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Manchester tram and others
Cheeky wrote: On Thu, 16 Sep 2004 19:14:14 GMT, (Neil Williams) wrote: On Thu, 16 Sep 2004 19:02:01 +0100, Cheeky wrote: GMPTE are miffed because their entire public transport strategy appears to be built around Metrolink to the detriment of everything else (IMHO). snip I'd agree with that. The main reason, as I see it, is that Metrolink (and, for that matter, the majority of the shoddy bus service) does not require an ongoing operational subsidy, while the regular local heavy rail operation does. Indeed. It's notable that the entire Greater Manchester heavy rail network carries fewer passengers than Metrolink but when you see the state of it and the total absence of any marketing from GMPTE it's no real surprise. IMO, the best solution for the Oldham Loop, for example, is not trams, but 25kV overhead line and new, high-acceleration heavy rail EMUs to form a German-style S-Bahn. The trams have their place, but it is not in taking over a perfectly good heavy rail system, increasing fares and slowing journeys. It is also not (in the case of Eccles) in operating routes that are substantially faster by bus! Agreed. Although even half-decent DMUs would improve services on the Oldham loop.... Though they would not, in themselves, solve the location problems at Mumps and Werneth stations. -- Stephen I'm gonna go trade my cow for some beans. No one else is seeing the funny here. |
Manchester tram and others
On Thu, 16 Sep 2004 23:21:43 -0400, Stephen Farrow
wrote: Though they would not, in themselves, solve the location problems at Mumps and Werneth stations. Perhaps not - but I'd be interested in how much a free shuttle bus service, like the successful Metroshuttle services in Manchester City Centre, would affect this and whether it would overall be a better (value?) solution. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK To e-mail use neil at the above domain |
Manchester tram and others
Cheeky wrote:
Originally it was about £500m with £300m coming from central government. Now it is up to about £1000m with £500m coming from central government with costs still rising... My question is why costs keep rising for schemes that I feel shold be capable of being costed pretty accurately. After all we are not building anything that hasn't been done before. M. |
Manchester tram and others
Neil Williams wrote: On Thu, 16 Sep 2004 23:21:43 -0400, Stephen Farrow wrote: Though they would not, in themselves, solve the location problems at Mumps and Werneth stations. Perhaps not - but I'd be interested in how much a free shuttle bus service, like the successful Metroshuttle services in Manchester City Centre, would affect this and whether it would overall be a better (value?) solution. It'd certainly cost less. Whether or not it would attract as many riders is another question. There'd need to be some upgrading of the (very unreliable) train service, for a start - and it's doubtful whether such a scheme would bring with it the regeneration investment for the town centre and Westwood that Oldham council are hoping will come with Metrolink (which, given the borough's depressed economic state, is an important consideration). -- Stephen Maybe it was lint. Maybe it was evil lint! |
Manchester tram and others
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Manchester tram and others
On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 08:27 +0100 (BST), (Colin
Rosenstiel) wrote: Needing to change vehicles, without a general transfer ticket system, reduces the value of such connections in the UK. No need for ticket transfers if it is a *free* bus like it is in Manchester City Centre. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK To e-mail use neil at the above domain |
Manchester tram and others
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Manchester tram and others
marcb wrote in message ...
Cheeky wrote: Originally it was about £500m with £300m coming from central government. Now it is up to about £1000m with £500m coming from central government with costs still rising... My question is why costs keep rising for schemes that I feel shold be capable of being costed pretty accurately. After all we are not building anything that hasn't been done before. Its not really the building costs that rise its the cost of financing the building as under PFI/PPP the builder is responsible for the cost of raising money and factoring in risks like if the government suddenly deceide to nationalise the system as in the case of Railtrack. The figure will also contain an element for operation and maintenance, somthing you rarely see in the capital costs for non PFI/PPP contracts. ie. the £450M? or so for the scottish parliament probably doesnt contain the ongoing costs of running the thing. Also the PFI/PPP contract will be over a set period (Ten years?)and the builder will have to make sure they pitch at a price that recoups all their costs plus whatever profit they trying to get within that period. This is what makes me so annoyed; the government make tram projects jump through a series of increasingly costly hoops until it reaches a point where they say its too expensive and abandon it. London does come out better usually but watch Crossrail constantly being put off for more consultation or retuning or even more reports and enquiries by the great and good. I predict another year of that before they cancel it again, maybe less if the Olympic bid goes bad. |
Manchester tram and others
On Thu, 16 Sep 2004 23:21:43 -0400, Stephen Farrow
wrote: Agreed. Although even half-decent DMUs would improve services on the Oldham loop.... Though they would not, in themselves, solve the location problems at Mumps and Werneth stations. True... they are not ideally located for the centre. However it is debatable whether a slower, more expensive service from Manchester to Oldham would be an improvement either.... As other posters have suggested a bus like the freebies in Manc may be a better VFM solution. -- ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø Please reply to the group Replies to this address will bounce! ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø |
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