Croxley Link
Peter Able stuck@home wrote:
On 28/09/2014 11:17, Recliner wrote:
Peter Able stuck@home wrote:
On 28/09/2014 10:19, Recliner wrote:
Roland Perry wrote:
And I suppose many of the additional fares will be to
Zone 1, and therefore quite expensive.
I hope they don't take such a simplistic view of the extra fares. Quite a
bit of traffic to Z1 will be abstracted from existing stations.
Let's hope not. But obviously there will be net additional fares from zones
7&8, and therefore expensive if to London.
It is ironic that one of the rationales given in the past for closing
Chesham is that little traffic will be lost, the bulk being transferred
to Amersham and Chalfont.
Here we have the same situation in reverse. How realistic is it to
"hope" that the Croxley link will generate £500k of NEW business per week?
Yes, put like that, it does look rather optimistic. I wonder if that's the
projected fare revenue in a few years, once new developments are in place
around the new stations? It's hard to envisage such high net revenue
increases in the first year or two.
You earlier corrected the "expected incremental fare box revenue" quoted
by the OP to £26 million. Dare I suggest that the figure comes from this?
LU Fare Revenue 2013/14: £2,286m (tfl annual report)
Number of LU stations: 270 (Wikipedia)
Fare Revenue per station: £8.5m (calculated)
Net increase in LU stations by Croxley Link: 3 (croxleyraillink.com)
Fare Revenue for 3 stations: £26m (calculated)
My, my, what a coincidence.
This sort of back-of-the-fag-packet crude estimation (by the promoters of
the Croxley Link, I mean) is not at all rare. Early on someone makes a
wet-fingered guess and twenty PowerPoint presentations later it is quoted as Gospel.
Surely there's only a net increase of *one* new station? There's two new
stations (Cassiobridge and Vicarage Rd) and one station (Watford) closing.
In addition, the Met will serve two existing LO stations (Watford High St
and Junction), which already have direct services to Harrow and London.
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