
  • National Rail Great Northern[i]
  • Weaver line Weaver line
  • Central line (London Underground) Central line
  • Circle line (London Underground) Circle line
  • Hammersmith & City Line Hammersmith & City line
  • Metropolitan Line Metropolitan line
  • Northern Line Northern line[i]
Whitechapel
24 May 2022 (2022-05-24)
  • Windrush line Windrush line
  • District Line District line
  • Hammersmith & City Line Hammersmith & City line
Canary Wharf
Abbey Wood branch 24 May 2022 (2022-05-24)
  • Jubilee Line Jubilee line[j]
  • Docklands Light Railway Docklands Light Railway[k]
Custom House
Docklands Light Railway Docklands Light Railway
Woolwich
  • National Rail Southeastern[l]
  • National Rail Thameslink[l]
  • Docklands Light Railway Docklands Light Railway[l]
Abbey Wood
  • National Rail Southeastern
  • National Rail Thameslink
Stratford
Shenfield branch 31 May 2015 (2015-05-31)
  • National Rail c2c[h]
  • National Rail Greater Anglia
  • Mildmay line Mildmay line
  • Central line (London Underground) Central line
  • Jubilee Line Jubilee line
  • Docklands Light Railway Docklands Light Railway
Maryland
Forest Gate
Suffragette line Suffragette line[m]
Manor Park
Ilford
Seven Kings
Goodmayes
Chadwell Heath
Romford
  • National Rail Greater Anglia
  • Liberty line Liberty Line
Gidea Park
Harold Wood
Brentwood
Shenfield
National Rail Greater Anglia
  1. ^ a b Reading branch services skip Hanwell, West Ealing, and Acton Main Line stations
  2. ^ Some early-morning and late-night services instead use the National Rail terminal platforms
  3. ^ Services using the National Rail terminal platforms commenced on 20 May 2018
  4. ^ a b c From Paddington (Bakerloo, Circle, and District) tube station
  5. ^ a b From Paddingdon (Circle and Hammersmith & City) tube station
  6. ^ Some early-morning, late-night, and peak-time services instead use the National Rail terminal platforms
  7. ^ Services using the National Rail terminal platforms commenced on 31 May 2015
  8. ^ a b Only limited service
  9. ^ a b From Moorgate station
  10. ^ From Canary Wharf tube station
  11. ^ From Canary Wharf, Poplar, and West India Quay DLR stations
  12. ^ a b c From Woolwich Arsenal station
  13. ^ From Wanstead Park station
The new platforms at Farringdon

Ten new stations have been built in the central and south east sections of the line, and 31 existing stations were upgraded and refurbished.[48] Nine of the ten new-build stations opened for revenue service on 24 May 2022; the remaining station – Bond Street – required additional finishing works before commissioning could proceed.[49][50] Trains passed through its platforms non-stop until it opened five months later on 24 October.[51][52] All stations are equipped with CCTV[53] and because of the length of trains, central stations have train indicators above the platform-edge doors.[54]

All 41 stations are step-free from street to platform.[55] Thirteen stations (the central and Heathrow stations) have level access between trains and platforms while other outer suburban platforms remain at their pre-existing height, about 200 millimetres (7.9 in) lower.[56] This platform height difference was criticised by the Campaign for Level Boarding who said Crossrail's "poor decision making" meant "this brand-new railway has cornered itself into perpetually offering an inaccessible service."[56]

Although the trains are 200 metres (660 feet) long, platforms at the new stations in the central core are built to enable 240-metre-long (790 ft) trains in case of possible future need. In the eastern section, Maryland and Manor Park have not had platform extensions, so trains use selective door opening instead.[57] At Maryland this is because of the prohibitive cost of extensions and the poor business case,[58] and at Manor Park it is due to the presence of a freight loop that would otherwise be cut off.[59]

The new subterranean stations were designed by Grimshaw Architects, adopting a uniform approach across all stations, in partnership with engineering firm AtkinsRéalis; way-finding was designed by Maynard and lighting designed by Equation.[60]

Future stations

[edit]

As of 2024[update], Old Oak Common railway station is under construction. It will provide an interchange with the High Speed 2 service.

Station Image Line section Opening Interchanges
Old Oak Common —N/a Core[61] c. 2030[62]
  • National Rail Avanti West Coast
  • National Rail Great Western
  • Heathrow Express Heathrow Express

Rolling stock

[edit]

Current rolling stock

[edit]
 Class Image Type  Top speed  Carriages  Number  Routes operated  Built  Years in operation
 mph   km/h 
Class 345 Aventra EMU 90 145 7 or 9 70

All lines

2015–2019

2025–present

June 2017–present

Former rolling stock

[edit]
 Class Image Type  Top speed  Carriages  Number  Routes operated  Built  Years in operation
 mph   km/h 
Class 315 EMU 75 120 4 20 Liverpool Street – Shenfield[63] 1980–1981 May–December 2022
Class 345 unit at Shenfield in 2017

Services on the Elizabeth line are operated exclusively by a fleet of nine-car Class 345 trains that was procured especially for this purpose.[64][38] The service specifications called for approximately 60 trains, each 200 metres (660 feet) long and capable of carrying up to 1,500 passengers, of which 57 would be in service at any one time.[65][66] In March 2011, Crossrail indicated that five bidders had been shortlisted as potential suppliers of both the new fleet and its depot facilities; Alstom, CAF, Siemens Mobility, Hitachi Rail, and Bombardier Transportation – although Alstom withdrew four months later.[65][66] Crossrail issued invitations to negotiate to the remaining bidders in March 2012, with submission of tenders expected between June and August.[66] It was stipulated that bidders should offer a fleet based on technology that was "already developed", with the expectation that an "evolutionary, not revolutionary" product would help to ensure "value for money" and "[the] utmost reliability from day one".[65][66] Siemens withdrew their rolling stock bid in July 2013, citing an increase in other business and a need to protect their "ability to deliver ... current customer commitments", which included the £1.6 billion Class 700 order for Thameslink. Their contract to supply Crossrail's signalling and control systems was unaffected.[67]

In December 2013, the European Investment Bank (EIB) agreed to provide TfL loans of up to £500 million to fund the rolling stock procurement, following TfL's decision in March of that year to abandon plans to cover most of the cost with private financing.[68]

TfL and the DfT announced in early February 2014 that Bombardier's bid had been successful. The 32-year contract for the supply and maintenance of the trains and depot was valued at £1 billion. It included a firm order for 65 units from Bombardier's new Aventra family, plus an option for a further 18.[4][69] The trains have air-conditioning and are designed to be as accessible as possible, including wide aisles and gangways, dedicated areas for wheelchairs, audio and visual announcements, CCTV, and passenger intercoms connected to the driver for use in the event of emergency.[70] They will run at up to 90 mph (140 km/h) on certain parts of the route.[71]

Due to limited platform lengths at both Liverpool Street and Paddington National Rail stations, most Class 345 units were initially delivered as seven-car formations, then later extended to the intended nine.[72] The first unit entered service on 22 June 2017, between Liverpool Street and Shenfield.[73][74] TfL exercised an option to acquire a further five units in July 2017, bringing the total number on order to 70.[75]

A number of Class 315 units that had been operating with TfL Rail remained in use on Elizabeth line services between Liverpool Street's terminal platforms and Shenfield alongside Class 345 units while the introduction of the new fleet – including the extension to nine-car formations – was completed.[76] The Class 315 units, which had been built for British Rail in 1980–1981, could not be used in the line's core section. The final four were withdrawn from service on 9 December 2022.[77]

Future stock

[edit]

Following the opening of the Elizabeth line, TfL experienced high passenger growth on the line.[78] TfL noted that extra capacity would be required when Old Oak Common railway station opens in the 2030s alongside the opening of High Speed 2.[79] TfL therefore pushed for funding from the DfT for additional trains.[80] Following this, Alstom (new owners of the original builder Bombardier) was awarded a £370 million contract in June 2024 to build an additional ten Class 345 trains at its factory in Derby. This would increase the number of trains from 70 to 80.[81]

Electrification and train protection

[edit]

The Elizabeth line uses 25 kV, 50 Hz AC overhead lines, already in use on the Great Eastern and Great Western Main Lines.

The Heathrow branch started using the European Train Control System (ETCS) in 2020. The Automatic Warning System (AWS) and Train Protection & Warning System (TPWS) are used on the Great Western and Great Eastern Main Lines, with possible later upgrades to ETCS. Communications-based train control (CBTC) is installed in the central section and the Abbey Wood branch.[82][83][84]

Depots

[edit]

The Elizabeth line has depots in west London at Old Oak Common TMD, in south-east London at Plumstead Depot, and in east London at Ilford EMU Depot.[85][86]

Service pattern

[edit]

Previous service

[edit]

In May 2015, commuter services on a section of one of the eastern branches, between Liverpool Street and Shenfield, were transferred to TfL Rail; this precursor service also took control of Heathrow Connect in May 2018, and some local services on the Paddington to Reading line in December 2019. These services were augmented by a new central section in May 2022, and rebranded as the Elizabeth line. The outer services were connected to the central section in November 2022. Since May 2023, the central section has had up to 24 nine-carriage Class 345 trains per hour in each direction.

Upon opening, the line ran as three physically separate services: between Reading or Heathrow Airport and Paddington in the west; from Paddington via Liverpool Street to Abbey Wood in the centre; and between Liverpool Street and Shenfield in the east. To connect between services, a walk between the separate stations at Paddington or Liverpool Street was required. Operating hours were limited, as well as the service running Monday to Saturday only - allowing for further testing and software updates to take place.[87] When through-running began in November 2022, there were two main service groups, overlapping through the core section: from Reading or Heathrow Airport to Abbey Wood; and from Paddington to Shenfield.

Current service

[edit]

As of December 2024, the off-peak weekday service is as follows:[88]

Elizabeth line off-peak weekday service
Route tph Calling at
Reading to Abbey Wood 2
  • Twyford
  • Maidenhead
  • Taplow
  • Burnham
  • Slough
  • Langley
  • West Drayton
  • Hayes & Harlington
  • Southall
  • Ealing Broadway
  • Paddington
  • Bond Street
  • Tottenham Court Road
  • Farringdon
  • Liverpool Street
  • Whitechapel
  • Canary Wharf
  • Custom House
  • Woolwich
Maidenhead to Abbey Wood 2
  • Burnham
  • Slough
  • Langley
  • Iver
  • West Drayton
  • Hayes & Harlington
  • Southall
  • Ealing Broadway
  • Paddington
  • Bond Street
  • Tottenham Court Road
  • Farringdon
  • Liverpool Street
  • Whitechapel
  • Canary Wharf
  • Custom House
  • Woolwich
Heathrow Terminal 4 to Abbey Wood 4
  • Heathrow Terminals 2 & 3
  • Hayes & Harlington
  • Southall
  • Hanwell
  • West Ealing
  • Ealing Broadway
  • Acton Main Line
  • Paddington
  • Bond Street
  • Tottenham Court Road
  • Farringdon
  • Liverpool Street
  • Whitechapel
  • Canary Wharf
  • Custom House
  • Woolwich
Heathrow Terminal 5 to Shenfield 2
  • Heathrow Terminals 2 & 3
  • Hayes & Harlington
  • West Ealing
  • Ealing Broadway
  • Paddington
  • Bond Street
  • Tottenham Court Road
  • Farringdon
  • Liverpool Street
  • Whitechapel
  • Stratford
  • Maryland
  • Forest Gate
  • Manor Park
  • Ilford
  • Seven Kings
  • Goodmayes
  • Chadwell Heath
  • Romford
  • Gidea Park
  • Harold Wood
  • Brentwood
Paddington to Shenfield 6
  • Bond Street
  • Tottenham Court Road
  • Farringdon
  • Liverpool Street
  • Whitechapel
  • Stratford
  • Maryland
  • Forest Gate
  • Manor Park
  • Ilford
  • Seven Kings
  • Goodmayes
  • Chadwell Heath
  • Romford
  • Gidea Park
  • Harold Wood
  • Brentwood

Some early morning and late night services run into Paddington mainline terminus instead of going through central London. Likewise, some early, peak-direction, and late trains run between Liverpool Street mainline terminus and Gidea Park, bypassing Whitechapel.

Journey times

[edit]
Minutes between stations[89]
Route Pre-Elizabeth line time Elizabeth line time
Paddington to Tottenham Court Road 20 4
Paddington to Canary Wharf 34 17
Bond Street to Paddington 15 3
Bond Street to Whitechapel 24 10
Canary Wharf to Liverpool Street 21 6
Canary Wharf to Heathrow 55 39
Whitechapel to Canary Wharf 13 3
Abbey Wood to Heathrow 93 52

Operations

[edit]

Operator

[edit]

The Elizabeth line is currently operated by GTS Rail Operations, a train operating company owned by Go-Ahead Group, Tokyo Metro and Sumitomo Corporation.[6] GTS took over operations from MTR Elizabeth line,[90] the line's first operator, whose contract with TfL expired in May 2025. Following a model similar to that used for the Docklands Light Railway and London Overground, TfL invited tenders for operation of the Elizabeth line. Unlike other National Rail operators under the franchise control of the DfT, TfL sets fares, procures rolling stock and decides service levels. The operator takes only a small element of revenue risk, with TfL taking 90% and the operator 10%.

History

[edit]

In June 2013, TfL announced that Arriva, MTR Corporation, Keolis / Go-Ahead Group and National Express had been shortlisted to bid for the concession to operate Crossrail, which was under construction.[91][92] Prior to the opening of the central section, the concessionaire would operate the existing railway services using the TfL Rail brand. In July 2014, TfL awarded the contract to MTR Corporation, for a duration of eight years with an option to extend by an additional two years.[93][94]

On 16 February 2024, TfL shortlisted four bidders – Arriva, a FirstGroup / Keolis joint venture, MTR Corporation and GTS Rail Operations (a consortium comprising Go-Ahead Group, Tokyo Metro and Sumitomo Corporation) – to operate the line from May 2025.[95] In November 2024, GTS Rail Operations was chosen to operate the line from May 2025 for seven years with an optional two-year extension.[96][97][98]

Ticketing

[edit]

Ticketing is integrated with the other London transport systems, but Oyster pay as you go is not accepted on the western section between West Drayton (the limit of London fare zone 6) and Reading, with only contactless cards valid there. The concessionary travel Freedom Pass is valid for the whole length of the route, including stations outside London.[99][100] The Elizabeth line is integrated with the London Underground, the wider TfL network and the National Rail networks; it is also included on the standard Tube map.[101]

Journeys to or from Heathrow Airport are priced at a premium due to using the rail tunnel between the airport and Hayes & Harlington. That stretch of line is not part of the Network Rail system but owned by Heathrow Airport Holdings, who charge TfL an additional fee for each train that uses it. This fare is priced approximately halfway between the more expensive Heathrow Express and the standard Zone 6 fare charged on the Underground. Heathrow is nevertheless included within the Travelcard scheme and daily/weekly fare capping as fare zone 6 stations.[102]

Passenger numbers

[edit]

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the Elizabeth line was predicted to carry over 200 million passengers annually immediately after opening;[103] this was expected to relieve pressure on London Underground's lines, especially the Central line.[104] Farringdon is expected to become one of the busiest stations in the UK, due to it being the key interchange station with Thameslink services.[105] In a business plan for the line published in January 2020, TfL predicted total annual revenues from the line of nearly £500 million per year in 2022/23 (its first full year of operation) and over £1 billion per year in 2024/25.[103] By the time the line opened, TfL had reduced their passenger forecasts because passenger travelling habits changed during the pandemic; the estimate was between 130 and 170 million passengers by 2026.[106] However, the Elizabeth line carried 62.2 million passengers in the last quarter of 2022 alone. That was one-sixth of the UK's total rail journeys, and double the number the line carried during the same period one year earlier.[107] TFL later stated the line had carried over 150 million passengers in its first year of operation.[108] By its second anniversary, more than 350 million trips had been made on the line, and it carried a seventh of all rail trips in the UK.[109]

In the fiscal year ending March 2025, the line carried 243 million passengers,[2] an increase of 10% on the previous year.

Number of passengers carried
Fiscal Year Passengers
(millions)
Source
2022/23 143.1 [2]
2023/24 220.3 [2]
2024/25 242.9 [2]

Further proposals

[edit]
Main article: Crossrail § Further proposals

A new station has been proposed to serve London City Airport, and extensions have been put forward to Ebbsfleet in the south east, Milton Keynes in the north west, Staines in the south west, and Southend Airport in the east.

TfL has introduced high-speed 4G and 5G mobile coverage in the first tunnelled section of the Elizabeth line between Liverpool Street and Paddington. This initiative, part of a broader plan to extend coverage across the entire Tube and London Overground network, aims to improve connectivity.[110]

Honours and awards

[edit]

In 2024, the Elizabeth line won the RIBA London Building of the Year award,[111] and won the Stirling Prize for the same year.[112] Muyiwa Oki, RIBA president and chair of judges, said the Elizabeth line was "a triumph in architect-led collaboration" that transformed "the typical commuter chaos . . . into an effortless experience".[112]

See also

[edit]
  • Crossrail 2 – second proposed Crossrail route providing a new north–south rail link across Greater London
  • Thameslink - north–south route through London connecting locations across south east England
  • The Fifteen Billion Pound Railway, a documentary about the Elizabeth line's construction and commissioning
  • Transport in London
  • Réseau Express Régional
  • Naniwasuji Line, planned north–south rail link in Osaka

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
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Sources

[edit]
  • "London & South East RUS (final)". Network Rail. 28 July 2011. p. 9. Archived from the original on 28 November 2017. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  • "Crossrail Act 2008". The National Archives.
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  • "Crossrail: A rare look deep under London" (video). BBC News. 25 January 2013. Retrieved 26 January 2013.

External links

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  • Passenger rail franchising in Great Britain
Current
National
  • Arriva Rail London
  • Avanti West Coast
  • c2c1
  • Caledonian Sleeper4
  • Chiltern Railways
  • CrossCountry
  • East Midlands Railway
  • Govia Thameslink Railway
  • Grand Central2
  • Greater Anglia1
  • Great Western Railway
  • GTS Rail Operations
  • Heathrow Express2
  • Hull Trains2
  • London North Eastern Railway1
  • Lumo2
  • Merseyrail
  • NI Railways3
  • Northern1
  • ScotRail4
  • Southeastern1
  • South Western Railway1
  • TransPennine Express1
  • Transport for Wales5
  • West Midlands Trains1
International
  • Enterprise3
  • Eurostar
Sub-brands
  • Gatwick Express
  • Great Northern
  • Island Line1
  • London Northwestern Railway1
  • Night Riviera
  • Southern
  • Stansted Express1
  • Thameslink
  • West Midlands Railway1
Operators not subject to franchising or concession:
  • 1 Owned by the UK Government
  • 2 Open-access operator
  • 3 Operates on the Irish railway network and state-owned
  • 4 Owned by the Scottish Government
  • 5 Owned by the Welsh Government
Defunct (since 1994)
  • Abellio ScotRail
  • Anglia Railways
  • Arriva Rail North
  • Arriva Trains Merseyside
  • Arriva Trains Northern
  • Arriva Trains Wales
  • c2c
  • Central Trains
  • Connex South Central
  • Connex South Eastern
  • East Coast5
  • East Midlands Trains
  • First Capital Connect
  • First Great Eastern
  • First Great Western Link
  • First North Western
  • First ScotRail
  • First TransPennine Express
  • Gatwick Express1
  • Great North Eastern Railway
  • Greater Anglia
  • Heathrow Connect
  • Island Line2
  • KeolisAmey Wales
  • London Midland
  • London Overground Rail Operations
  • Midland Mainline
  • MTR Crossrail
  • National Express East Anglia
  • National Express East Coast
  • Northern Rail
  • ScotRail (National Express)
  • Silverlink
  • South Eastern Trains5
  • Southeastern
  • South Western Railway
  • South West Trains
  • TfL Rail
  • Thameslink3
  • Thames Trains
  • TransPennine Express
  • Valley Lines
  • Virgin CrossCountry
  • Virgin Trains East Coast
  • Virgin Trains West Coast
  • Wales and Borders
  • Wales & West
  • West Midlands Trains
  • Wessex Trains
  • West Anglia Great Northern
  • Wrexham & Shropshire4
    • 1 Separate franchise until 2008; now a sub-brand of Govia Thameslink Railway
    • 2 Separate franchise until 2007, now a sub-brand of South Western Railway
    • 3 Separate franchise until 2006; later reintroduced as a sub-brand of Govia Thameslink Railway
    • 4 Open-access operator
    • 5 Operator of last resort
    Future
    Future operators
    • First Rail London
    • Great British Railways
    • Thameslink Southern Great Northern
    Prospective operators
    • Go-op
    • Virgin Trains
    • Wrexham, Shropshire & Midlands Railway
    • Category
    • Commons
    • map icon Maps
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Rail infrastructure projects in the United Kingdom
    Current projects
    Projects
    • Camden Highline
    • Camp Hill line
    • East West Rail (Oxford to Bedford section)
    • High Speed 2
    • Northern Hub
    • Northern Powerhouse Rail (Hull–Liverpool)
    • Northumberland Line
    • South Wales Metro
    • West Midlands Metro extension to Brierley Hill
    Electrification
    • Bolton–Wigan
    • East Kilbride Enhancement
    • Kettering–Sheffield (paused)
    • Welsh Valleys
    Stations
    • Balgray
    • Beam Park
    • Bedlington
    • Birmingham Curzon Street
    • Birmingham Interchange
    • Butetown
    • Cambridge South
    • Darlaston James Bridge
    • Elland
    • Kings Heath
    • Moseley Village
    • Okehampton Interchange
    • Old Oak Common
    • Pineapple Road
    • White Rose
    • Willenhall
    • Winslow
    • Wixams
    Proposed projects
    Projects
    • Aberdare–Hirwaun Line reopening
    • Aberdeen Crossrail
    • Bakerloo line extension
    • Barrow Hill line reopening
    • Bristol Airport Rail Link
    • Brentford branch line reopening
    • Bolton–Bury line reopening
    • Bordon Light Railway reopening
    • Carmarthen–Aberystwyth line reopening
    • Cirencester branch line reopening
    • Consett–Newcastle line reopening
    • Coventry Very Light Rail
    • Cranleigh line reopening
    • Crossrail 2 (London)
    • Crossrail Glasgow
    • Darlaston Loop reopening
    • Parts of Electric Spine (including
    • Coventry–Leamington Spa
    • Coventry–Nuneaton
    • Leamington Spa–Aynho Junction)
    • Bedford–Cambridge reopening
    • Fawley branch line reopening
    • Fleetwood branch line reopening
    • Formartine and Buchan Railway reopening
    • Maid Marian line reopening
    • MetroWest (Bristol)
    • Hall Farm Curve reopening
    • Heathfield Branch Line reopening
    • Heathrow Airport transport proposals
      • including Heathrow Airtrack
      • Heathrow Southern Railway
      • Heathwick
      • Western Rail Approach to Heathrow
    • Leicester–Burton upon Trent line reopening
    • Lisburn–Antrim line reopening
    • Cowley branch line reopening
    • North and West London Light Railway
    • Northern Powerhouse Rail
    • North Wales Metro
    • Oxford, Witney and Fairford Railway reopening
    • Ringwood branch line reopening
    • R25 Orbital
    • Skelmersdale branch reopening
    • Skipton–Colne Rail Link
    • Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway reopening
    • South Staffordshire line reopening
    • Southern Crossrail
    • St Andrews Rail Link
    • Sutton Link
    • Sutton Park line reopening
    • Swansea Bay and West Wales Metro
    • Walsall–Wolverhampton line reopening
    • Wealden Line (Uckfield–Lewes reopening)
    • West London Orbital
    • Wisbech line reopening
    • York–Beverley line reopening
    Stations
    • Armagh
    • Allandale
    • Aldergrove
    • Aldridge
    • Arthington
    • Ashley Hill
    • Ashton Gate
    • Balsall Heath
    • Barcombe Mills
    • Beechwood
    • Beeston Castle and Tarporley
    • Beith North
    • Bonnybridge
    • Bordon
    • Bradford St James
    • Bramley
    • Broughton (Flintshire)
    • Brownhills
    • Brentford Golden Mile
    • Brinsford Parkway
    • Burgess Park
    • Caerleon
    • Camberwell
    • Cambourne (Cambridgeshire)
    • Canterbury Parkway
    • Cardiff Parkway
    • Carno
    • Carr Mill
    • Carterton
    • Castlethorpe
    • Castle Bromwich
    • Castle Green
    • Charfield
    • Cheadle
    • Chipping Sodbury
    • Claydon
    • Cottam Parkway
    • Corsham
    • Cranleigh
    • Cross Hills
    • Crwys Road
    • Cullompton
    • Cwm
    • Dalston
    • Deeside Parkway
    • Devizes Parkway
    • Ditton
    • Drake Street
    • East Midlands Hub
    • Eastriggs
    • Edwinstowe
    • Ely Mill
    • Eynsham
    • Errol
    • Ferryhill
    • Finningley
    • Fleetwood
    • Fort Parkway
    • Fraserburgh
    • Gabalfa
    • Glasgow Airport
    • Glasgow Cross
    • Glencarse
    • Gloucestershire Parkway
    • Gorbals
    • Greenfield (Flintshire)
    • Hatch End
    • Haxby
    • Heathrow Hub
    • Heathfield
    • Henbury
    • Hirwaun
    • Horfield
    • Horsforth Woodside
    • Hythe
    • Hythe Road
    • Isfield
    • King's Road Chelsea
    • Ladbroke Grove
    • Langport and Somerton
    • Leeds Bradford Airport Parkway
    • Leeds New Lane
    • Liverpool Baltic
    • Lisburn West
    • Llanwern
    • Long Ashton
    • Maiden Lane
    • Manchester Airport High Speed
    • March Elm Road
    • Meir
    • Monkerton
    • Moorside
    • Mouldon Hill
    • Newbiggin-by-the-Sea
    • Newport West
    • Newport West Central
    • Newton Longville
    • North Filton
    • Old Kent Road
    • Old Oak Common Lane
    • Oxford Science Park
    • Oxford Business Park
    • Ollerton
    • Park Farm
    • Pelsall
    • Peterhead
    • Pill
    • Portishead
    • Portobello
    • Poyle
    • Richhill
    • Roseberry Parkway
    • Rugby Parkway
    • Rushden Parkway
    • Saltford
    • Sharnal Street / Hoo
    • Silvertown
    • Skelmersdale
    • Slattocks
    • St Anne's Park
    • St Clears
    • Stanley Park
    • Stockingford
    • Stonehouse (Bristol Road)
    • Surrey Canal
    • Thamesmead
    • Templepatrick
    • Tempsford
    • Thornhill (Dumfries)
    • Thornton
    • Thorpe Park
    • Torquay Gateway
    • Town Meadow
    • Vauxhall (Merseyside)
    • Wantage Road
    • Warsop
    • Waverley
    • Weedon
    • Wellington
    • Winchburgh
    • Witney
    • Woodchurch
    • Woodhorn
    • Wootton Bassett
    • Wormit
    • Wrexham North
    • Wrexham South
    Heritage railways
    • Don Valley Railway
    • Norfolk Orbital Railway
    • Wisbech and March Bramley Line
    • Honeybourne Line
    Cancelled projects
    Projects
    • Advanced Passenger Train
    • Bordesley to Birmingham Curzon Street
    • Cardiff to Swansea electrification
    • Central Line extension to Richmond
    • Central Line Extension to Denham
    • Chessington branch line (never completed)
    • Cranbrook and Tenterden Light Railway
    • Cromarty and Dingwall Light Railway
    • Croxley Rail Link
    • Docklands Light Railway extension to Dagenham Dock
    • Dawlish Avoiding Line
    • Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway (never completed)
    • East Sussex Light Railway
    • Edinburgh Airport Rail Link
    • Electric Spine
    • Oxford-Bletchley/Bedford Electrification
    • Glasgow Airport Rail Link
    • Hawkhurst branch line (never completed)
    • Hebridean Light Railway Company
    • Heathrow Airport transport proposals
      • Heathrow Airtrack
      • HS4Air
    • Headcorn and Maidstone Junction Light Railway
    • Highclere, Kingsclere and Basingstoke Light Railway
    • InterCity 250
    • Kingsbridge to Salcombe
    • Lancashire, Derbyshire and East Coast Railway (never completed)
    • Leeds and York Railway
    • Mid-Suffolk Light Railway (never completed)
    • Nightstar (train)
    • North Holderness Light Railway
    • Ouse Valley Railway
    • Picc-Vic tunnel
    • Regional Eurostar
    • Robertsbridge & Pevensey Light Railway
    • St Germans & Looe Railway (never completed)
    • Superlink (railway network)
    • Tees Valley Metro
    • UK Ultraspeed
    • Windsor Link Railway
    • York and North Midland Railway (Leeds Extension)
    • York, Hull and East and West Yorkshire Junction Railway
    Stations
    • Barrhead (New)
    • Brierdene
    • Cassiobridge
    • Collywell Bay
    • Crowlands
    • Doncaster Sheffield Airport
    • Doncaster (York Road)
    • Dykebar
    • Ferguslie
    • Glenfield
    • Lullingstone
    • Paisley East
    • Queens Road (GER)
    • Richboro Port
    • Stanely
    • Swithland
    • Sykehouse
    • Thorpe-in-Balne
    • Watford Vicarage Road
    • West Hampstead interchange
    • Windsor Royal
    • Proposed projects category
    • Cancelled projects category
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Passenger rail franchising in Great Britain
    Current franchises
    • Caledonian Sleeper
    • CrossCountry
    • Chiltern
    • East Anglia
    • East Midlands
    • Essex Thameside
    • Greater Western
    • InterCity East Coast
    • Northern
    • ScotRail
    • South Eastern
    • South Western
    • Thameslink, Southern & Great Northern
    • TransPennine Express
    • Wales & Borders
    • West Coast Partnership
    • West Midlands
    Former franchises
    • Central
    • InterCity Anglia
    • InterCity Great Western
    • InterCity West Coast
    • Island Line
    • Gatwick Express
    • Great Eastern
    • Great Western
    • Midland Main Line
    • North London
    • North Eastern
    • North Western
    • South Central
    • Thames
    • Thameslink
    • Valley Lines
    • Wales & West
    • Wessex
    • West Anglia Great Northern
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Approved and current major construction projects in London
    Development
    sites
    • Barking Riverside
    • Battersea Power Station
    • Brent Cross Cricklewood
    • Canary Wharf's New District
    • Chelsea Barracks
    • Convoys Wharf
    • Earl's Court
    • Elephant & Castle (Heygate Estate)
    • Meridian Water
    • Embassy Gardens
    • Greenwich Peninsula
    • Kidbrooke Village
    • King's Cross Central
    • Lewisham Gateway
    • London Riverside
    • Northumberland Development Project
    • Olympic Park (East Village)
    • Paddington Waterside
    • Royal Albert Dock
    • Ruskin Square
    • Southall Gas Works
    • South Quay Plaza
    • Wembley City
    • Westfield Croydon
    • Westfield London Phase 2
    • Wood Wharf
    Buildings
    • 40 Leadenhall Street
    • 100 Bishopsgate
    • Arena Tower
    • Heron Quays West
    • Landmark Pinnacle
    • North Quay
    • One Park Drive
    • Riverside South
    • Spire London
    Infrastructure
    • High Speed 2
    • London Power Tunnels
    • Thames Tideway Tunnel
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Local rail transport in the United Kingdom
    Metros
    • Docklands Light Railway (London)
    • Glasgow Subway
    • London Underground
      • Night Tube
    • Tyne and Wear Metro
    Tramways
    • Blackpool
    • Edinburgh
    • Greater Manchester
    • Nottingham
    • South Yorkshire
    • South London
    • West Midlands
    Mainline railways
    • Belfast
    • Birmingham
    • Bristol
    • Cardiff
    • Edinburgh
    • Exeter
    • Glasgow
    • Leeds and Bradford
    • Liverpool
    • London
      • London Overground
      • Elizabeth line
    • Manchester
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Airport rail links and people mover systems in the United Kingdom
    Rail and metro links
    In service
    London airports
    • London City Airport
      • Docklands Light Railway
    • Gatwick Airport
      • Brighton Main Line
        • Gatwick Express
    • Heathrow Airport
      • Heathrow Express
      • Elizabeth line
      • Piccadilly line
    • Luton Airport
      • Thameslink
      • East Midlands Railway
        • Luton Airport Express
    • London Southend Airport
      • Shenfield–Southend line
    • London Stansted Airport
      • West Anglia Main Line
        • Stansted Express
    Airports outside London
    • Birmingham Airport
      • Rugby–Birmingham–Stafford line
    • Edinburgh Airport
      • Edinburgh Trams
    • Manchester Airport
      • Airport Line
      • Styal Line
    • Newcastle International Airport
      • Tyne & Wear Metro
    • RailAir
    • Southampton Airport
      • South West Main Line
    Under construction/proposed
    • Bristol Airport Rail Link
    • Glasgow Airport Rail Link
    • Heathrow Airport transport proposals
    • Leeds Bradford Airport Parkway railway station
    Defunct
    • Birmingham Maglev
    • Edinburgh Airport Rail Link
    • Heathrow Connect
    • TfL Rail
    Automated people movers
    In service
    • Birmingham Airport
      • Air-Rail Link
    • Gatwick Airport
      • Gatwick Airport Shuttle Transit
    • Heathrow Airport
      • Heathrow Terminal 5 Transit
      • Ultra (personal rapid transit)
    • Luton Airport
      • Luton DART
    • London Stansted Airport
      • Stansted Airport Transit System
    Under construction/proposed
    • Birmingham Airport
      • HS2 automated people mover
    • Rail transport in the United Kingdom
    • Air transport in the United Kingdom
    Retrieved from "https://teknopedia.ac.id/w/index.php?title=Elizabeth_line&oldid=1342649635"
    Categories:
    • Crossrail
    • Transport at Heathrow Airport
    • Airport rail links in London
    • London Rail
    • Railway lines in London
    • Regional rail in the United Kingdom
    • Railway operators in London
    • Underground commuter rail
    • Railway services introduced in 2022
    • 2022 establishments in England
    • Nicholas Grimshaw buildings
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