NEWS
Competition seeks architects to design a High Line for London
POSTED 17 Dec 2015 . BY Kim Megson
The proposed public realm would occupy a 1km stretch of a line once used to transport coal between two train stations in Peckham, south-east London Credit: Peckham Coal Line
Another day, another plan for an elevated public park inspired by New York’s High Line.

Following in the footsteps of Singapore, Seoul and Sydney, a community group in London has now completed a design brief for an elevated green space following one of the city’s disused railway lines.

Named the Peckham Coal Line, the proposed public realm would occupy a 900m (1km) stretch of a line once used to transport coal between two train stations in Peckham, south-east London. The planned park consists of green-lined pedestrian and cycle routes running through Victorian brick viaducts before dropping down to a little-used nature reserve.

The Friends of the Peckham Coal Line (FPCL) are behind the plans, which are being developed in consultation with Southwark Council, The Greater London Authority and Network Rail – which owns most of the land and railway.

In a statement issued on their website, FPCL said: “The Coal Line would allow us to discover local history in the atmospheric shadow of grand old Victorian arches and factories with park views towards the city skyscrapers and beyond helping contextualise Peckham geographically and historically.

“This will transform Peckham. It will turn disused space into a source of civic pride that brings benefits to health, culture and business and celebrates Peckham’s industrial past.”

The group has successfully crowdfunded £70,000 (US$104,000, €96,200) to create a design and feasibility brief for the project. This is being made available to architects, engineers and landscape designers, who have been invited to team up and submit their technical vision for the Peckham Coal Line via an open tender.

All entrants must have experience working with railway infrastructure, solving technically difficult engineering situations and creating designs relating to public realm within both new and existing structures.

The deadline for submissions is 29 January 2016.

FPCL hopes the Peckham Coal Line can be integrated into the ongoing £15m (US$22.3m, €20.6m) regeneration of Peckham Rye station, which is committed to improving access to the station, creating more leisure facilities and increasing the public realm in the surrounding area.

Since fully opening in 2014, New York’s High Line – built on an elevated section of a disused railway in Manhattan – has been a huge success, attracting millions of visitors every year.

The project – designed by landscape firm James Corner Field Operations, architects Diller Scofidio + Renfro and Dutch designer Piet Oudolf – was itself inspired by the Promenade Plantée in Paris, which opened in 1993.

International architecture firm Arup recently published a report declaring city planners around the world must do more to create green urban environments that promote the health and wellbeing.

The report called for unused transport links, bridges and obsolete infrastructure to be transformed into natural habitats for wildlife and spaces for human enjoyment.
The planned park consists of green-lined pedestrian and cycle routes running through Victorian brick viaducts before dropping down to a little-used nature reserve Credit: Peckham Coal Line
PROJECT PROFILE:

The Goods Line
The first phase of Sydney’s new linear park, inspired by New York’s High Line, has opened to the public for the first time.


RELATED STORIES
  Nikken Sekkei to masterplan Singapore's High Line-inspired rail corridor


A design team led by Nikken Sekkei have won an international competition to develop a 24km (15m) of railway track stretching the length of Singapore.
  First phase of Sydney's Goods Line opens to the public


The first phase of Sydney’s new linear park, inspired by New York’s High Line, has opened to the public for the first time.
  Five teams shortlisted for Singapore's Rail Corridor redevelopment


Following the phenomenal success of New York’s High Line – a disused railway transformed into a public greenway – architects across the world have been keen to get their hands on similar projects, with cities and countries keen to capitalise on the unused space. The Singaporean government is the latest to get involved, shortlisting five architects to develop a feasible plan for 24km (15m) of track spanning the length of Singapore from north to south.
  Bjarke Ingels, Renzo Piano and other top architects take part in Lego art project at New York’s High Line


New York has seen ten ambitious new buildings from a range of top architecture firms spring up at the same time – with the public given free reign to add to, amend or otherwise improve on them.
 


CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS
 
Leisure Management - Competition seeks architects to design a High Line for London...
09 Jun 2026 Leisure Management: daily news and jobs
 
 
HOME
JOBS
NEWS
FEATURES
PRODUCTS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTION
PRINT SUBSCRIPTION
ADVERTISE
CONTACT US
Sign up for FREE ezine
Latest news

17 Dec 2015

Competition seeks architects to design a High Line for London
BY Kim Megson

The proposed public realm would occupy a 1km stretch of a line once used to transport coal between two train stations in Peckham, south-east London

The proposed public realm would occupy a 1km stretch of a line once used to transport coal between two train stations in Peckham, south-east London
photo: Peckham Coal Line

Another day, another plan for an elevated public park inspired by New York’s High Line.

Following in the footsteps of Singapore, Seoul and Sydney, a community group in London has now completed a design brief for an elevated green space following one of the city’s disused railway lines.

Named the Peckham Coal Line, the proposed public realm would occupy a 900m (1km) stretch of a line once used to transport coal between two train stations in Peckham, south-east London. The planned park consists of green-lined pedestrian and cycle routes running through Victorian brick viaducts before dropping down to a little-used nature reserve.

The Friends of the Peckham Coal Line (FPCL) are behind the plans, which are being developed in consultation with Southwark Council, The Greater London Authority and Network Rail – which owns most of the land and railway.

In a statement issued on their website, FPCL said: “The Coal Line would allow us to discover local history in the atmospheric shadow of grand old Victorian arches and factories with park views towards the city skyscrapers and beyond helping contextualise Peckham geographically and historically.

“This will transform Peckham. It will turn disused space into a source of civic pride that brings benefits to health, culture and business and celebrates Peckham’s industrial past.”

The group has successfully crowdfunded £70,000 (US$104,000, €96,200) to create a design and feasibility brief for the project. This is being made available to architects, engineers and landscape designers, who have been invited to team up and submit their technical vision for the Peckham Coal Line via an open tender.

All entrants must have experience working with railway infrastructure, solving technically difficult engineering situations and creating designs relating to public realm within both new and existing structures.

The deadline for submissions is 29 January 2016.

FPCL hopes the Peckham Coal Line can be integrated into the ongoing £15m (US$22.3m, €20.6m) regeneration of Peckham Rye station, which is committed to improving access to the station, creating more leisure facilities and increasing the public realm in the surrounding area.

Since fully opening in 2014, New York’s High Line – built on an elevated section of a disused railway in Manhattan – has been a huge success, attracting millions of visitors every year.

The project – designed by landscape firm James Corner Field Operations, architects Diller Scofidio + Renfro and Dutch designer Piet Oudolf – was itself inspired by the Promenade Plantée in Paris, which opened in 1993.

International architecture firm Arup recently published a report declaring city planners around the world must do more to create green urban environments that promote the health and wellbeing.

The report called for unused transport links, bridges and obsolete infrastructure to be transformed into natural habitats for wildlife and spaces for human enjoyment.



Connect with
Leisure Management
Magazine:
View issue contents
Sign up:
Instant Alerts/zines

Print edition
 

News headlines
Hoshino Resorts combats summer heat with medically-supervised cool bathing programme for KAI onsen
Hoshino Resorts combats summer heat with medically-supervised cool bathing programme for KAI onsen   09 Jun 2026

Hoshino Resorts has developed a “Cool-down onsen soak” programme at properties with Japanese onsen facilities – those within the company’s KAI .... more>>

Peloton signals potential move into reformer Pilates with Skop acquisition
Peloton signals potential move into reformer Pilates with Skop acquisition   09 Jun 2026

Peloton has made the strategic acquisition of Pilates start-up, Skōp, to support the expansion of its strength ecosystem.

....
more>>
Rainforest immersion and mindfulness are on offer at The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, for Global Wellness Day
Rainforest immersion and mindfulness are on offer at The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, for Global Wellness Day   09 Jun 2026

The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, in Malaysia, has revealed a schedule for Global Wellness Day (GWD) that includes guided rainforest walks, mindful .... more>>

Crunch Fitness creates more affordable reformer Pilates concept
Crunch Fitness creates more affordable reformer Pilates concept   09 Jun 2026

Crunch Fitness has announced the launch of Crunch Reform Pilates – its own reformer concept designed to bring this fast growing, but rather .... more>>

As the 20th State of the Industry Report is released, LeisureDB rebrands to Evolve
As the 20th State of the Industry Report is released, LeisureDB rebrands to Evolve   08 Jun 2026

The 20th State of the Industry Report from LeisureDB has revealed a resilient, expanding and competitive sector, the importance of .... more>>

Longevitix launches AI-powered platform to deliver longevity medicine at scale
Longevitix launches AI-powered platform to deliver longevity medicine at scale   08 Jun 2026

Longevitix, a clinical platform for preventive and longevity medicine, has launched its AI-powered intelligence system to help physicians deliver .... more>>

Company profile


IndigoFitness

At IndigoFitness, we create intelligent training spaces that elevate fitness facilities across industries. With nearly three decades of experience and hundreds of successful installations, we understand that no two spaces, or clients are the same.

View full profile>>

Catalogue gallery


Featured Supplier

CoverMe extends matching service to personal training, rewriting how members and personal trainers connect

CoverMe extends matching service to personal training, rewriting how members and personal trainers connect

CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right client in under 10 seconds. More>>




in this issue

• Virgin gets right to wipe out rent arrears
• Fitness industry mourns passing of Jan Spaticchia
• STA offers mindfulness resources



Latest jobs

Jobs Search



Membership Advisor
Salary: Competitive salary plus commission & benefits
Location: Market Rasen
Company: Everyone Active
Customer Service Advisor
Salary: Competitive
Location: Market Rasen
Company: Everyone Active
GP Exercise Referral Instructor
Salary: £33,000pa + benefits
Location: Harrow
Company: Everyone Active
Diary dates
Powered by leisurediary.com

09-11 Jun 2026

World Sauna Forum 2026

Savutuvan Apaja, Haapaniemi, Finland







Published by Leisure Media Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385 | Contact us | About us | © Cybertrek Ltd