Initial design and phase 1 consultation Following the Thames Tideway Strategic Study,
Thames Water consulted with relevant authorities to get feedback from stakeholders who would potentially be affected by the construction of the Thames Tideway Tunnel. Thames Water sought feedback on the proposed tunnel routes and potential locations of construction sites. The three tunnel routes, as well as the shortlist of sites, were then put out for consultation between September 2010 and January 2011. In total 2,389 feedback forms (both online and hard copy), 480 pieces of correspondence and five petitions were received. In response to the comments received, changes and improvements to some of the sites, including the potential use of alternative sites and alternative technical solutions, were considered. Based on this a round of interim engagement took place from March to August 2011. and invited to attend drop-in sessions to pose questions and gain a better understanding of the project. In total ten two-day sessions and one community liaison meeting were held. These were attended by over 800 people. In all 168 comment cards and 147 pieces of site specific correspondence were received and considered. when local authorities, land owners, local businesses and communities were consulted on: • The need for the project and whether a tunnel was the most appropriate solution • The preferred tunnel route (including the detailed alignment of the tunnel) • Preferred sites and permanent works (taking into account the feedback received from the first phase of consultation such as the move from greenfield to brownfield sites) • Detailed proposals for the preferred sites (again taking into account feedback from the phase one consultation) • The effects the project would have (as outlined in the preliminary environmental information report) A total of 1,374 feedback forms (online and hard copy), 4,636 pieces of correspondence and nine petitions were received. •
Hammersmith pumping station – CSO interception and connection tunnel drive site •
Putney Embankment foreshore – CSO interception and connection tunnel drive site • Carnwath Road riverside – main tunnel drive and reception and connection tunnel reception site •
Dormay Street CSO – interception and connection tunnel drive site •
King George's Park – CSO and connection tunnel reception site •
Falconbrook pumping station – CSO and connection tunnel drive site •
Cremorne Wharf Depot – CSO interception and connection tunnel drive site •
Chelsea Embankment foreshore – CSO interception and connection tunnel drive site •
Kirtling Street – main tunnel double drive site •
Heathwall pumping station – CSO interception and connection tunnel drive site •
Albert Embankment foreshore – CSO interception and connection tunnel drive site •
Victoria Embankment foreshore – CSO interception and connection tunnel drive site •
Blackfriars Bridge foreshore – CSO interception site •
Shad Thames pumping station – system modification site • Chambers Wharf – main tunnel drive and reception site • Earl pumping station – CSO interception site •
Deptford Church Street – CSO interception site •
Greenwich pumping station – CSO interception and connection tunnel drive site •
King Edward Memorial Park – CSO interception site • Bekesbourne Street – system modification site •
Abbey Mills pumping station – main tunnel reception site
Proposed design and construction To build the Thames Tideway Tunnel, four
tunnel boring machines (TBMs) were needed to excavate the main tunnel plus two others for smaller connection tunnels. It also required two types of construction sites: main tunnel sites, where the TBM was either launched or received, and CSO sites, where interception tunnels and a connection culvert were built to connect the existing sewer to the new tunnel. Construction of the shafts at the CSO sites, to transfer flows from the existing sewer to the tunnel, would vary depending on the depth, the amount of flow they need to carry and the geology. The shaft would be a concrete cylinder with an internal diameter of and deep. Ventilation structures at CSO sites to allow air in and out of the shaft were also required. Construction at these sites was expected to take between 2½ and 3½ years and once complete each site would be landscaped. In 2017, the public voted on a short-list of 17 to name the six TBMs. They were named after female pioneers of their fields linked to where each began to dig. One began tunnelling from
Fulham in 2018, the
Rachel Parsons, after the engineer and advocate for women's employment rights, who set up the first women-only engineering company in Fulham. The others were cryobiologist
Audrey 'Ursula' Smith and suffragist
Millicent Fawcett for the Central area and suffragist
Charlotte Despard for the Frogmore Connection Tunnel from Wandsworth to Fulham. The TBM for the east section from Bermondsey was named after doctor
Selina Fox who set up Bermondsey Medical Mission for Southwark's poor and disadvantaged residents. The machine for the Greenwich Connection Tunnel was named after
Annie Scott Dill Russell, the first female scientist to work at the
Greenwich Observatory.
Planning application In October 2012, the deadline of the tunnels' Section 48 consultation closed. This lasted 12 weeks and was the last opportunity for the public to have their say on the updated proposal. The Application for Development Consentfor the final, detailed plan for the constructionwas delivered to the
Planning Inspectorate on 28 February 2013. The Inspectorate then had 28 days to decide whether the application was valid and whether the consultation undertaken was adequate. On 27 March 2013, it was decided that the application was valid and that Thames Water's consultation for the project had been adequate. All the application documents were made available in their own section of the Planning Inspectorate's National Infrastructure website. Thames Water also made the documents available for scrutiny at six public places along the route, three either side of the river. On 3 June 2013, it was announced that the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government had appointed inspectors Jan Bessell, Libby Gawith, Emrys Parry, Andrew Phillipson and David Prentis as the examining authority to consider any matters arising. As part of this process, interested parties were able to make representations. A preliminary meeting, open to those who had registered an interest, began on 12 September 2013 at the
Barbican Centre. Chaired by the
Planning Inspectorate, this determined how the examination would be carried out, including consideration of more detailed hearings on site-specific matters, as well as project-wide issues. While the inspectors gave a commitment to consider the alternatives to the tunnel, in the event they were not reviewed as part of the examination. Government legislation and the NPSWW required that all efforts be made to reduce carbon emissions in new projects, but the examiners did not manage to study this issue. Once the Inspectorate concluded its examination of the application, a recommendation on whether or not to issue a development consent order would be submitted to ministers to make the final decision.
Planning acceptance On 12 September 2014, the UK Government approved the plans, overriding some of the findings of the Planning Inspectorate. The decision gave rise to at least three
judicial reviews. ==Funding and delivery==