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#51
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In message , Paul Corfield
writes Terminating trains open the doors on both sides at Morden, Golders Green, Arnos Grove and White City. Cockfosters? Loughton? Certainly not CFS (open onto platform 3 only for 'safety reasons') -- Steve Fitzgerald has now left the building. You will find him in London's Docklands, E16, UK (please use the reply to address for email) |
#52
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In message
, MIG writes Terminating trains open the doors on both sides at Morden, Golders Green, Arnos Grove and White City. Cockfosters? Loughton? Uxbridge? Nope, same as Cockfosters, only one platform (the one nearest the bus station, I never remember the platform numbers there though!) -- Steve Fitzgerald has now left the building. You will find him in London's Docklands, E16, UK (please use the reply to address for email) |
#53
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On 1 Sep, 20:55, "Peter Smyth" wrote:
wrote in message ... On 01/09/2010 15:17, MIG wrote: On 1 Sep, 12:08, Mike *wrote: In , * * * * *Paul *wrote: On Sep 1, 12:01 am, *wrote: Presumably the old platform 3 will close - or will we have the excitement of dual platforms and both sets of doors opening? AIUI the latter. No platforms are closing. The email I got is quite explicit on this point. * *It says: } Westbound Central line train doors will now open on both sides. } When facing the direction of travel, you should exit via the right } side of the train to change onto London Overground and National } Rail services or via the left side of the train to change onto the } Jubilee line, DLR or to leave the station. This, I suppose, begs the question: *doors open on both sides of the train at Barking, and soon at Stratford... anywhere else? -- Mike Bristow * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * I can't think of anywhere else on LU where non-terminating trains do it. I can't think of any place that terminating trains do it. The only place that I know of that opens doors on both sides is the DLR at Canary Wharf. Terminating trains open the doors on both sides at Morden, Golders Green, Arnos Grove and White City. Peter Smyth IME Golders Green terminators only disgorge onto the platform in direction of travel. |
#54
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On 31 Aug, 12:36, "Dr. Sunil" wrote:
On 31 Aug, 10:59, Mike Bristow wrote: In article , * * * * Dr. Sunil wrote: It would appear that both the Central Line platform and the DLR extension will be opening in mid to late September. Same here! But they only mentioned 3a and not the DLR extension. Platform 3a...must have platform 3a.... ![]() Um, shots taken today: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...Sept2010. jpg http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi..._look_east.jpg http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi..._look_west.jpg http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...3a_signage.jpg http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...a_Sept2010.jpg |
#55
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In article da0bc271-168d-45a0-a5b6-
, says... On 31 Aug, 12:36, "Dr. Sunil" wrote: On 31 Aug, 10:59, Mike Bristow wrote: In article , * * * * Dr. Sunil wrote: It would appear that both the Central Line platform and the DLR extension will be opening in mid to late September. Same here! But they only mentioned 3a and not the DLR extension. Platform 3a...must have platform 3a.... ![]() Great fun today [Sunday]. Crowds on platform 3, beat them onto the westbound Central as no-one exited on 3a. |
#56
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On 5 Aug, 19:24, Bruce wrote:
On Thu, 5 Aug 2010 08:17:56 -0700 (PDT), "Dr. Sunil" wrote: I cannot understand the close spacing between West India Quay*/Canary Wharf/Heron Quays. There is so much that you "cannot understand". *Perhaps you should do a little more research rather than instantly jump to the conclusion that you "cannot understand". One any other railway they'd have just built Canary Wharf (longer platforms perhaps), with additional accesses north and south across each Quay. When the line was built, Canary Wharf did not exist as anything other than a disused wharf. *Until the Reichmann brothers came along with proposals to develop Canary Wharf into what it is today, there was no need for a station at Canary Wharf at all. * The DLR was built as an ultra-low cost light railway, and anything that wasn't needed was not included. *Heron Quays and West India Quays were both developed early and got stations. When Canary Wharf station was built, it had to go between the two existing stations. *That's why the three are so close together. *Once again, the cost of making all three into one much larger station spanning wide expanses of water would not have been economic. (*even more so given the skip-stop service on some Bank-Lewisham service (peaks?)). In those days, the Lewisham extension hadn't even been planned, let alone started. *Once again, you seem to think that people designing the DLR in the mid-1980s should have been able to predict the exact future course of development decades ahead ... The truth is that no-one could have foreseen what would eventually happen at Canary Wharf. *The idea came completely out of the blue. *It was quite out of keeping with the then-current plans for Docklands, which were for low- and medium-rise, low density development with the primary objective of providing jobs for local people who were made redundant when the docks and other associated local businesses closed. The DLR was designed to support this objective. *So why on earth build a grandiose station for a quay (Canary Wharf) which wasn't expected to be developed? No doubt you will have some smart-arse response to all this. *But I suggest you should do a little more research instead of sounding off on the basis of zero knowledge of the subject, which seems to have been your style so far. By the way, you owe Paul Corfield an apology. *Some serious grovelling would be appropriate, but if you can't be sincere, don't bother. Oh drop the haughty attitude you arrogant prick. Canary Wharf was always planned as the main focus of the docklands development. The plans did change, but the original scheme had the largest most elaborate offices there - a big post-modernist thing. The second plan had the canary wharf tower and two smaller towers adjacent to it. Even though they ran out of money, when the development expanded over the last decade, they still kept to the plan, building the two companion towers where they always were going to be. The reason there is a station at Canary Wharf is because, prior to the Jubilee line and Crossrail, the line crossed multiple docks. There was a station at each landfall - South Quay, Heron Quays, Canary Wharf, and West India Quay - because people can't swim across the docks, there were no bridges, and it was a long way to walk round the quay to the bit where they all meet. |
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