Findings back case for putting projects in the capital outside the 鈥榩olitical cycle鈥 

More than half of Londoners would welcome more private sector involvement in building the capital鈥檚 infrastructure, according to a new report from Aecom.

As major infrastructure schemes such as Crossrail get caught up in lengthy and costly delays, a survey for found that more than half, or 57%, of respondents wanted greater private firm involvement in schemes, while two thirds believed those in power weren鈥檛 making the right decisions concerning which projects to fund.

Crossrail

The consultant said its findings meant the government should shift major projects beyond the political cycle 鈥渁nd create the right business environment to attract private investment and get key schemes off the ground鈥.

More than half of respondents in the capital believed city officials took a short-term view of infrastructure planning and 59% said large-scale transportation projects in the capital were usually delivered late.

Issues with public transport dominated Londoners鈥 concerns, with nearly a quarter (23%) of those who use it as their primary means of travel struggling to get to their destination on time, despite nearly three quarter (70%) using as their main mode of transport.

Colin Wood, Aecom鈥檚 chief executive of civil infrastructure, EMEA, said government should be buoyed by the apparent public support for more private sector involvement in infrastructure.

鈥淟ondon, along with the rest of the UK, has an impressive pipeline of projects, but private finance is required to fill the funding gap and secure the delivery of much-needed schemes,鈥 he said.

As the capital heads towards its next mayoral election Wood said the large proportion of respondents that saw too many policy shifts as a result of changes to elected officials sent a clear message around the need to take the politics out of infrastructure decision-making where possible.