The Central London Grid will be a mixture of Quietways and Superhighways in the City and West End.

Superhighways are mostly segregated and on main roads, while Quietways, will be lower-intervention and mainly on streets with less traffic.

Quietways

The Central London Grid will be a mixture of Quietways and Superhighways in the City and West End.

Superhighways are mostly segregated and on main roads, while Quietways, will be lower-intervention and mainly on streets with less traffic.

Transport for London, in partnership with seven London boroughs, the City of London, the Greater London Authority, the Canal and River Trust and The Royal Parks, has developed proposed routes for the Central London Grid.

Comments Closed on the 14th February, and you can follow how we arrived at those in the blog roll further down this page.

  • TfL will continue to develop route proposals with their delivery partners
  • A revised map of the Grid will be published in 2014
  • Boroughs will consult locally once designs are developed
  • The first improvements will be delivered in 2014

You can check out the full Consultation Documents central-london-grid-map and central-london-grid-map-with-borough-boundaries together with central-london-grid and of course the central-london-grid-faqs

As we work through the Local Borough Consultation you can follow the proposals using the menu on the right, from Videos of the proposed routes, our interventions map and make your own comments.

 Blog Roll

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