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#1
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I see Boris has ordered another 195 Boris buses before the end of his
mayoral term: https://www.london.gov.uk/press-rele...rthern-ireland The press release gives the strong impression that Boris is campaigning for votes all over the UK... |
#2
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On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 22:02:22 +0000, Paul Corfield
wrote: On Mon, 29 Feb 2016 17:11:18 -0000 (UTC), Recliner wrote: I see Boris has ordered another 195 Boris buses before the end of his mayoral term: https://www.london.gov.uk/press-rele...rthern-ireland The press release gives the strong impression that Boris is campaigning for votes all over the UK... Monstrous waste of money and a particularly grotesque decision in his final weeks in office. Let's hope whoever is Mayor next cancels the order. Will you get to see bendy buses on the streets of London again? -- jhk |
#3
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On Wed, 02 Mar 2016 23:27:16 +0000
Paul Corfield wrote: On Wed, 02 Mar 2016 22:45:13 +0100, Jarle Hammen Knudsen Will you get to see bendy buses on the streets of London again? Doubtful and to be honest it's not important. That depends on who you are. Bendy buses were a lot friendlier to the disabled and people with pushchairs than any sort of double decker. Something the europeans - and Ken Livingstone for all his other faults - seem to have grasped but completely sailed past Boris. Or he didn't give a **** being too busy stroking his ego creating his "legacy". campaign) knows that too. Hence all the focus on attacking that particular policy and deliberate vagueness about Zac Goldsmith's own policy on fares. Goldsmith is the definition of vague. Frankly its a **** poor show from all the main parties. You'd think they were putting forward candidates for the major of bognor regis, not western europes largest and richest city. Unfortunately I think we are going to see the partial destruction of Central London's bus network off the back of pedestrianising Oxford Something needs to be done about Oxford street. The river of virtually empty red buses crawling along in both directions at 10mph no matter what time of day means something is seriously broken. St. All the candidates support it and believe Crossrail will be some sort of cure all. They are wrong. It has also been reported that TfL have apparently decided that Central London is no longer a priority for investment so what money there is will go to the suburbs and capacity will be lost in Zone 1. Oddly I can't recall where the public were asked if they supported this fundamental change in policy. Suburbs? They're going beyond that. They want to hoover up some of the services into rural kent & surrey too. Why politicians think slapping an Overground roundal on a 375 will suddenly cure all the signal failures and train issues is anyones guess. -- Spud |
#4
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On 2016-03-02 23:27:16 +0000, Paul Corfield said:
Unfortunately I think we are going to see the partial destruction of Central London's bus network off the back of pedestrianising Oxford St. All the candidates support it and believe Crossrail will be some sort of cure all. They are wrong. It has also been reported that TfL have apparently decided that Central London is no longer a priority for investment so what money there is will go to the suburbs and capacity will be lost in Zone 1. Oddly I can't recall where the public were asked if they supported this fundamental change in policy. I'm afraid I agree with the proposal - Oxford St is at times a horrible place to be, and it would be much nicer if it was pedestrianised. I'd cope with a tram running up and down every 5-10 minutes, but other than that it is the epitome of the oppressive feel of much of London caused by the predominance of large, often aggressively-driven vehicles. Though I'd admit that builders' lorries are far worse. Along similar lines, I don't get the Edinburgh hate for the tram network idea (other than its appalling project mismanagement). Princes St is oppressive with the number of buses running up and down it at all times of day. I like Lothian as an operator, but it really isn't becoming of a European capital city in 2016. I also, as you're aware, agree with the idea that the primary purpose of buses should be to run outside central London taking people to/from railway stations. I do accept that some parallel running is needed, but that should be limited to where capacity on the rail network is inadequate. I also don't like the "first and second class" nature of bus vs Tube. It should be one fare set for a journey on TfL, regardless of what mode or combinations thereof are used. If that causes certain groups economic difficulties, then a concessionary scheme for travel on the whole network, not just buses, needs to be looked at. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
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#6
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On Thu, 3 Mar 2016 10:24:28 +0000
Neil Williams wrote: Along similar lines, I don't get the Edinburgh hate for the tram network idea (other than its appalling project mismanagement). Princes St is oppressive with the number of buses running up and down it at all times of day. I like Lothian as an operator, but it really isn't becoming of a European capital city in 2016. The scots love to moan. Edinburgh could do with a proper metro, never mind a tram. I also don't like the "first and second class" nature of bus vs Tube. It should be one fare set for a journey on TfL, regardless of what mode or combinations thereof are used. If that causes certain groups Which unless you start zoning the buses would mean a flat fare on the tube which I've advocated for years. -- Spud |
#7
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On Thu, 3 Mar 2016 10:31:17 +0000
Neil Williams wrote: On 2016-03-03 10:22:00 +0000, d said: Something needs to be done about Oxford street. The river of virtually empty red buses crawling along in both directions at 10mph no matter what time of day means something is seriously broken. If the buses have to stay, banning taxis and pedicabs would be a start. The black cab is the biggest form of disruption to the bus network of central London going. They stop where they like and cause significant delay. They certainly can be cavalier with the rules of the road. Whether they're have a big effect on buses on oxford street I don't know. I suspect the main issue is the sheer number of buses themselves. Far too many routes going down one street. -- Spud |
#8
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#9
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