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The dangleway
Any chance the Air Line will open in the next two weeks?
-- jhk |
The dangleway
On Saturday, 16 June 2012 00:14:04 UTC+1, Jarle H Knudsen wrote:
Any chance the Air Line will open in the next two weeks? Here's an oddity I have not yet seen mentioned. On the Tube map 'Emirates' can now be seen right next to 'Woolwich Arsenal'. |
The dangleway
On 16/06/2012 00:14, Jarle H Knudsen wrote:
Any chance the Air Line will open in the next two weeks? The only date I've seen was the 2nd July but that was still subject to confirmation and was a by-proxy reference in any case (it was a London Service Permit application for a tour bus to start visiting it when it opened). Diamond Geezer on his blog suggests it will be earlier otherwise there would be no point in this release of the tube map, but in that case I could use Shadwell DLR station as a counterpoint where the January map claimed it would be going step free in January whereas in fact they'd finished all the work by late November or so. |
The dangleway
On 16/06/2012 00:14, Jarle H Knudsen wrote: Any chance the Air Line will open in the next two weeks? No chance. |
The dangleway
On 17/06/2012 12:44, Mizter T wrote: On 16/06/2012 00:14, Jarle H Knudsen wrote: Any chance the Air Line will open in the next two weeks? No chance. That was a bit abrupt - so here's some more info from a BBC London news report (video) from mid-May: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-18080615 |
The dangleway
On 18/06/2012 00:15, Paul Corfield wrote:
On Sat, 16 Jun 2012 01:14:04 +0200, Jarle H Knudsen wrote: Any chance the Air Line will open in the next two weeks? According to a tweet from Tom Edwards of BBC London the dangleway will open at midday on Friday 28 June 2012. I imagine Boris will be doing his stuff in the morning. Oyster fare is £3.20 (I assume on PAYG). £4.30 cash. Frequent flyers pay £16 for 10 rides. And for season ticket holders? |
The dangleway
Paul Corfield wrote:
Oyster fare is £3.20 (I assume on PAYG). £4.30 cash. Frequent flyers pay £16 for 10 rides. Great, yet another non integrated element in TfL's fare system. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK. Put first name before the at to reply. |
The dangleway
I suspect that might just allow Jarle to sneak a ride before he has to
head to the airport! Unless of course it will immediately be designated a "Games Lane" as part of the Olympic Routre Network and its use restricted to athletes - plus of course the many thousands of Olympic "VIPs" and other people who helped spend our money on their toys. -- Robin (increasingly feeling trapped in Hackney for the summer by the Olympics) reply to address is (meant to be) valid |
The dangleway
In message , at 09:13:21 on
Mon, 18 Jun 2012, Paul Corfield remarked: Oyster fare is £3.20 (I assume on PAYG). Does it form a component of daily capping? £4.30 cash. I hope the ticket machines have got a lot of 70p's in them, for change. Frequent flyers pay £16 for 10 rides. Great, yet another non integrated element in TfL's fare system. Did you ever expect it to be on standard fares? It's always felt like a premium service to me. Is it included on a Travelcard? What zones are the two ends in, or doesn't it matter (if Travelcards aren't accepted). -- Roland Perry |
The dangleway
Paul Corfield wrote:
Did you ever expect it to be on standard fares? It's always felt like a premium service to me. I expected them to do what they did, but I don't think it was right to do that. It should have been in the standard fares system, treated as a Tube journey for ticketing purposes. The only separate fares structure I see a need for in London is a cheaper bus only fare to reduce Tube overcrowding. Everything else should be on one single unified tariff, which should also include connectional bus travel. If the Germans can do it, why can't we? Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK. Put first name before the at to reply. |
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