Railway bosses confirm station will only be ready some time after rest on central section of line

Crossrail chair Tony Meggs has said delays to the 拢19bn railway鈥檚 Bond Street station are in part down to Costain and Skanska and their 鈥渓ess than perfect performance鈥 on the job.

The problem station, which is the only terminus on the line which is not ready for the next stage of testing, was being built by the pair before the two firms pulled out of the job in a mutual agreement with Crossrail two months ago.

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Until June, Bond Street was being built by a Costain/Skanska joint venture

A spokesperson for the joint venture, known as CSJV, said at the time that the job had been 鈥渦niquely affected by the covid-19 crisis鈥 due to the number of workers required on site to complete the station.

It was backed up by a spokesman for Crossrail, who said that the change had come about following a covid-19 review.

But in a grilling by the All-Party Parliamentary Rail Group, which consists of MPs and Lords from across parliament, Meggs admitted that one of the reasons for the delays to the beleaguered station was 鈥渢o be frank, less than perfect contractor performance鈥.

He told the committee: There are three issues on Bond Street. One is that it was late starting because all of the tunnelling that allowed it to begin was itself late. Secondly, for some reason it is a very complex design. For technical reasons there is complexity in the station and the design of the station. Thirdly, and to be frank, less than perfect contractor performance on that station. 

鈥淲e have engineered the railway and the handover process as such that Bond Street itself cannot hold up the station completion process because we didn鈥檛 want any single station to hold up the railway. 

鈥淭he way this railway was designed was that nothing could open until everything was open. We have redesigned that such that we can open the central section without Bond Street if we need to, if it is not ready in time. Indeed, that is also true for other stations as well.鈥

Earlier in the same session, Crossrail deputy chair Nick Raynsford admitted it was 鈥渘ot feasible鈥 that Bond Street will open at the same time as the line鈥檚 other central London stations, which are currently due to begin passenger services in the first half of 2022.

He told the committee: 鈥淸It] has still got a long way to go and we do not think at the moment that it is going to be feasible to open Bond Street station at the same time as the others.鈥

But he added that Crossrail bosses expect the station to be at a state where trial running of trains can begin early next year.

The admission follows a letter sent to London Assembly transport committee chair Alison Moore earlier this month by Crossrail chief executive Mark Wild which revealed that there is 鈥渁 possibility鈥 that the line鈥檚 central section would open without Bond Street.

Crossrail had warned in November last year that the station would not open with the rest of the line, before Wild announced later that month that it was 鈥渋ncreasingly likely鈥 the station would be ready in time.

In August Crossrail said the project would be 拢1.1bn over budget and completed up to three and a half years late.