The Docklands historically had poor transport connections. This was addressed by the LDDC with the construction of the
Docklands Light Railway (DLR), which connected the Docklands with the city. According to Transport for London, the owner of the project, it was a remarkably inexpensive development, costing only £77 million in its first phase, as it relied on reusing disused railway infrastructure and derelict land for much of its length. The LDDC originally requested a full
London Underground line, but the Government refused to fund it. The LDDC also built the
Limehouse Link tunnel, a
cut and cover road tunnel linking the Isle of Dogs to
The Highway (the A1203 road) at a cost of over £150 million per kilometre, one of the most expensive stretches of road ever built. The LDDC also contributed to the development of
London City Airport (
IATA airport code LCY), opened in October 1987 on the spine of the
Royal Docks. The London Underground's
Jubilee line was extended eastwards in 1999; it now serves Rotherhithe/
Surrey Quays at
Canada Water station, the Isle of Dogs at
Canary Wharf tube station,
Greenwich at
North Greenwich tube station and the nearby Royal Docks at
Canning Town station. The DLR was extended in 1994 to serve much of the Royal Docks area when the
Beckton branch was opened. The Isle of Dogs branch was extended further south, and in 1999 it began serving Greenwich town centre—including the
Cutty Sark museum—
Deptford and finally
Lewisham. In 2005, a new branch of the DLR opened from Canning Town to serve what used to be the eastern terminus of the
North London Line, including a station at
London City Airport. It was then further extended to
Woolwich Arsenal in 2009.
Future developments Further development projects are being proposed and put into practice within the London Dockland area, such as: • Extensions of the DLR, possibly to
Dagenham. • Further development of
Canada Water. • Redevelopment of
Blackwall Basin and
Wood Wharf, east of Canary Wharf. • New skyscrapers to be built at Canary Wharf, including the
Riverside South towers, the
Heron Quays West double-skyscraper development and the
North Quay project, consisting of three towers. In the early 21st century, redevelopment is spreading into the more suburban parts of east and southeast London, and into the parts of the counties of
Kent and
Essex that abut the
Thames Estuary. See
Thames Gateway and
Lower Lea Valley for further information on this trend.
Docklands series buses History The numbers of several
London Buses routes are prefixed
D for Docklands; all run on the north bank of the River Thames as part of the London bus network, and act as feeder buses to the DLR. The
D network was developed in the early stages of Docklands redevelopment; it was originally much larger, but as transport rapidly improved across east London, the need for the
D routes reduced. Today only four remain, running primarily in
Tower Hamlets and briefly into
Newham and
Hackney.
Stagecoach London operate routes D6, D7 and D8, and
Blue Triangle operate route D3. ==21st century==