The launch of London’s Elizabeth Line in 2023 happened 13 years after shovels first hit the ground in Canary Wharf
One of the UK’s biggest and most complex infrastructure projects in decades, it’s now part of the fabric of the city.
Every day it connects people travelling across the capital and beyond, as passengers travel on state-of-the-art trains from Abbey Wood to Paddington in half the time it used to take.
The Elizabeth Line is cited by Transport for London as a big contributor to London and the UK economy’s post-pandemic. And data from the time of its launch indicates that around 3.5 million Elizabeth Line journeys are taken each week, making the network one of the most used railways in the country.
We’re proud to have supported the delivery of such a complex programme that’s making a positive impact.
A boost for communities
While new trains and faster journey times are no small thing, the ambitions behind the Crossrail project and now the Elizabeth Line are much bigger, including social and economic gains:
It’s a privilege to have been able to support the Crossrail project. And what a challenge. It’s the kind of programme we love getting behind.
Rob Scopes, Partner, Deloitte
Estimated addition to the UK economy
Additional journeys attracted each weekday
Approximate span of the Elizabeth Line
Journeys taken each week
The Elizabeth line is the most significant addition to our transport network in decades and has proven to be much more than just a new railway - providing a crucial economic boost to the whole country and playing a vital role in drawing people back on to London's public transport.
Sadiq Khan, Mayor of London
May 2023
Off to a flying start
Our association with Crossrail began in 2010, supporting its work to prepare the project for construction and meeting regulatory requirements. Later, in 2018, we had the opportunity to support the programme through to its finish and support a new direction for the project.
Rob Scopes, a partner in our major programmes practice, led this part of the engagement:
“It’s a privilege to have been able to support the Crossrail project. And what a challenge. It’s the kind of programme we love getting behind.
“The size of the Crossrail project was truly extraordinary. It created 42 kilometres of new track and tunnels under London, reaching from Berkshire to Essex, and ten new stations.
“One of the most complex parts of the build was integrating the new tunnels, tracks and stations with the existing transport system and seamlessly join with the already complex railway network.
“Deloitte was engaged by Crossrail when the project entered difficulty due largely to the lack of a transparency that meant overruns on budget and schedule weren’t spotted in time. Working with its leadership team, we helped to re-plan the programme and create the conditions for successful delivery. Remedial action included bringing together a stronger governance and a clear risk framework to give Crossrail’s leadership a clear view of the programme.
“It’s an example of being able to bring our firm’s multi-disciplinary skills and expertise where they can make a big difference. In this case, by supporting the public sector to deliver a project that really matters, that’s boosting the economy and connecting people.
“Seeing it get off to a flying start and continue to thrive is a good feeling. We’ll be watching with interest as it goes from strength to strength.”
What we did
Read more: Lessons from Crossrail
Programme Aerodynamics® - dealing with the unknown
A programme as complex as Crossrail calls for serious planning know how.
But dealing with things we don’t know is just as important. So is managing the realistic expectation that what can go wrong, sometimes does.
Designed to sit alongside traditional programme planning, Deloitte’s Programme Aerodynamics® builds in uncertainty as a key part of the plan. It helps programmes to constantly scan the horizon for likely, and unlikely, challenges using digital modelling to help.
And it enables teams to create strategies to tackle issues before they actually happen – rather than after, when they become bigger and harder to manage.
So rather than following an impossibly ‘perfect’ plan, programmes get comfortable with tightly managed strategies that evolve every day, acknowledge issues and fixes quickly, and bring in the right people and solutions to manage them.
Read more: Major Programmes that deliver for people
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