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#31
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77002 wrote:
Fast forward to the Jubilee Line extension: This one was much less well planned, but did manage provide a useful route with some Useful until it heads of to stratford pointlessly duplicating the DLR. It provides a direct link from east to south London, starting from east London's biggest interchange station. It provides much needed pressure relief for the DLR. It regularly fills up before it first hits the Thames. How is that not useful? A role which previously the North London line filled. The Jubilee Line is an expensive replacement. By now the North London Line to Docklands would have been an Overground Link. The North London Line in that part of town was okay if you wanted to go to north London and if you could bear the infrequent service it was fine for Silvertown and North Woolwich. But it was utterly useless for getting from Stratford/West Ham/Canning Town to places south of the river. The development in the docks was not adequately served - even three car DLR trains are still slow (and the Waterloo & City heaving at the other end) and no great substitute for a proper tube lin to the centre. -- My blog: http://adf.ly/4hi4c |
#33
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On 7 Dec, 12:36, "Tim Roll-Pickering"
wrote: 77002 wrote: Fast forward to the Jubilee Line extension: This one was much less well planned, but did manage provide a useful route with some Useful until it heads of to stratford pointlessly duplicating the DLR. It provides a direct link from east to south London, starting from east London's biggest interchange station. It provides much needed pressure relief for the DLR. It regularly fills up before it first hits the Thames. How is that not useful? A role which previously the North London line filled. *The Jubilee Line is an expensive replacement. *By now the North London Line to Docklands would have been an Overground Link. The North London Line in that part of town was okay if you wanted to go to north London and if you could bear the infrequent service it was fine for Silvertown and North Woolwich. But it was utterly useless for getting from Stratford/West Ham/Canning Town to places south of the river. The development in the docks was not adequately served - even three car DLR trains are still slow (and the Waterloo & City heaving at the other end) and no great substitute for a proper tube lin to the centre. Which is why I believe the NLL needed to be diverted from Silvertown and North Woolwich, and instead run under the Thames to an interchange with the Dartford lines. There would nothing to prevent an interchange staion with a Jubilee route to Thamesmead. |
#34
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A role which previously the North London line filled. *The Jubilee
Line is an expensive replacement. *By now the North London Line to Docklands would have been an Overground Link. The North London Line in that part of town was okay if you wanted to go to north London and if you could bear the infrequent service it was fine for Silvertown and North Woolwich. But it was utterly useless for getting from Stratford/West Ham/Canning Town to places south of the river. The development in the docks was not adequately served - even three car DLR trains are still slow (and the Waterloo & City heaving at the other end) and no great substitute for a proper tube lin to the centre. Which is why I believe the NLL needed to be diverted from Silvertown and North Woolwich, and instead run under the Thames to an interchange with the Dartford lines. *There would nothing to prevent an interchange staion with a Jubilee route to Thamesmead. In my eyes, the ideal situation given hindsight would have been for the NLL's Poplar branch to have been renovated and tunnelled under the river as the DLR was and linked to a rebuilt Greenwich Park branch, which would then run through to Clapham Junction via Peckham Rye. Likewise, there would have been little need to wait for Crossrail to run from North Woolwich to Abbey Wood had the NLL been extended the same way, with a service from the North Kent line running via Canning Town and Stratford to the Goblin at South Tottenham, thence onward to Willesden Junction and Richmond. Given the demand between Stratford and Canary Wharf I believe a grade- separated curve linking the two Crossrail branches would serve this demand far better than the Jubilee line does, and it would enable more use to be made of the capacity on the two branches (i.e. every train to Canary Wharf from Whitechapel is a train to Shenfield that has to use up capacity at Liverpool Street). Accordingly, the Jubilee could then have it's branch to Thamesmead, with the DLR running alongside the NLL up to Stratford. ....swinging back on topic, the Northern Line extension to Battersea couldn't be more of a pig's ear if they tried, and funding it with a loan is disgraceful. The capacity of the CX branch should be used to extend south east, e.g. down to Crystal Palace via Loughborough Junction, Herne Hill et. al. en route to the Hayes branch. A major redevelopment of the drain (including lengthening the existing Bank platforms to 8 car length and building new ones at Waterloo) would be the ideal way to serve the Battersea area, with stations at Bank, Blackfriars, Waterloo, Lambeth, Vauxhall, Nine Elms, Battersea Park, Battersea High Street and Clapham Junction, with depot facilities provided by London Road (the Bakerloo getting a new depot on its own southern extension.) Even if you accept that the drain proposal above is dependant on the Bakerloo works to free up London Road, then simply building Clapham Junction to Vauxhall then linking to Kennington is the way to do things for the time being so you can just reuse the infrastructure later in doing things properly. Likewise, the reasons given for not interchanging with Vauxhall are bunk of the highest order. Routing the line as required and hollowing out the platform tunnels is all that is needed for passive provision until Crossrail 2 relieves the Victoria line enough to permit the interchange being brought into use. |
#35
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On 07/12/2012 17:54, Jamie Thompson wrote:
..swinging back on topic, the Northern Line extension to Battersea couldn't be more of a pig's ear if they tried, and funding it with a loan is disgraceful. How else are you going to fund it? The capacity of the CX branch should be used to extend south east, e.g. down to Crystal Palace via Loughborough Junction, Herne Hill et. al. en route to the Hayes branch. A major r IIRC Crystal Palace et al already have a railway service. -- Graeme Wall This account not read, substitute trains for rail. Railway Miscellany at http://www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail |
#36
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On Dec 7, 5:59*pm, Graeme Wall wrote:
How else are you going to fund it? From the developers whom will reap the financial benefits perhaps? I'm not against a loan in the general per se, just against a taxpayer- subsidised and guaranteed one, especially given the site's history of financial imploding. IIRC Crystal Palace et al already have a railway service. It does indeed, however it operates on a two track railway that has to be shared with longer-distance suburban services. Compare and contrast the service provision of Crystal Palace and Hendon Central, both zone 3/4 stations...not to mention that removing the current services from their respective termini frees up capacity there. |
#37
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the people who make the decisions seem to be totally unaware of how that would benefit London. The second major failing of this Battersea scheme is that is does not link up with other routes. My particular obsession - an extension from Kennington to Clapham Junction - would most definitely "join up the dots" as would other obvious - to practical people - proposals like extending the Bakerloo Line to Peckham Rye and the Victoria Line to Leytonstone. |
#38
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On 07/12/2012 18:54, Jamie Thompson wrote:
On Dec 7, 5:59 pm, Graeme wrote: How else are you going to fund it? From the developers whom will reap the financial benefits perhaps? I'm not against a loan in the general per se, just against a taxpayer- subsidised and guaranteed one, especially given the site's history of financial imploding. So best not to invest in some wastrel scheme to redevelop old docks the other end of London then? After all the docks business imploded. -- Graeme Wall This account not read, substitute trains for rail. Railway Miscellany at http://www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail |
#39
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On 7 Dec, 09:54, Jamie Thompson wrote:
A role which previously the North London line filled. *The Jubilee Line is an expensive replacement. *By now the North London Line to Docklands would have been an Overground Link. The North London Line in that part of town was okay if you wanted to go to north London and if you could bear the infrequent service it was fine for Silvertown and North Woolwich. But it was utterly useless for getting from Stratford/West Ham/Canning Town to places south of the river. The development in the docks was not adequately served - even three car DLR trains are still slow (and the Waterloo & City heaving at the other end) and no great substitute for a proper tube lin to the centre. Which is why I believe the NLL needed to be diverted from Silvertown and North Woolwich, and instead run under the Thames to an interchange with the Dartford lines. *There would nothing to prevent an interchange staion with a Jubilee route to Thamesmead. In my eyes, the ideal situation given hindsight would have been for the NLL's Poplar branch to have been renovated and tunnelled under the river as the DLR was and linked to a rebuilt Greenwich Park branch, which would then run through to Clapham Junction via Peckham Rye. Likewise, there would have been little need to wait for Crossrail to run from North Woolwich to Abbey Wood had the NLL been extended the same way, with a service from the North Kent line running via Canning Town and Stratford to the Goblin at South Tottenham, thence onward to Willesden Junction and Richmond. Given the demand between Stratford and Canary Wharf I believe a grade- separated curve linking the two Crossrail branches would serve this demand far better than the Jubilee line does, and it would enable more use to be made of the capacity on the two branches (i.e. every train to Canary Wharf from Whitechapel is a train to Shenfield that has to use up capacity at Liverpool Street). Accordingly, the Jubilee could then have it's branch to Thamesmead, with the DLR running alongside the NLL up to Stratford. ...swinging back on topic, the Northern Line extension to Battersea couldn't be more of a pig's ear if they tried, and funding it with a loan is disgraceful. The capacity of the CX branch should be used to extend south east, e.g. down to Crystal Palace via Loughborough Junction, Herne Hill et. al. en route to the Hayes branch. A major redevelopment of the drain (including lengthening the existing Bank platforms to 8 car length and building new ones at Waterloo) would be the ideal way to serve the Battersea area, with stations at Bank, Blackfriars, Waterloo, Lambeth, Vauxhall, Nine Elms, Battersea Park, Battersea High Street and Clapham Junction, with depot facilities provided by London Road (the Bakerloo getting a new depot on its own southern extension.) Even if you accept that the drain proposal above is dependant on the Bakerloo works to free up London Road, then simply building Clapham Junction to Vauxhall then linking to Kennington is the way to do things for the time being so you can just reuse the infrastructure later in doing things properly. Likewise, the reasons given for not interchanging with Vauxhall are bunk of the highest order. Routing the line as required and hollowing out the platform tunnels is all that is needed for passive provision until Crossrail 2 relieves the Victoria line enough to permit the interchange being brought into use. Excellent thinking sir. I cannot fault it. |
#40
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On 07/12/2012 18:54, Jamie Thompson wrote:
On Dec 7, 5:59 pm, Graeme Wall wrote: How else are you going to fund it? From the developers whom will reap the financial benefits perhaps? I'm not against a loan in the general per se, just against a taxpayer- subsidised and guaranteed one, especially given the site's history of financial imploding. The Nine Elms and Battersea developments aren't just about the power station site, which has been undeveloped through at least two boom and bust cycles. -- Phil Cook |
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