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#181
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In message , Dave Liney
writes Only if you take as truth that most of the people getting on Eurostar trains are from SWT destinations and that is because people can't cope with the "struggle" of 1.9 miles/20-30 minutes from St Pancras. I don't. The argument is more finely balanced than the inconvenience of a poor interchange. There is the additional time and the fact that there is now an additional leg of the journey in both directions. It is the *combination* of these factors that will make St Pancras far less attractive than Waterloo for customers currently using the latter. Considering that they won't survive if they haven't done their sums properly Since Eurostar isn't even remotely "commercial" in the normal sense of the term, there is every likelihood that they would survive a bad decision. The shareholders are hardly short of funds! I'd expect them to have taken the job seriously. Perhaps you don't know all the facts? I don't any more than you do. But one only has to look at the history of the line - customer predictions that were miles off-target, the great plan for direct services from Manchester, Edinburgh and Leeds that never transpired - oh, yes, and the famous South Wales to Paris night service. I'd expect them to do the same as they do at Heathrow which is head for the tube/train to where they want to go. And you think that's better than stepping off the train in Waterloo? -- Paul Terry |
#182
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![]() "David Marsh" wrote in message al.lan... [Outlook Express bug: message invisible. See http://viewport.co.uk/outlook ] Do the world a favour, FOAD Plonk... |
#183
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On Wed, 24 Nov 2004, David Marsh wrote:
So Waterloo is a good and cheap solution for those north of London The interchange between St Pancras and Waterloo is poor, especially when carrying luggage. How infeasible (read: costly) would it be to build an underground travelator link between Euston Station (with access from the mainline and the Underground) to St Pancras International Better: PEDESTRIANISE EUSTON ROAD! Think about it - a broad, leafy (plant some trees), elegant avenue running from Paddington to King's Cross (if you also do the Marylebone Road and integrate the land around Paddington Basin), in front of some of the most refined buildings in northern central London (and some ****ty ones too, of course). It would be completely wonderful! Stick that in your Piazza San Marco, Venice, and smoke it! Not sure what you'd do with the cars, though. I'd suggest cut-and-covering a highway underneath the avenue, but the Metropolitan Line's got there first. Perhaps another tunnel could be dug alongside it. Yes! And at the eastern end, it could carry on through the Widened Lines tunnels, to Moorgate! Two birds with one stone! Also not sure how cars would get from the tunnel and the side roads; i bet that Funky Junction guy could work something out. Really, though, consider the alternatives: (a) Cars on the surface, people underground (b) People on the surface, cars underground Not rocket science. (And while I'm in tunnel-digging mode, why not merge Embankment and Charing Cross Northern/Bakerloo stations into one station (on each line) with travelators to shrink the distance/time from the existing entrances, to save the time of an extra station stop? This is also obviously right. tom -- Understand the world we're living in |
#184
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In article , Matt Wheeler wrote:
"TP" wrote in message ... Anyway, from Waterloo, you can cross over to Waterloo East and catch a South Eastern service to Ashford, which, for the fast trains, are just over an hour.. And pay another £16.70 for a return ticket from Waterloo East to Ashford, followed by the full Eurostar fare from Ashford? |
#185
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In article , Stevie D wrote:
Martin Rich wrote: Which line is that? For many (most?) Waterloo commuters the natural way to St Pancras is to get off their national rail train at Vauxhall, admittedly not the nicest or easiest of interchanges, and get the Victoria Line which in my experience is usually quick and efficient. The problem is that so many trains don't stop at Vauxhall, which means an additional change at Clapham Junction, which is not an experience for the faint-hearted! And at peak times few of the longer distance mainline trains stop at Clapham Junction either, making for another change at Woking. |
#186
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An aspect of this subject which has not been aired here is the fact that
St.Pancras/KX from a public transport point of view is the most overcrowded in London and distribution of passengers from there is extremely problematical.This is greatly exacerbated at peak times. This problem will not be helped by the arrival of the CTRLDS and the absence of an upgraded Thameslink (3,000?). MJW |
#187
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On Wed, 24 Nov 2004 21:10:06 -0000, "M.Whitson"
wrote: An aspect of this subject which has not been aired here is the fact that St.Pancras/KX from a public transport point of view is the most overcrowded in London and distribution of passengers from there is extremely problematical.This is greatly exacerbated at peak times. This problem will not be helped by the arrival of the CTRLDS and the absence of an upgraded Thameslink (3,000?). MJW Agreed. The London transport planning community is well aware of this, hence TfL's plans for LUL upgrades as well as the continuous review the bus network undergoes.... Rob. -- rob at robertwoolley dot co dot uk |
#188
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#189
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"M.Whitson" wrote:
An aspect of this subject which has not been aired here is the fact that St.Pancras/KX from a public transport point of view is the most overcrowded in London and distribution of passengers from there is extremely problematical.This is greatly exacerbated at peak times. This problem will not be helped by the arrival of the CTRLDS and the absence of an upgraded Thameslink (3,000?). All very good points, and all true. |
#190
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David Marsh wrote:
[Outlook Express bug: message invisible. See http://viewport.co.uk/outlook ] begin Paul Terry's quote in uk.railway about: Eurostar to quit Waterloo So Waterloo is a good and cheap solution for those north of London No. Now you are making your third false assumption. The interchange between St Pancras and Waterloo is poor, especially when carrying luggage. Eurostar had the opportunity of enabling all of their customers to avoid making that cross London journey. They have chosen not to. Just a general comment in this thread; everyone is assuming that people will transfer from Waterloo to St Pancras, but there will also be a direct transfer between Waterloo and Stratford, which only takes 23 minutes platform to platform, compared to the 16 minutes for Waterloo to St Pancras. There will hopefully be a travelator at Stratford to compensate for it being a longer interchange than St Pancras. How infeasible (read: costly) would it be to build an underground travelator link between Euston Station (with access from the mainline and the Underground) to St Pancras International (also linking with King's Cross and King's Cross / St Pancras Underground)? It's only about 500 m on the surface, and given the nature of all the existing gubbins underground, probably less than that in practice. The existing gubbins underground is rather the problem. There's so much down there, it would be difficult to find somewhere to put the tunnel (unless you put it very deep, which just defeats the point if you spend ages trekking down into the bowels of the earth and out again at the other end). This would put Waterloo and Euston (and Victoria, come to that) within easy reach of St Pancras, with only one Underground transfer required. Er, Victoria already has a pretty decent link to St Pancras :-) Better yet: build Cross River Transit; surface light rail between Waterloo and King's Cross, every 90 seconds in the peaks. No need to journey to the centre of the earth, and you get a view. Such a link could also be extended to Euston Square Underground to make it a proper interchange both for Euston Station and for Eurostar from the likes of Paddington, Liverpool St, Fenchurch St, etc (although presumably the latter two would have better Eurostar interchange at Stratford). (And while I'm in tunnel-digging mode, why not merge Embankment and Charing Cross Northern/Bakerloo stations into one station (on each line) with travelators to shrink the distance/time from the existing entrances, to save the time of an extra station stop? Or would that require an incredible amount of underground reconstruction work?) Ouch. Charing Cross Northern and Bakerloo platforms are miles away from Charing Cross SET as it is, without merging them. It would make more sense to split them back into what they used to be before the Jubilee Line arrived - Trafalgar Square (Bakerloo) and Strand (Northern). The Bakerloo platforms are certainly more suited to Trafalgar Square than Charing Cross. After all, Embankment used to be called Charing Cross... -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
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