Comment

05.07.19

The challenge of completing Crossrail

Source: RTM June/July

With a new plan now in place to deliver Crossrail, Hedley Ayres, National Audit Office manager, major projects and programmes, takes a look at how things went wrong.

As has been extensively reported, Crossrail is around two years late and, if all its £17.6bn of funding is used, could end up costing around £3bn more than expected.

In May this year, we produced a report setting out our findings on the causes of these cost increases and delays.

Perhaps unsurprisingly for a project of Crossrail’s scale and ambition, we found that many of the issues the programme has faced result from the programme’s complexity and Crossrail Ltd’s management of that complexity.

The scale of the engineering challenge on Crossrail is well known. It involves constructing around 26 miles of tunnels beneath London and 10 new, bespoke stations.

c610 line wide systems december 2018 315769 (1)

Much of the construction work is taking place in enclosed places beneath London which, of course, makes it more difficult to do.

The programme also requires software to be developed for a new fleet of trains that can switch between the three different signalling systems along the route.

Until delays to the opening date were announced in August last year, Crossrail was dominated by a fixed completion date for the central section of December 2018.

Delivering by December 2018 meant multiple activities ran in parallel. This approach meant that some work to install systems required to operate the railway would take place at the same time during the latter stages of the programme.

Crossrail Ltd decided to break the programme down into 36 main works contracts, increasing delivery and cost risks.

Although Crossrail Ltd employed two contractors as project management partners, Crossrail Ltd chose to fold those teams into its own project management effort.

Ultimately, contract costs increased by £2.5bn owing to design and contract changes.

We found that Crossrail Ltd did not have a sufficiently detailed delivery plan against which to track progress and that it only started to produce a detailed, realistic, bottom-up plan in late 2018.

Prior to this, from 2015, it had based its management of the programme on an aspirational plan designed to improve progress by suppliers, rather than to provide a reality check on overall progress.

We found that this plan did not adequately reflect the com-plex interdependencies across the programme.

Consequently, Crossrail Ltd had a gap in its understanding of delivery risks and the likelihood of meeting the December 2018 opening date.

18.04.19 custom house construction progress 321654

According to the latest forecasts form Crossrail, new Elizabeth line services on the central section of the new railway between Canary Wharf and Paddington should open sometime between the start of October 2020 and the end of March 2021.

At the time of writing, it is not clear when the full service and benefits to passengers will be delivered.

There is still a great deal of work to do. A particular challenge will be ensuring that contractors prioritise completion of Crossrail over other projects and opportunities.

Crossrail Ltd now needs space and time to complete and deliver its plans.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE AND MORE IN THE JUNE/JULY EDITION OF RTM.

Comments

There are no comments. Why not be the first?

Add your comment

related

rail technology magazine tv

more videos >

latest rail news

View all News

rail industry focus

Versatile coating system enhances Indestructible Paint rail industry role

12/08/2020Versatile coating system enhances Indestructible Paint rail industry role

A highly versatile and robust epoxy coating s... more >
Network Rail partners with Cycling UK for new initiative

03/08/2020Network Rail partners with Cycling UK for new initiative

Network Rail and Cycling UK have launched a p... more >

editor's comment

23/01/2018Out with the old...

Despite a few disappointing policy announcements, especially for the electrification aficionados amongst us, 2017 was, like Darren Caplan writes on page 20, a year generally marked by positive news for the rail industry. We polished off the iconic Ordsall Chord (p32), hit some solid milestones on Thameslink (p40), progressed on ambitious rolling stock orders (p16), and finally started moving forward on HS2 (p14) ‒ paving the way for a New Year with brand-new infrastructrure to... read more >

last word

Encouraging youngsters to be safe on the railway

Encouraging youngsters to be safe on the railway

This summer, Arriva Group's CrossCountry and the Scout Association joined to launch a new partnership to promote rail safety among young people. Chris Leech MBE, business community manager at the TOC, gives RTM an update on the innovative scheme. Recognising that young people are more likely to take a risk trespassing on railway tracks, C... more > more last word articles >

'the sleepers' daily blog

On the right track, Sulzer is awarded RISAS accreditation for Nottingham Service Centre

29/06/2020On the right track, Sulzer is awarded RISAS accreditation for Nottingham Service Centre

Following an independent audit, Sulzer’s Nottingham Service Centre has been accepted as part of the rail industry supplier approval scheme (RISAS). The accreditation reinforces the high-quality standards that are maintained by Sulzer’s network of independent repair facilities across the UK and further afield in its global network. ... more >
read more blog posts from 'the sleeper' >

interviews

Andrew Haines, CE of Network Rail, tells BBC News his organisation could issue future rail franchises

24/06/2019Andrew Haines, CE of Network Rail, tells BBC News his organisation could issue future rail franchises

Andrew Haines, the Chief Executive of Network Rail, has told the Today programme on Radio 4's BBC’s flagship news programme that he wo... more >
Advancing the rail industry with management degree apprenticeships

08/05/2019Advancing the rail industry with management degree apprenticeships

In answering the pressing questions of how current and future generations of managers can provide solutions to high-profile infrastructure projec... more >
Women in rail - is the industry on the right track?

12/03/2019Women in rail - is the industry on the right track?

RTM sits down with Samantha Smith, sole female member of the TransPennine Route Upgrade Alliance Leadership Team, to find out more about encourag... more >
TfN Strategic Transport Plan: not just for transport's sake

22/01/2019TfN Strategic Transport Plan: not just for transport's sake

Peter Molyneux, Transport for the North’s (TfN’s) strategic roads director, has been leading on the development of the seven economic... more >