Programme update: Roxane McMeeken finds out where the 拢16bn Crossrail project is at

It will be the largest single addition to the London transport network for over 50 years 鈥 as long as it goes ahead. The 拢15.9bn mission to bore an east-west railway through London 鈥 some 118km of tracks 鈥 got under way in earnest this year, with completion due in 2017. Of course, the fear remains that the Tories might abandon the whole thing if they win next year鈥檚 general election, but the vocal support of London mayor Boris Johnson and the recent news that spending on the scheme will already have reached about 拢3bn by then are encouraging signs.

Rob Holden, chief executive of Crossrail, remains confident. He says:鈥漈he arguments for Crossrail are compelling: the UK needs better infrastructure and in particular better transport infrastructure. We have seen in the last 15 years or so the success of Thames Link, which links north and south London. We don鈥檛 have an equivalent west-east link, but Crossrail will do this.

鈥淲e acknowledge that any new government will review a project like this but we鈥檙e confident that when they do, they鈥檒l back it.鈥

But what kinds of team is Holden looking to work with? Tellingly he wants to see 鈥渁n awareness of the need to drive down costs鈥, including by simplifying designs. He adds that the headline 拢15.9bn cost is a maximum and he wants to spend far less: 鈥溌15.9bn cannot be the cost of the projects. I am not revealing the true amount I think we can do this project for because then contractors will think they can spend up to that amount rather than strain to keep costs down.鈥

That said, there is still work to be done 鈥 and work to be won 鈥 on the scheme. Here鈥檚 好色先生TV鈥檚 essential guide to the key contracts that have been signed so far and what is still up for grabs.

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