London Mayor Sadiq Khan to review Tube station ticket office closures By Tim Donovan

Political Editor, BBC London Published duration 13 May 2016

image caption Queensway station was one of the first to move staff from ticket offices into ticket halls and on to platforms

London transport bosses will start a review of Tube station ticket office closures within the first three months of Sadiq Khan's mayoralty.

Transport for London (TfL) will also begin consultations into air quality and making a pedestrian-only zone in Oxford Street in central London.

Other 100-day milestones - agreed by TfL - are the launch of a safer trucks programme and the completion of 12 junction upgrades to improve safety for cyclists.

The aims are set out in the Delivering Your Manifesto document drawn up by TfL commissioner Mike Brown and were presented to Mr Khan after their meeting at City Hall on Monday.

image caption The mayor intends the Night Tube service to start running on two lines in the summer

The ticket office closures had promoted strikes in the past but TfL said it would save £50m annually.

In a sign of how the new Labour mayor is hoping to show some early momentum, there are also plans for the following before the middle of August:

Proposals for a new TfL consultancy service to raise revenue

New advertising strategy with fresh guidelines on how body image is presented in stations and on vehicles

Decision by the mayor on the preferred route of Crossrail 2

Car-free day in Regent's Street in July

Appointment of a new "walking champion"

The document also reveals the mayor wants to set up a new advisory body - Homes for London - within the first three months, in order to help the capital reach a target of 50,000 new homes per year.

The measures come on top of the one-hour bus hopper ticket fare announced by the mayor on Tuesday with a planned roll-out for September.

The air quality consultation will be 'the most ambitious in London's history', the document says.

There is also a pledge to set "a new course for cycling in London which is inclusive and open to all," with an emphasis on cycle training.

The document continues: "We will deliver a fundamental change in how we are structured and how we operate.