It has been given a fairly large amount of coverage, with criticism that it does not link with Heathrow.
Travel times would be reduced :-
London to Birmingham would be about 50 minutes (not 90 minutes).
Leeds, Sheffield, Manchester could be within 80 minutes of London (up to 130 minutes).
Scotland times would reduce from approx 4.5 hours to 3.5 hours (because only part of the journey would be at higher speeds, existing tracks would be used north of Manchester/ Yorkshire for West or East coast lines, respectively.
Euston station would need to be rebuilt, and while I have not taken in the full details, it looks like the Ibis (one of the nearby hotels) might need to be demolished for it to all fit in...
The RAC Foundation, a motoring think tank, is critical of the decision that no new motorways would be built.
There are also questions over whether / how much freight will go by rail - and considering how there have always been problems about taking larger freight containers from the continent through the older sections of the UK railways, it doesn't make sense to keep these new tracks for passengers only.
So - what do you think - will the money proposed (30 billion estimate at present, perhaps pushed up by the time it comes to start building, plus money for inquiries, compulsory purchase, etc) be worth spending on helping a minority get to/from London a bit faster ?
I have not added links to this - sure many people will have read / seen / heard about it, and I'm still digesting the information from the DfT site - they're releasing a CD of all the documents. The BBC web site included links to maps of various places from Birmingham towards London, which look as if everything has already been decided - seems a little premature without having had public discussions - but I guess it's been a very expensive 'feasibility study' to see that if they can force purchases of land and properties, this might be achieved.
Finally, to put some of my cards on the table - I'm far from convinced this is anything more than a costly attempt to play 'catch up' claiming Britain is overshadowed by others in Europe - seems a bit too much like being part of the high-speed trains 'set'. Sure railways are important, but invest in existing routes and services before pumping billions into cutting some times for some major cities (and sticking two fingers up at the people near the route who cannot use these trains).
I question the benefit of cutting the journey times from Birmingham and the other named cities. Yes, there may be a greater case for travel to/from Scotland, but we are in a teleconferencing age, and if we moved to better 'virtual reality' systems, we could have 'conferencing' which could remove the need for so many face-to-face meetings... and the cash could pay for the fibre to make it possible, far faster, and without needing to demolish homes and change the countryside.
We know that what have been classed as 'developing' countries are overtaking us on mobile phone and internet services because they had no existing infrastructure, so jumped to the latest technology where we spent time 'upgrading' 50 and 100 year old technology, and cannot work as well as the latest methods.