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[email protected] March 12th 10 12:58 PM

Eusless
 
On Fri, 12 Mar 2010 12:00:19 +0000
Roland Perry wrote:
International pax wanting to travel onward have been estimated at just
two trains-full a day, apparently.


But does that take into account potential through running from the midlands
when people there find its a lot easier to get to france etc?

Would a large junction matter? Its not like theres trains leaving every
minute clapham junction style.


There would be, once you've combined the HS1 and HS2 traffic.


But if HS2 doesn't intersect with HS1 then thats the point of it? All it'll
do is knock 30 mins of the trip to birmingham. It won't make getting too or
from france any easier for travellers. I don't get it.

B2003



Basil Jet March 12th 10 01:17 PM

Eusless
 
Mizter T wrote:

See the PDF leaflet:
http://www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/rail/pi/hi...df/leaflet.pdf


It doesn't make it clear whether the work involves rotating the station and
surrounding roads by 90 degrees or whether they are moving the north pole to
Brazil.

--
We are the Strasbourg. Referendum is futile.



Paul Terry[_2_] March 12th 10 01:28 PM

Eusless
 
In message , d
writes

On Fri, 12 Mar 2010 12:00:19 +0000
Roland Perry wrote:


International pax wanting to travel onward have been estimated at just
two trains-full a day, apparently.


But does that take into account potential through running from the midlands
when people there find its a lot easier to get to france etc?


I think a key issues will be whether a through service to Paris could
compete with the cheap airlines on cost grounds. The report into the
failure of Regional Eurostar concluded that trains couldn't complete
with low-cost direct plane fares to Paris from regional airports. If HS2
is built, the journey times will be attractive, but my guess is that
fares will still not be competitive enough to move many away from flying
- unless, of course, air fares rise substantially, which is not
impossible.
--
Paul Terry

[email protected] March 12th 10 02:46 PM

Eusless
 
On Fri, 12 Mar 2010 14:28:41 +0000
Paul Terry wrote:
I think a key issues will be whether a through service to Paris could
compete with the cheap airlines on cost grounds. The report into the
failure of Regional Eurostar concluded that trains couldn't complete
with low-cost direct plane fares to Paris from regional airports. If HS2
is built, the journey times will be attractive, but my guess is that
fares will still not be competitive enough to move many away from flying
- unless, of course, air fares rise substantially, which is not
impossible.


Theres more to it than price though. A lot of people don't like flying and
find the whole airport and security experience unpleasent. Plus in the
particular case of Paris CDG its right out in the sticks and you need to get a
train or taxi into central paris anyway.

Regional eurostar was also done when people had to cross london to waterloo.
Now they could (in theory) step across the platform , or at least only walk
100 metres from which would make it a lot more attractive.

B2003


Roland Perry March 12th 10 05:07 PM

Eusless
 
In message , at 13:58:23 on Fri, 12 Mar
2010, d remarked:

International pax wanting to travel onward have been estimated at just
two trains-full a day, apparently.


But does that take into account potential through running from the midlands
when people there find its a lot easier to get to france etc?


You'd have to ask the people who did the estimates. Perhaps they've been
living on Mars and don't know about the effect whereby cheap airlines
fares have drummed up demand from nowhere.

Would a large junction matter? Its not like theres trains leaving every
minute clapham junction style.


There would be, once you've combined the HS1 and HS2 traffic.


But if HS2 doesn't intersect with HS1 then thats the point of it? All it'll
do is knock 30 mins of the trip to birmingham. It won't make getting too or
from france any easier for travellers. I don't get it.


Because most of the people travelling to France are coming from
somewhere other than an HS2 train.
--
Roland Perry

Roland Perry March 12th 10 05:08 PM

Eusless
 
In message , at 14:28:41 on Fri,
12 Mar 2010, Paul Terry remarked:
International pax wanting to travel onward have been estimated at just
two trains-full a day, apparently.


But does that take into account potential through running from the midlands
when people there find its a lot easier to get to france etc?


I think a key issues will be whether a through service to Paris could
compete with the cheap airlines on cost grounds. The report into the
failure of Regional Eurostar concluded that trains couldn't complete
with low-cost direct plane fares to Paris from regional airports. If
HS2 is built, the journey times will be attractive, but my guess is
that fares will still not be competitive enough to move many away from
flying - unless, of course, air fares rise substantially, which is not
impossible.


And there's more to France than Paris, and more to the Continent than
France.
--
Roland Perry

[email protected] March 12th 10 07:13 PM

Eusless
 
On Fri, 12 Mar 2010 18:08:38 +0000
Roland Perry wrote:
And there's more to France than Paris, and more to the Continent than
France.


Hopefully Euseless Eurostar will lose their monopoly on international
services and we'll get a proper range of through services from St P.

B2003


Roland Perry March 12th 10 07:32 PM

Eusless
 
In message , at 20:13:04 on Fri, 12 Mar
2010, d remarked:
And there's more to France than Paris, and more to the Continent than
France.


Hopefully Euseless Eurostar will lose their monopoly on international
services


I believe they already have, but no-one has stepped in (yet).

and we'll get a proper range of through services from St P.


I look forward to that, given that the service to Brussels struggles to
support a train every couple of hours.
--
Roland Perry

Arthur Figgis March 12th 10 08:26 PM

Eusless
 
On 12/03/2010 20:13, d wrote:
On Fri, 12 Mar 2010 18:08:38 +0000
Roland wrote:
And there's more to France than Paris, and more to the Continent than
France.


Hopefully Euseless Eurostar will lose their monopoly on international
services and we'll get a proper range of through services from St P.


There hasn't been an monopoly on international rail services since the
start of the year.

--
Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK

Arthur Figgis March 12th 10 08:27 PM

Eusless
 
On 12/03/2010 11:42, eastender wrote:
In , d
wrote:

It won't be very attractive to international travellers if once they arrive
at St P. they have to schlep over to euston or paddington with all their
luggage by foot or tube.


Paris is worse - say getting from Gare du Nord to Gare de Lyon. Although
I guess you can go via Charles de Gaulle airport.


Paris Nord - Est is not too dissimilar to Euston - St Pancras. London
even avoids stairs.

--
Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK


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