Railway lines in south London wound over the docks and each other on
long viaducts of brick arches.
London Bridge railway station was opened in 1836 as a terminus for the
London and Greenwich Railway, and remodelled several times before 1850 to accommodate more railway companies;
London and Croydon Railway and
London and Brighton Railway to the south, and
South Eastern Railway to the north. The London and Croydon Railway and South Eastern Railway constructed a branchline and rival passenger terminal at
Bricklayers Arms railway station in 1842 and closed it in 1845. This required a flat junction, on the viaduct, which was controlled by the first ever
signal box. The signals and points contained some elements of
interlocking. The first example of a
flying junction in the United Kingdom was the
Weaver Junction that opened on 13 November 1881. Here the grade separation was used to raise one track over the oncoming mainline on a
double junction. In 2000, commuter services south of Thames were using the legacy tracks of a century earlier. map of lines around the approaches to
London Bridge, including the western end of the Greenwich line
Construction history Construction of the dive-under was complicated as existing services had to be maintained through the construction. Work commenced during 2013, with bridge-strengthening works near London Bridge station completed in June 2013. The first track was used for services from 27 December 2016, two new lines for SouthEastern traffic came into service after the August bank holiday. The overall programme of work was scheduled to be completed in January 2018. branch • 2011 the
Borough Market viaduct was completed, doubling the available tracks to the west of London Bridge station, it was commissioned in January 2016. • Demolish Bricklayers Arms branch viaduct and rebuild to new profile in preparation for future use. • Restricted timetable imposed • Southeastern lines 3 & 4 were taken out of use and realigned. These were temporarily resignalled as lines 5 & 6, and used while lines 5 & 6 were taken out. • Dive downs constructed. Side walls constructed. Piling. • The dive-under box was built. This took a year to complete. • Trackbed for the terminating Brighton slow downline laid and tested, and is operational on 27 December 2016 giving 3 line running capacity. • Later, in August 2017, the Charing Cross tracks were diverted to their new permanent route using the dive-under, freeing the rest of the Southeastern part of the site for the installation of the final layout during 2018. At the same time work preparation was made for the new Thameslink dedicated tracks, ready to open the new through route via London Bridge. • In January 2018 the new Thameslink London Bridge route opens. In December 2018, the timetable made its annual change. ==Description==