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Heathrow Piccadilly Line Closure
Brimstone wrote:
As was done during the building and extending of every deep tube line on the underground since the 1920s. Build the junction round the existing tunnel whilst allowing the service to continue running. That is not possible at Heathrow, as Richard J. has indicated elsewhere. Basically, the ground is so unstable and poor that if a traditional step-plate junction were built, the tunnels could collapse. Thus a huge cofferdam is needed to enclose the site of the junction. I highly doubt that TfL wanted to do this in the first place, but they would rather close the loop than risk a collapse and entrapment of a service train with hundreds of passengers. Which is preferred? |
Heathrow Piccadilly Line Closure
Brimstone wrote (I've repositioned his comment):
Mait001 wrote: It is also the complete lack of foresight and advance preparation when building the original line, and then the T4 line that irks me. Whilst I don't disagree with you basic premise, it has to be said that the site for T5 has been moved IIRC. Yes, the design of T5 was changed, which meant that the straight section of the T4 loop that could have accommodated a station was not in a suitable place. In other words, people did their best to show foresight and advance preparation. You would have done better within the available budget, I assume? Let me give you an example. In the late 1960s/early 1970s, my father was a civil engineer working for the London Borough of Hounslow. He was responsible for rebuilding Stanwell Road, a road connecting the Great South West Road to the cargo area of Heathrow Airport. At the time, there were vague rumblings about building a rail link to Heathrow from Victoria. In the end, it was abandoned because it would have cut through Buckingham Palace Garden. With that possibility in mind, however, he ensured that there were culverts, diverted drainage etc., and indeed an opening beneath Stanwell Road (that is there, unused, to this day) so that this could have been used by the railway line if ever it was built. So, on the basis of "vague rumblings", extra costs were voluntarily incurred by L.B. Hounslow, including a bridge under Stanwell Road large enough for a 2-track railway apparently. That perhaps explains part of the large debt that Hounslow council taxpayers are still having to pay the interest on. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
Heathrow Piccadilly Line Closure
"Richard J." wrote in message
k... There are some details in this month's Modern Railways (page 52). The ground at the junction site consists of water-bearing gravel, and conventional techniques to build a step-plate junction would risk a collapse of the existing tunnel. "At the site of the existing junction, the ground is being opened up for the construction of a big coffer dam extending 25 metres down. ... Once complete,this box will then hold the junction." TBMs will drill towards the site from the T5 end, but the final breakthrough will be done outwards from the box. Then they have the task of restoring the concrete aircraft taxiway over the box. In the circumstances, 20 months seems reasonable. Did I fall asleep at LURS in November, or was this important information omitted from the talk on the T5 extension? Omitted, I believe. If I'm understanding this correctly, this info seems to significantly reduce the wastage involved in building a step plate junction which will never be used as a junction, but doesn't seem to completely eliminate it. -- John Rowland - Spamtrapped Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001 http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood. That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line - It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes |
Heathrow Piccadilly Line Closure
"Mait001" wrote in message
... That is called foresight and forward planning that is so patently missing now. I don't agree. Many modern schemes have passive provision, or more, for other schemes. In fact, the existing Heathrow Express has a junction which was built for the T5 branch, although this will not be used.... and the Piccadilly T4 loop has a straight bit beneath where T5 was planned, although this will also now not be used. -- John Rowland - Spamtrapped Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001 http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood. That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line - It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes |
Heathrow Piccadilly Line Closure
TheOneKEA wrote:
Brimstone wrote: As was done during the building and extending of every deep tube line on the underground since the 1920s. Build the junction round the existing tunnel whilst allowing the service to continue running. That is not possible at Heathrow, as Richard J. has indicated elsewhere. Basically, the ground is so unstable and poor that if a traditional step-plate junction were built, the tunnels could collapse. Thus a huge cofferdam is needed to enclose the site of the junction. I highly doubt that TfL wanted to do this in the first place, but they would rather close the loop than risk a collapse and entrapment of a service train with hundreds of passengers. Which is preferred? My response was made before Richard J's appeared on my server. He has answered the question that I've been trying to find the answer to. |
Heathrow Piccadilly Line Closure
John Rowland wrote:
"Mait001" wrote in message ... That is called foresight and forward planning that is so patently missing now. I don't agree. Many modern schemes have passive provision, or more, for other schemes. In fact, the existing Heathrow Express has a junction which was built for the T5 branch, although this will not be used.... and the Piccadilly T4 loop has a straight bit beneath where T5 was planned, although this will also now not be used. And away from Heathrow, the Jubilee line has provision for an eastwards branch to Thamesmead at North Greenwich; the DLR has provision for future stations at Connaught Bridge, Thames Wharf (on the new LCY branch) and also I believe even in the tunnel to Bank for an underground station to replace Tower Gateway, which was originally going to be closed in favour of Bank, but DLR decided operationally that it was too useful to close. Plus the CTRL works incorporate provision for Thameslink 2000 by building a new link from St Pancras to the GN lines out of King's Cross. So I agree with John; planners still take into account future possibilities, but whether those possibilities change or not is a different issue. No-one can predict the future! -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
Heathrow Piccadilly Line Closure
John Rowland wrote:
"Richard J." wrote in message k... There are some details in this month's Modern Railways (page 52). The ground at the junction site consists of water-bearing gravel, and conventional techniques to build a step-plate junction would risk a collapse of the existing tunnel. "At the site of the existing junction, the ground is being opened up for the construction of a big coffer dam extending 25 metres down. ... Once complete,this box will then hold the junction." TBMs will drill towards the site from the T5 end, but the final breakthrough will be done outwards from the box. Then they have the task of restoring the concrete aircraft taxiway over the box. In the circumstances, 20 months seems reasonable. Did I fall asleep at LURS in November, or was this important information omitted from the talk on the T5 extension? Omitted, I believe. If I'm understanding this correctly, this info seems to significantly reduce the wastage involved in building a step plate junction which will never be used as a junction, but doesn't seem to completely eliminate it. I'm not sure why you say it will never be used as a junction. When T5 is open, the trains that run via T4 will join the eastbound T5-T123 track at the new junction. There may also be a connection from the T4 loop to the westbound T123-T5 track, which I guess wil be rarely used. Is that what you were referring to? -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
Heathrow Piccadilly Line Closure
"Mait001" wrote in message
... I have just read the TFL leaflet "Heathrow by Tue" Rats, my plane leaves on Monday. -- John Rowland - Spamtrapped Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001 http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood. That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line - It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes |
Heathrow Piccadilly Line Closure
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Heathrow Piccadilly Line Closure
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