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#131
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TheOneKEA wrote:
Dave Arquati wrote: Further to the whole Greenford thing, I totally forgot that the Greenford branch may *not* lose all its passengers if it is cut back to West Ealing for Crossrail, as Crossrail proposes that the frequency of the branch is doubled to 4tph (making connections to Crossrail at West Ealing). There would be cross-platform interchange from a bay platform for Greenford trains to eastbound Crossrail trains. Journey times from Greenford to Liverpool Street would be marginally quicker via Crossrail than via the Central line (35 mins vs. 38 mins). How much faster would journey times be from a hypothetical Crossrail station at North Acton and/or Park Royal instead of the companion LU station? I imagine times would be similar to those from Acton Main Line; Crossrail quote 16 minutes to Liverpool Street, compared to 30 minutes via the Central line. I was at North Acton today and could see just how absurdly easy it would be to dig out the northern edge of the cutting, reinstate double track and build a pair of side platforms, with stairwell interchange at North Acton. You could even get a set of lifts to the Central Line platforms without any major issues... I discovered the other day that the High Wycombe corridor considered previously would have included a station at Park Royal/North Acton. It was also once proposed that Crossrail take over the Central line from North Acton to Ealing Broadway. In any case, I hope advantage is taken of Acton Main Line as a gateway station from Crossrail to Park Royal - the current 440 bus misses Acton Main Line to head off into the depths of West Acton. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#132
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"Chris Tolley" wrote in message
.. . On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 19:04:49 +1030, Aidan Stanger wrote: Chris Tolley wrote: Central? Paddington? Yes, it's in Zone 1 therefore it's central. Even Fenchurch Street is closer to Charing Cross than Paddington... As is Marylebone. That's the thing about Central London termini: they're ALL central! In my mind it's "central" if it's within sensible walking distance of something useful. I used to work in Traf Sq., and used to shop in Tottenham Ct Rd. So, for me, neither Padd nor Fen St qualify. ;-) The boundary of what is, and what is not part of Central London is defined by the map accompanying the Mayor of London Order 2000, as signed by the First Secretary of State. And no, it's not on the internet! |
#133
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"Tony Polson" wrote in message
... We live on a very crowded island. Yes. People are crammed into urban areas through the "sustainability agenda". Actually, it only "seems" crowded because only 11% of the UK is actually urbanised. Our landscape is unique and precious. It recovers quite than one might imagine from development! |
#134
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Ian Harper wrote:
"Chris Tolley" wrote in message .. . On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 19:04:49 +1030, Aidan Stanger wrote: Chris Tolley wrote: Central? Paddington? Yes, it's in Zone 1 therefore it's central. Even Fenchurch Street is closer to Charing Cross than Paddington... As is Marylebone. That's the thing about Central London termini: they're ALL central! In my mind it's "central" if it's within sensible walking distance of something useful. I used to work in Traf Sq., and used to shop in Tottenham Ct Rd. So, for me, neither Padd nor Fen St qualify. ;-) The boundary of what is, and what is not part of Central London is defined by the map accompanying the Mayor of London Order 2000, as signed by the First Secretary of State. And no, it's not on the internet! That's a shame. It could settle quite a few arguments on this newsgroup! -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#135
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On Thu, 3 Mar 2005 23:10:00 -0000, Ian Harper wrote:
"Chris Tolley" wrote in message In my mind it's "central" if it's within sensible walking distance of something useful. I used to work in Traf Sq., and used to shop in Tottenham Ct Rd. So, for me, neither Padd nor Fen St qualify. ;-) The boundary of what is, and what is not part of Central London is defined by the map accompanying the Mayor of London Order 2000, as signed by the First Secretary of State. And no, it's not on the internet! So much for freedom of information... ;-) -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p12161563.html (Red Parcels Bubble 55995 at London Liverpool Street in 1991) |
#136
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On Mon, 21 Feb 2005 11:38:51 +0000, Graeme Wall
wrote: Count the number of days when there isn't a major event at Wembley. Remember it is not just the football ground that is served by that station, there are 4(?) exhibition halls, the Conference Centre and the Arena as well. Hmm, Wembley is served by Wembley Park and Wembley Central. Now how does the service freuqnecy of these stations compare with Wembley Stadium? Rob. -- rob at robertwoolley dot co dot uk |
#137
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![]() "Robert Woolley" wrote in message ... Hmm, Wembley is served by Wembley Park and Wembley Central. Now how does the service freuqnecy of these stations compare with Wembley Stadium? It depends where you want to go from/to. For Gerrards Cross, Beaconsfield, High Wycombe, Bicester, Banbury etc. neither Wembley Park nor Wembley Central are any use at all and 2tph from Wembley Stadium is quite acceptable. For Aylesbury, despite the slightly longer journey, Wembley Stadium is far more convenient that Wembley Park and a change at Harrow-on-the-Hill. |
#138
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On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 14:03:02 +0000, PaulBowery wrote:
What about this for an idea- combine the Greenford branch and Barking to Gospel Oak into a single service via Ealing Broadway and Willesden Junction. This would provide an interchange between the North London Line and the west via Ealing Broadway. If paths in the Willesden Junction area are a problem then some of the Stratford trains could run to Willesden Junction low level via Queens Park. How about (after crossrail) Greenford via CastleBarPark, West Ealing, Ealing Broadway, Acton Main Line, then down via Shepherds Bush, KennyO, West Brompton, Imperial Wharf to Clapham Junction to meet the East London line? 4tph would offer some form of SouthWest - West London transport. Alternativly move half of the Heathrow Connect/Express services to Waterloo via Clapham. A 30 minute every 30 minutes Express none-stop to Waterloo would surely be a winner, combined with a Heathrow Connect all stop - or at least EalingB-KennyO-Clapham, would be a well-used service. -- Everything I write here is my personal opinion, and should not be taken as fact. |
#139
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Paul Weaver wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 14:03:02 +0000, PaulBowery wrote: What about this for an idea- combine the Greenford branch and Barking to Gospel Oak into a single service via Ealing Broadway and Willesden Junction. This would provide an interchange between the North London Line and the west via Ealing Broadway. If paths in the Willesden Junction area are a problem then some of the Stratford trains could run to Willesden Junction low level via Queens Park. How about (after crossrail) Greenford via CastleBarPark, West Ealing, Ealing Broadway, Acton Main Line, then down via Shepherds Bush, KennyO, West Brompton, Imperial Wharf to Clapham Junction to meet the East London line? 4tph would offer some form of SouthWest - West London transport. Unfortunately the reason Greenford trains are being cut back to West Ealing is that all line capacity on the Relief lines is required for Crossrail services. Cutting back to West Ealing will mean Greenford trains don't actually use the GW at all other than for travelling to/from the depot. Alternativly move half of the Heathrow Connect/Express services to Waterloo via Clapham. A 30 minute every 30 minutes Express none-stop to Waterloo would surely be a winner, combined with a Heathrow Connect all stop - or at least EalingB-KennyO-Clapham, would be a well-used service. That's fine if you're already at Heathrow and want to get into London, but if you're doing it the other way around or want to travel to an intermediate station on the GWML (which is what Heathrow Connect is for!) then you've just halved the frequency. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#140
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Dave Arquati wrote:
Unfortunately the reason Greenford trains are being cut back to West Ealing is that all line capacity on the Relief lines is required for Crossrail services. Cutting back to West Ealing will mean Greenford trains don't actually use the GW at all other than for travelling to/from the depot. This is why I suggested using the GW link line to run some of the Crossrail trains to Greenford; unfortunately, the Central Line viaducts would make it very difficult to get a link in from the bay platform to the link line. |
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