Thames Hub Airport

Thames Hub Airport was a proposed platform-based hub airport located on the Isle of Grain in the Thames Estuary in Kent, whose development has been led by the architect Lord Foster. The idea for the airport was originally included within the Thames Hub integrated infrastructure vision, and the idea of some kind of airport in the Thames Estuary has been discussed since the 1970s.

The case for developing the airport as a solution to the question of how the United Kingdom can maintain its global hub aviation status was submitted, alongside many other solutions, to the UK’s Airports Commission in July 2013 by Foster+Partners. In December 2013 the Commission announced its shortlist of proposals for expanding Britain's airports. The Thames Estuary concept was not included on the initial shortlist,[1] but the Commission said it would undertake further study of the Isle of Grain option in the first half of 2014.[2]

In September 2014 the Committee concluded that the Thames Hub proposal had "substantial disadvantages that collectively outweighed its potential benefits and that it therefore did not represent a credible option for shortlisting". They described it as "unfeasibly expensive, highly problematic in environmental terms and would be hugely disruptive for many businesses and communities". It remained off the shortlist.[3]

Background

Expansion of London’s airports

Expanding the capacity of London's airports to meet growing demand is an issue that successive governments have failed to address since the 1950s. In recent years it has been widely claimed that, to provide the level of connectivity that the UK and London require to maintain their global hub status, the capital requires additional hub airport capacity. Proponents of this idea, such as business lobby groups and the aviation industry, believe that further expansion of London's point-to-point airports, such as Gatwick and Stansted, would not address London's claimed need for extra hub capacity. However, some transport experts and many politicians and organisations dispute the need for a single huge hub.

London's largest and only hub airport, Heathrow, has been operating at almost full capacity since 1993. The two-runway airport is less than 20 miles west of Central London and is completely surrounded by urban development, leaving no room to build additional runways to cater for additional air passenger demand. Due to the UK's prevailing southwesterly winds, aircraft predominately approach Heathrow over Central London. As a result, over 750,000 people live within the 55 dB aircraft noise contour and suffer from aircraft noise pollution.

Thames Estuary Airport

A proposed solution to the need to expand London's hub airport capacity, which has been studied on a number of occasions, is to build a new hub airport in the Thames Estuary. Following the work of the Roskill Commission, in 1973 the Maplin Airport Development Act was passed to enable an airport to be built at Maplin Sands. However the project was cancelled in 1974.

In 2009, London Mayor Boris Johnson announced his support for a proposed new offshore airport in the Thames Estuary at Shivering Sands that had been developed by former Crossrail chairman Doug Oakervee. At the time, the idea of an estuary airport was lampooned by the press.

Thames Hub integrated infrastructure vision

In November 2011 Lord Foster launched the concept of the Thames Hub integrated infrastructure vision – an integrated infrastructure development in the Thames Estuary which included a high-speed rail line, a combined Thames road and rail crossing and a flood protection barrier incorporating Renewable energy generation#Hydropower renewable energy generation, and a new 150 million passenger hub airport.[4]

Proposal

The Thames Hub Airport would have been built on a platform, partly in the Thames Estuary but attached to the land, on the Isle of Grain in Kent. It would have had four runways, located as two parallel pairs, and would have had a handling capacity of 110 million passengers per annum (mppa), expandable to 150 mppa.

Advantages

  • Significant reduction in the number of people impacted by noise because aircraft would predominantly approach the airport over water
  • 24-hour operation (not possible at Heathrow)
  • Reduced air-pollution impacts - aircraft emissions disperse over water
  • Opportunity to redevelop the Heathrow site for housing and a new commercial centre

Challenges

  • Bird strike: 300,000 birds that breed along the flight path.
  • Relocation of airport staff and businesses that are currently located around Heathrow
  • Dealing with the wreck of the SS Richard Montgomery with its 1,400 tonnes of explosives, just off the Nore
  • Working around the natural gas terminals that import and temporarily store 20% of the UK's natural gas
  • Fitting another airport in this crowded airspace. On 13 April 2012, Richard Deakin, the head of National Air Traffic Services, commented that "the very worst spot you could put an airport is just about here". He continued, "We’re a little surprised that none of the architects thought it worthwhile to have a little chat."[5]
  • Due to the proximity to water in a temperate climate, fog could be an issue which reduces the capacity for aircraft to land. The Met Office provided a study that stated there would be three times as much fog than at London Heathrow over the course of the year.[6]

Reaction

Boris Johnson, the previous Mayor of London, was the main supporter of a new airport in the Thames Estuary.

Farrells, another London architecture firm, advocates expanding Gatwick Airport instead, providing a second runway and reconstructing the passenger terminal. Sir Terry Farrell claims this could be "the world’s most efficient two-runway airport", a quicker and cheaper solution, and that it would "turbocharge" the economy of South London.[7][8] Gatwick Airport set up a website called "Gatwick Obviously" to promote this idea, although a 1979 legal agreement with West Sussex County Council prohibits construction of a new runway before 2019.[9]

gollark: "committed a crime under my proposed law" doesn't mean "committed a crime".
gollark: *Did* they? I don't think it's illegal to accidentally introduce bugs.
gollark: Punishing someone after they do a thing doesn't mean that thing didn't happen, just makes other people (probably) want to do it less. People don't *want* exploits in their software, generally. It might make people more cautious, but I don't think it's worth the downsides.
gollark: Anyway, you compare it to the medical field, but that... obviously works very differently, and the licensing thing is a bit problematic there too.
gollark: I mean, *some* of them would be prevented using not-C, obviously some are logic errors of some kind and wouldn't.

References

  1. "Airports Commission reveals expansion shortlist". BBC News. 17 December 2013.
  2. "Expanding Britain's airports: Heathrow, Gatwick shortlisted". Channel 4 News. 17 December 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  3. "Final Report" (PDF). Airports Commission. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  4. "Thames Hub: An integrated vision for Britain". Foster+Partners, Halcrow, Volterra. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  5. "Proposed Thames Hub airport in 'very worst spot' say air traffic controllers". The Guardian. 13 April 2012.
  6. "Thames Estuary 'three times more foggy' than Heathrow". BBC News. 22 August 2012.
  7. Hopkirk, Elizabeth (29 June 2015). "Farrell unveils new Gatwick images as campaign ramps up". Building Design.
  8. "Gatwick Airport expansion images released". BBC News. 26 June 2015.
  9. "Expanded Gatwick best for UK growth and London regeneration". Gatwick Airport. 25 March 2014. Archived from the original on 5 April 2016.

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