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#11
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message -sept ember.org, at 09:19:09 on Mon, 2 May 2016, Recliner remarked: If the third runway is built, aiui there will be a shuttle train from the current T5 stations, rather than extend either the tube or heavy rail. That'll mean a more frequent service will be required. Is that confirmed or speculation? From a usually reliable source, if the project goes ahead. does the new runway require a new terminal (and hence a new station) or will the current terminals be sufficient (and hence no new station)? tim |
#12
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tim... wrote:
"Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message -sept ember.org, at 09:19:09 on Mon, 2 May 2016, Recliner remarked: If the third runway is built, aiui there will be a shuttle train from the current T5 stations, rather than extend either the tube or heavy rail. That'll mean a more frequent service will be required. Is that confirmed or speculation? From a usually reliable source, if the project goes ahead. does the new runway require a new terminal (and hence a new station) or will the current terminals be sufficient (and hence no new station)? It will need a big new terminal, to the north west of T5. Roland is saying that there will be an internal shuttle link to T5, so the pax to the new terminal will use the existing T5 stations and then take the shuttle. That makes sense to me. |
#13
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On Mon, 2 May 2016 10:48:48 +0100, Roland Perry
wrote: In message -sept ember.org, at 09:19:09 on Mon, 2 May 2016, Recliner remarked: If the third runway is built, aiui there will be a shuttle train from the current T5 stations, rather than extend either the tube or heavy rail. That'll mean a more frequent service will be required. Is that confirmed or speculation? From a usually reliable source, if the project goes ahead. I've just been looking at this 2014 document: http://your.heathrow.com/wp-content/...i_easyread.pdf Page 13 shows a map of the future planned western side of Heathrow. It shows the main new terminal immediately to the west of the T5 short stay car park, probably with direct escalator connections to the heavy rail stations under it. It has some new gates on the west side and there's a longish transit link to a long new east-west satellite building between the existing northern runway and the new runway. It has gates on both sides. It shows western rail links to both the GWR and SWT lines, using both sets of platforms. No Piccadilly line extension is shown. It also shows the current T3 site redeveloped as a pair of north-south satellites, presumably linked an expanded central terminal building (ie, the current T2). |
#14
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In message , at 12:21:13 on
Mon, 2 May 2016, Recliner remarked: If the third runway is built, aiui there will be a shuttle train from the current T5 stations, rather than extend either the tube or heavy rail. That'll mean a more frequent service will be required. Is that confirmed or speculation? From a usually reliable source, if the project goes ahead. I've just been looking at this 2014 document: http://your.heathrow.com/wp-content/...i_easyread.pdf I was looking at various plans on that site earlier, but lost the will to live as a result of them not making sufficiently clear which proposals were out of date, and which was the currently promoted one. The most "popular" in the sense of people discussing it as the "plan" is the one with the new terminal halfway along the M4 motorway spur [in effect just off the top right of that p13 map], and that's the one which was going to have a Stansted-like subterranean people mover connecting it to T5 to the west and T2 to the south. Page 13 shows a map of the future planned western side of Heathrow. It shows the main new terminal immediately to the west of the T5 short stay car park, probably with direct escalator connections to the heavy rail stations under it. It has some new gates on the west side and there's a longish transit link to a long new east-west satellite building between the existing northern runway and the new runway. It has gates on both sides. It shows western rail links to both the GWR and SWT lines, using both sets of platforms. No Piccadilly line extension is shown. It also shows the current T3 site redeveloped as a pair of north-south satellites, presumably linked an expanded central terminal building (ie, the current T2). Yes, whatever happens I think that the two main terminals will be T5 expanding eastwards and T2 expanding westwards, until they meet. The obvious thing to do then is an airside shuttle like they have at Atlanta or Incheon, joining in the middle. -- Roland Perry |
#15
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On 02/05/16 10:32, Basil Jet wrote:
... with a siding that Liverpool Central doesn't have. My point was that Liverpool Central seems to cope with a more intensive service than is proposed for T5, without any siding. A pedant points out that Liverpool Central does have a reversing siding. But your comments still stand as it is not used to reverse the normal service. -- Phil Liverpool, UK |
#16
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Phil wrote:
On 02/05/16 10:32, Basil Jet wrote: ... with a siding that Liverpool Central doesn't have. My point was that Liverpool Central seems to cope with a more intensive service than is proposed for T5, without any siding. A pedant points out that Liverpool Central does have a reversing siding. But your comments still stand as it is not used to reverse the normal service. Do they run as three-car units, or as two units coupled together? |
#17
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On Mon, 2 May 2016 13:46:50 +0100, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 12:21:13 on Mon, 2 May 2016, Recliner remarked: If the third runway is built, aiui there will be a shuttle train from the current T5 stations, rather than extend either the tube or heavy rail. That'll mean a more frequent service will be required. Is that confirmed or speculation? From a usually reliable source, if the project goes ahead. I've just been looking at this 2014 document: http://your.heathrow.com/wp-content/...i_easyread.pdf I was looking at various plans on that site earlier, but lost the will to live as a result of them not making sufficiently clear which proposals were out of date, and which was the currently promoted one. The most "popular" in the sense of people discussing it as the "plan" is the one with the new terminal halfway along the M4 motorway spur [in effect just off the top right of that p13 map], and that's the one which was going to have a Stansted-like subterranean people mover connecting it to T5 to the west and T2 to the south. I think that was from an earlier, now rejected, proposal for a new northern, rather than the northwestern runway. |
#18
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In message , at 12:44:30 on
Tue, 3 May 2016, Recliner remarked: If the third runway is built, aiui there will be a shuttle train from the current T5 stations, rather than extend either the tube or heavy rail. That'll mean a more frequent service will be required. Is that confirmed or speculation? From a usually reliable source, if the project goes ahead. I've just been looking at this 2014 document: http://your.heathrow.com/wp-content/...i_easyread.pdf I was looking at various plans on that site earlier, but lost the will to live as a result of them not making sufficiently clear which proposals were out of date, and which was the currently promoted one. The most "popular" in the sense of people discussing it as the "plan" is the one with the new terminal halfway along the M4 motorway spur [in effect just off the top right of that p13 map], and that's the one which was going to have a Stansted-like subterranean people mover connecting it to T5 to the west and T2 to the south. I think that was from an earlier, now rejected, proposal for a new northern, rather than the northwestern runway. I don't think the runway has moved much - the eastern end is stubbornly just west of the M4 spur. Apart from moving the terminal from near that spur to west of T5, the plan which may be the latest one doesn't require the M25/M4 junction to be rebuilt - which may or may not be part of the OP's £16bn. -- Roland Perry |
#19
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On 03/05/16 09:30, Recliner wrote:
Phil wrote: On 02/05/16 10:32, Basil Jet wrote: ... with a siding that Liverpool Central doesn't have. My point was that Liverpool Central seems to cope with a more intensive service than is proposed for T5, without any siding. A pedant points out that Liverpool Central does have a reversing siding. But your comments still stand as it is not used to reverse the normal service. Do they run as three-car units, or as two units coupled together? The reversers are usually 3-car in my experience. -- Phil Liverpool, UK |
#20
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 12:44:30 on Tue, 3 May 2016, Recliner remarked: If the third runway is built, aiui there will be a shuttle train from the current T5 stations, rather than extend either the tube or heavy rail. That'll mean a more frequent service will be required. Is that confirmed or speculation? From a usually reliable source, if the project goes ahead. I've just been looking at this 2014 document: http://your.heathrow.com/wp-content/...i_easyread.pdf I was looking at various plans on that site earlier, but lost the will to live as a result of them not making sufficiently clear which proposals were out of date, and which was the currently promoted one. The most "popular" in the sense of people discussing it as the "plan" is the one with the new terminal halfway along the M4 motorway spur [in effect just off the top right of that p13 map], and that's the one which was going to have a Stansted-like subterranean people mover connecting it to T5 to the west and T2 to the south. I think that was from an earlier, now rejected, proposal for a new northern, rather than the northwestern runway. I don't think the runway has moved much - the eastern end is stubbornly just west of the M4 spur. Apart from moving the terminal from near that spur to west of T5, the plan which may be the latest one doesn't require the M25/M4 junction to be rebuilt - which may or may not be part of the OP's £16bn. It is further to the west. See chapters 7 and 8 in this, which I think is the latest, document which describes the plan the Airports Commission prefers: http://www.heathrow.com/file_source/...in_further.pdf Needless to say, the cutaway diagram of the integrated Heathrow West on p27 clearly gets the trains and platforms wrong. So the plan is to have just three terminals: very large East and West terminals (much expanded versions of the current T2 and T5) and the existing much smaller T4, perhaps renamed the South terminal. Each will have Piccadilly and mainline stations, as now, but the West terminal station(s) will have two more platforms. I see they envisage the western/southern rail links having a combined 10 (4+6) tph by 2040. |
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