Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#21
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 18 May 2004 16:50:04 +0100, k wrote:
And I STILL don't understand why there are the extra set of gates at Stratford.... The stratford issue is very easy to explain. When the system was originally conceived a decree from on high said the JLE would be gated off from other operators and from the street. This was before authority was granted to gate the remainder of the LUL network - one of my pieces of work at LUL so you can all blame me!!! The original design of Stratford station had an independent overbridge from the main ticket hall to the JLE platforms with its own gateline. Therefore street to JLE was via one gateline. In order to comply with the overarching edict the interchange gateline was designed in to cover the potential for people reaching JLE from "open" stations on the Central Line, BR and DLR lines. At a later stage there was a need to redesign the route from street to JLE and the independent one gateline route was removed. Therefore we ended up with the unique requirement to double enter or double exit for trips from JLE to street - it caused no end of problems in getting the ticket checking logic to work but there you are. I don't claim any of it makes much sense but some of us did try to point out the pitfalls. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#22
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 18 May 2004 at 11:38:59, k wrote:
Just because it has a prepay facility it doesn't mean you are using it. If i only travel within the zones of my travelcard then I am not using prepay. I still maintaiin that I am doing nothing wrong by not vaidating my travelcard AT ALL when using the DLR (my Travelcard covers all zones of the DLR) If I must do so then the signs need to be changed ASAP. Ditto, likewise, and fully agree! If I am within the limits of my Travelcard zones, there is no reason on earth to engage Prepay. Anyway, the amount of times I've had my card read on the DLR, if I was doing something wrong, they'd have told me by now! -- Annabel Smyth http://www.amsmyth.demon.co.uk/index.html Website updated 9 May 2004 |
#23
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 18 May 2004 at 16:57:17, TheOneKEA wrote:
I asked: But why does this affect a Travelcard? I don't *have* any PrePay on my card? It only affects you if you go beyond the zonal configuration of your Travelcard, and thus incur an extension charge. Paul Corfield posted elsewhere in the thread and explained it far better than me. Indeed; and were I to wish to go beyond the limit of my Travelcard, I'd put some PrePay on my Oyster (and touch in/out, where valid) to enable me to do so. As I don't, I am not sure why PrePay comes into it at all. -- Annabel Smyth http://www.amsmyth.demon.co.uk/index.html Website updated 9 May 2004 |
#24
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , Annabel Smyth
writes On Tue, 18 May 2004 at 16:57:17, TheOneKEA wrote: I asked: But why does this affect a Travelcard? I don't *have* any PrePay on my card? It only affects you if you go beyond the zonal configuration of your Travelcard, and thus incur an extension charge. Paul Corfield posted elsewhere in the thread and explained it far better than me. Indeed; and were I to wish to go beyond the limit of my Travelcard, I'd put some PrePay on my Oyster (and touch in/out, where valid) to enable me to do so. As I don't, I am not sure why PrePay comes into it at all. Simply because many people are not as conversant with the zones as you and often travel outside those on their T/Cs without knowing it... or so they tell me. -- Kat Me, Ambivalent? Well, yes and no. |
#25
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 18 May 2004 18:59:05 +0100, Paul Corfield
wrote: The stratford issue is very easy to explain. Thanks for the explanation. Therefore street to JLE was via one gateline. In order to comply with the overarching edict the interchange gateline was designed in to cover the potential for people reaching JLE from "open" stations on the Central Line, BR and DLR lines. But surely they can get on from "open" stations elsewhere i.e. at any other interchange? I don't see why Stratford should be unique. |
#26
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 19 May 2004 11:48:12 +0100, k wrote:
On Tue, 18 May 2004 18:59:05 +0100, Paul Corfield wrote: The stratford issue is very easy to explain. Thanks for the explanation. Therefore street to JLE was via one gateline. In order to comply with the overarching edict the interchange gateline was designed in to cover the potential for people reaching JLE from "open" stations on the Central Line, BR and DLR lines. But surely they can get on from "open" stations elsewhere i.e. at any other interchange? I don't see why Stratford should be unique. Stratford was unique because of a policy statement to gate the JLE (a new piece of railway) off from all other operators. The end result of that policy only really applies at Stratford and the concept was not applied at places like Canning Town although we did have some utterly bizarre gateline designs to assess. I think in the end we convinced people that the cost far outweighed any benefit. This is what happens when people have high level concepts and ignore the practical detail. Similar arguments were put forward when we were designing the gate layouts for the North end of the Victoria Line. Thankfully we managed to convince people that such complex layouts would not work and would not be cost effective. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#27
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 19 May 2004 19:30:37 +0100, Paul Corfield
wrote: Similar arguments were put forward when we were designing the gate layouts for the North end of the Victoria Line. Thankfully we managed to convince people that such complex layouts would not work and would not be cost effective. Is this reference to Walthamstow Central, Tottenham Hale and Finsbury Park with National Rail services where one can travel without a ticket due to no barriers being in place? As a passenger using these stations periodically, I'd prefer that there *were* ticket barriers - complex layouts or not - to discourage fare evasion and the sort of people that flock to stations for "free" travel. Thankfully places like Blackhorse Road, and Highbury and Islington have gates lines even for National Rail services, so it's not all bad! Cheers, Jason. |
#28
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 27 May 2004 16:29:26 +0100, Jason wrote:
On Wed, 19 May 2004 19:30:37 +0100, Paul Corfield wrote: Similar arguments were put forward when we were designing the gate layouts for the North end of the Victoria Line. Thankfully we managed to convince people that such complex layouts would not work and would not be cost effective. Is this reference to Walthamstow Central, Tottenham Hale and Finsbury Park with National Rail services where one can travel without a ticket due to no barriers being in place? No it isn't. It is a reference to LU people wanting every possible route to and from street as well as between operators gated. This means a combination of normal gatelines and interchange ones as per stratford. It would mean at least 50% more gates, probably building works, more maintenance cost for next to no benefit. Where there has always been within the barrier line interchange then it seems completely pointless to create barriers to people moving freely - would you put gates on the cross platform corridors between WAGN and the Victoria Line at Highbury and Islington? If not then why put them between WAGN and the Victoria Line at say Seven Sisters? Walthamstow Central is impossible to deal with in its current configuration if you want to gate everything off from everything else. Believe me we looked at it but it would not be safe given the limited space, position of staircases and platform edges. It is bad enough in the LUL ticket hall area - we struggled to get in the requisite number of gates and it would be hugely expensive to expand under the WAGN tracks to make more room. Whether the link to the bus station makes any difference we shall have to wait and see. As a passenger using these stations periodically, I'd prefer that there *were* ticket barriers - complex layouts or not - to discourage fare evasion and the sort of people that flock to stations for "free" travel. Thankfully places like Blackhorse Road, and Highbury and Islington have gates lines even for National Rail services, so it's not all bad! But only because these stations are configured in such a way that a gateline at the station entrance covers both operators. You can still interchange between the operators within the gateline. There is also the small issue about who actually benefits - the TOCs were very reluctant to cough up any whatsoever where their lines were covered at places like Highbury even though they benefit directly from increased sales at Highbury and also from other stations where people travel to Highbury. In other words LUL can stump public sector money and they can reap the private sector gain - err I think not. We all have duties to demonstrate that we are getting value for money. At Tottenham Hale the second gateline you suggest would only cover WAGN - there's nothing to stop them putting one in if they think it would pay. It certainly would not be the responsibility of LUL. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#29
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
TheOneKEA wrote in message ...
So you're saying that you don't touch the validators when you enter a DLR station, and you don't touch them when you exit a DLR station? Sounds like she's saying that you don't (or shouldn't) need to swipe the card on the validator when you are a) interchanging between operators/lines at an interchange station and b) when you have a travelcard, as opposed to prepay. With prepay, there is the possibility of having an unclosed or ambiguous journey. This isn't usually the case with travelcards. However, it also appears that you *do* sometimes have to validate the card, even with travelcards. I don't know why, and I don't know where I first heard it. Richard [in PO7] |
#30
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Annabel Smyth wrote in message
But why does this affect a Travelcard? I don't *have* any PrePay on my card? My understanding is that every Oyster card has pre pay, even if it stays at zero for all its life. The idea, as I understand it, is that if you have a TC for zones 1,2,3 and use it to go from Z1 to Z4, it will take the Z3-Z4 bit out of your prepay. If this prepay is zero, it will leave you with a negative prepay balance. This may disable the card for future use (until you make good the debt) or it may just disable the out-of-zone aspect; I don't know. Richard [in PO7] |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
What happens at those "urgent" moments? | London Transport | |||
Oyster Pre-pay- Day/Weekend Travelcards | London Transport | |||
Oyster Pre-pay vs Carnets | London Transport | |||
Oyster Pre-Pay (again) | London Transport | |||
Oyster Pre-Pay - Does Anyone Have Planned Launch Date | London Transport |