16 April 2006 - The London Underground has said
that it will press ahead with plans to install
mobile phone masts underground even though many
fear that doing so will provide terrorists with a new way of detonating
bombs on the system.
The LU said that it will be launching a feasibility study this month
that will look at setting up
mobile phone transmitters at four central-London Tube
stations.
An LU spokesman said the feasibility study, due to last 2 months, will
look at the space, power and infrastructure implications of installing
mobile phone masts in stations.
The plans will see a system up and running by 2008.
The LU spokesman said: "The invitation to tender could potentially be
issued at the beginning of 2007, with the contract being awarded in
late-2007.
Mobile phone services could then be available to
Tube passengers on Underground stations from the summer of 2008".
Originally announced in March 2005, the London Underground plans on
making it possible for travellers to use their mobile phones on the
concourse, platform and ticket halls, and hopes that users of the
network will be able to use their journey time watching television or
surfing the Internet.
"We know that many Londoners would like the convenience of being able
to use their mobile phones at Tube stations throughout the Underground
network."
"We also want to see how the technology could be taken even further,
for instance wireless internet so passengers could receive
up-to-the-minute travel information via their
laptop or mobile phone", a LU spokesman said last
year.
Although a mobile phone signal can be got on around 55 per cent of the
current network some passengers have fears, not of terrorist actions,
but of the annoyance of other passengers using their phones.
"I hope they have quiet carriages like overland trains, it would be a
nightmare stuck on the Waterloo and City Line with hundreds of phones
going off at once", passenger Frances Barber outside Waterloo station
told Pocket-lint.
It's not the first time the London Underground has toyed with the idea
of allowing people to use their phones underground.
In the 1980s Hutchinson, the now owner of 3 the 3G network, once ran
the Rabbit base stations.
Subscribers to the service could make mobile calls when they were
within 100 metres of a Rabbit transmitter, and hence use their phone
underground.
None have survived to the present day. All that remains of Rabbit are a
few lonely signs in places such as New Barnet and Brighton stations.