Technical

Constructing Barking’s new steel railway viaduct

The steel viaduct spans the rail line and freight yard
Connecting a new riverside development meant traversing a number of significant infrastructure assets including rail lines, a freight yard, HS1 tunnels, roads and a waterway. The solution is a 1.5km-long viaduct using steel to minimise disruption to these assets. Martin Cooper reports.

With planning permission for up to 10,800 new homes, along with numerous healthcare, shopping, community and leisure facilities, Barking Riverside is currently east London’s largest housing-led mixed-use development.

Located on the site of a former coal-fired power station that closed in 1981, the former brownfield area is not best served by public transport and in order for the new development to realise its full potential a dedicated railway extension and station are being built.

The extension will add 4.5km to the London Overground network, extending the Gospel Oak line from Barking to a new elevated Barking Riverside terminus, which will be situated in the main square of the development. On completion, it will be capable of operating four trains per hour and provide residents with a vital transport link to the rest of the capital and beyond.

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