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#22
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#23
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#24
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On 19.11.15 1:09, Basil Jet wrote:
Incidentally, someone was describing a journey to me this morning and she said "I get the... vertical bit of the Overground and change to the... horizontal bit of the Overground". She sounded like she felt a bit foolish describing it in such terms, but TfL have left people with little choice. On querying it turned out that she has lived in Surrey Quays for decades and is well aware that the vertical line used to be called the East London Line, but as a young woman working in fashion she would be particularly keen to avoid looking out of date, and she has no up-to-date term to describe the line. The experience gelled with recent thoughts of mine. Why doesn't she just call them by their proper names, East London Line and North London Line, rather than desperately trying to look "cool"? |
#25
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On 19.11.15 10:34, Offramp wrote:
On Thursday, 19 November 2015 07:19:44 UTC, Recliner wrote: Basil Jet wrote: Incidentally, someone was describing a journey to me this morning and she said "I get the... vertical bit of the Overground and change to the... horizontal bit of the Overground". She sounded like she felt a bit foolish describing it in such terms, but TfL have left people with little choice. On querying it turned out that she has lived in Surrey Quays for decades and is well aware that the vertical line used to be called the East London Line, but as a young woman working in fashion she would be particularly keen to avoid looking out of date, and she has no up-to-date term to describe the line. The experience gelled with recent thoughts of mine. My own recent foray around East London presented me with confusing signs to multiple DLR platforms at Stratford, and confusing new signs in Hackney Central / Downs pointing from one half of the station to the other. As I arrived at Hackney from Chingford, robobint said "Change here for trains to Enfield Town" but didn't mention Cheshunt. And the part of the tube map between Seven Sisters and Mile End looks like an explosion in a spaghetti factory, utterly defeating the eyes' ability to plan routes without having to think too hard. I believe that the Overground brand, and to a lesser extent the DLR brand, are obfuscating rather than enlightening. I don't even know what promise the Overground brand is supposed to make. "Underground" means that wherever I may have ended up, I go in here and I can get frequent trains through Central London where I can make one change to another frequent line that will take me home. There are a few exceptions, like Roding Valley, but the Underground largely lives up to that promise. "Overground" - what is that promising? It used to mean orbital travel, for the most part, but that doesn't hold any more. If someone stumbles out of a party at 7am on a Sunday morning and finds himself at Turkey Street station, what does that Overground roundel represent? 2tph to the edge of Zone 1, and probably two changes before he gets home? That's hardly anything for a station to brag about - there are very few stations in Greater London that offer less (Emerson Park is ironically one). Overground is actually a negative concept. Just as the Volkswagen brand means "This is made by the same people who make Audi's, but it would harm the Audi image if we wrote Audi on a car like this", Overground means "This is run by the same people who run the Underground, but it would harm the Underground brand if we wrote Underground on stations that have infrequent service which only touches Zone 1 or avoids it completely. So the Overground brand exists purely to avoid tarnishing the reputation of the Underground. And yet, the Overground management act as if they have an inferiority complex, writing Overground everywhere and doing their best to obliterate the historic line identities as if writing Overground on something is the finest praise imaginable. We need different colours and line names. We need the trains to Chingford to have a different colour on the map from the trains that call at London Fields and Cambridge Heath. And the DLR needs to get line names too, so that the signs at Stratford and on the District Line line guides can start making sense. http://www.metrolondres.es/wp-conten...-mapa-tube.jpg has four different DLR interchanges, and no clue as to which you're supposed to use to get to which part of the DLR. I agree. We need line numbers on the Underground, Overground and DLR, just as bus routes have numbers. Maybe they could have an alpha prefix, but it would be much clearer if every route had a unique number. It's particularly confusing to non-locals on the subsurface Underground lines where similar looking trains serve many different routes from the same Circle line stations. I'd prefer letters: DLRA DLRB etc. London Overground was always a terrible name. It should have been given a monicker in the same way that the Jubilee Line was - how about the Dickens Line? And that abbrev.: LOROL! Faites-moi une faveur, mec! LOROL also should have letters to differentiate its several parts. RER, perhaps? |
#26
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#27
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On 2015\11\19 14:55, d wrote:
On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 06:44:38 -0600 wrote: An alternative view is that eventually we will have to grasp the nettle of getting the Southern brought up to metro standards. So we might as well start somewhere and that is where we are. I can't see how thats possible. The network is just too complex. LU can't even manage to make the northern line reliable with 2 junctions! What hope for the south london 3rd rail system. I wonder if you can do the South London 3rd rail network in a day, and if anyone's ever done it? Or even in 2 days? |
#28
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On 2015\11\18 22:58, wrote:
On Wednesday, 18 November 2015 22:44:47 UTC, Basil Jet wrote: On 2015\11\18 21:32, wrote: I don't know why, but I tend to go out via Canada Water and the Jubilee, and return all the way by Overground. Can you try and work out why... it might be important. And exactly which journey are you describing? 60 or 405 Bus from Coulsdon to West Croydon, Overground to Canada Water, Jubilee Line to Stratford. Return from Stratford to West Croydon Overground all the way, changing at Canonbury and Dalston Kingsland. Bus from Croydon to Coulsdon. I presume you mean changing at Canonbury and Dalston Junction. I'm not sure why you don't just walk from DK to DJ. Sometimes do other things, Croydon to Stratford by 75 and 108 bus for example, but that's even slower. I can think of other journeys where I tend to go out and return by different routes, but for no obvious reason. looks at bus map Can I just say that the 455 is the oddest bus route shape I've ever seen. I think there are three separate places where you could get off and walk and be waiting for the same bus further on. But I digress. You never get the train to East Croydon, tram to Elmers End, train to Lewisham, DLR? Would you go that way if Elmers to Lewisham had Bakerloo frequencies? Would you go that way if the DLR was extended to Elmers End? Would you go that way if the tram was extended to Lewisham? Although, I suspect the questions will be redundant as soon as Crossrail runs between Whitechapel and Stratford. |
#29
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In article , d () wrote:
On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 06:44:38 -0600 wrote: An alternative view is that eventually we will have to grasp the nettle of getting the Southern brought up to metro standards. So we might as well start somewhere and that is where we are. I can't see how thats possible. The network is just too complex. LU can't even manage to make the northern line reliable with 2 junctions! What hope for the south london 3rd rail system. I didn't say it wasn't a challenge! But then Crossrail 2 is addressing some of the issues. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#30
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In article , (Basil Jet)
wrote: On 2015\11\19 14:55, d wrote: On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 06:44:38 -0600 wrote: An alternative view is that eventually we will have to grasp the nettle of getting the Southern brought up to metro standards. So we might as well start somewhere and that is where we are. I can't see how thats possible. The network is just too complex. LU can't even manage to make the northern line reliable with 2 junctions! What hope for the south london 3rd rail system. I wonder if you can do the South London 3rd rail network in a day, and if anyone's ever done it? Or even in 2 days? I seem to remember doing an awful lot of it on a railtour once! -- Colin Rosenstiel |
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