Airport does not support a new airport Piccadilly Line station
  
Plane landing at Heathrow. Picture: Ian Wylie
        Heathrow Airport have announced they will not support a new underground 
        station on the Piccadilly Line being built to cope with extra demand on 
        a new runway, if it secures the backing of Parliament next year.
        
        The costs of building a station, which would have served a new Terminal 
        6, north of the current terminals, would have been paid for by Transport 
        for London and not Heathrow, who have refused to date to pay for more 
        than £1.1bn of the total surface access costs associated with a 
        new runway. 
Transport for London estimate the cost of surface access upgrades would 
        total up to £18bn. The Airports Commission estimated the cost at 
        £5.5bn in 2015.
        
        Rob Barnstone, Coordinator for the No Third Runway Coalition said: “The 
        lack of a new train station on the Piccadilly Line, will be a slap in 
        the face for residents and those travelling to and from the airport, who 
        would experience a soar in demand but no extra capacity. This new revelation 
        just shows Heathrow are so desperate for a third runway, it will push 
        for it at almost any cost. As long as it doesn’t have to pay.”
        
        “These watered-down plans from Heathrow simply highlights their 
        worry about being able to deliver a third runway – the costs of 
        which is almost certain to balloon – as in the case of just about 
        every significant project the UK has ever seen, leaving UK taxpayers – 
        from Truro to Aberdeen, footing the bill.”
        
        “For residents, this simply adds to the uncertainty and lack of 
        clarity about the precise plans"
        
         
        July 29, 2017