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#1
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"J. Chisholm" wrote in message
... Has the publication of Network Rail's 'Statement of Case' dated March 2005 for Thameslink 2000 been mentioned on this group? see: http://www.networkrail.co.uk/Documents/Web%20SOC.pdf for a 90 page document submitted in advance of pre-inquiry meeting to be held on Tuesday 26th April The Planning Inspectorate has confirmed that the public inquiry will start on September 6th 2005 Thanks. "4.33 Since the first inquiry the Crossrail project team has worked closely with the Thameslink 2000 project team to completely redesign the Farringdon Crossrail station at street level. The effect of the new Crossrail station design is to remove its dependency on the Thameslink 2000 scheme. In particular the new Crossrail design does not require use of the Moorgate branch" Use of the Moorgate branch? I don't know what they mean, unless the former plan required widening of the Circle Line platform at Barbican. -- 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 |
#2
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John Rowland wrote:
"4.33 Since the first inquiry the Crossrail project team has worked closely with the Thameslink 2000 project team to completely redesign the Farringdon Crossrail station at street level. The effect of the new Crossrail station design is to remove its dependency on the Thameslink 2000 scheme. In particular the new Crossrail design does not require use of the Moorgate branch" Use of the Moorgate branch? I don't know what they mean, unless the former plan required widening of the Circle Line platform at Barbican. It says the redesign is 'At street level'. It sounds like the disused (following Thameslink 2000) Widened Lines were going to be used for passenger access or buildings. |
#3
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#4
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"Boltar" wrote in message
ps.com... I can't help thinking that closing the moorgate spur is a hopelessly short sighted decision. Huge numbers of people use thameslink to travel into the city in the rush hour and if they all have to pile onto the circle line at farringdon into already overcrowded trains its going to be chaos. If they want to make the trains longer why not just delegate some carriages at the end that won't open their doors at the shorter farringdon platforms? Works elsewhere in the world. Or would the bedwetters in the HSE & HMRI have to reach for the smelling salts? The "2000" in Thameslink 2000 represents the number of times this has been suggested on Usenet. -- 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 |
#5
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![]() Boltar wrote: I can't help thinking that closing the moorgate spur is a hopelessly short sighted decision. Huge numbers of people use thameslink to travel into the city in the rush hour and if they all have to pile onto the circle line at farringdon into already overcrowded trains its going to be chaos. If they want to make the trains longer why not just delegate some carriages at the end that won't open their doors at the shorter farringdon platforms? Works elsewhere in the world. Or would the bedwetters in the HSE & HMRI have to reach for the smelling salts? B2003 or cut out the doors in the rear 4 coaches then move the train forward for the people at the back to get out. It does seem that in modern life the human race has lost the ability to come up with any compromise for anything. They must be really kicking themselves that they built on the goods yard and freight lines now. Kevin |
#6
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![]() John Rowland wrote: "Boltar" wrote in message ps.com... I can't help thinking that closing the moorgate spur is a hopelessly short sighted decision. Huge numbers of people use thameslink to travel into the city in the rush hour and if they all have to pile onto the circle line at farringdon into already overcrowded trains its going to be chaos. If they want to make the trains longer why not just delegate some carriages at the end that won't open their doors at the shorter farringdon platforms? Works elsewhere in the world. Or would the bedwetters in the HSE & HMRI have to reach for the smelling salts? The "2000" in Thameslink 2000 represents the number of times this has been suggested on Usenet. Thank you for that helpful reply. Perhaps some of us have work to do and don't have the time to read back a couple of years worth of posts. B2003 |
#7
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Other countries manage compromise , its just in this hopeless
paranoid litigation driven culture that nothing can get done or has to be put back 50 years because the inmates have taken over the asylum. No doubt theres some pointless rule made up by some intellectual midget that prevents my earlier suggestion from happening. B2003 |
#8
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Boltar wrote:
Other countries manage compromise , its just in this hopeless paranoid litigation driven culture that nothing can get done or has to be put back 50 years because the inmates have taken over the asylum. No doubt theres some pointless rule made up by some intellectual midget that prevents my earlier suggestion from happening. B2003 Shirley there could be some sort of transponder just under the platform edges that could tie in to receivers on the doors in order to guarantee that only doors adjacent to the platform would open ? Would this not appease the HSE ? Funnily enough, we were talking about this at work the other day. Someone had suggested making trains longer to reduce overcrowding and selective door opening to avoid lengthening platforms. When we pointed out that this was not allowed, and he said - but what about the doors on the other side of the train - what is to stop them opening accidentally? |
#9
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matt wrote:
Boltar wrote: Other countries manage compromise , its just in this hopeless paranoid litigation driven culture that nothing can get done or has to be put back 50 years because the inmates have taken over the asylum. No doubt theres some pointless rule made up by some intellectual midget that prevents my earlier suggestion from happening. B2003 Shirley there could be some sort of transponder just under the platform edges that could tie in to receivers on the doors in order to guarantee that only doors adjacent to the platform would open ? Would this not appease the HSE ? Funnily enough, we were talking about this at work the other day. Someone had suggested making trains longer to reduce overcrowding and selective door opening to avoid lengthening platforms. When we pointed out that this was not allowed, and he said - but what about the doors on the other side of the train - what is to stop them opening accidentally? Doesn't this lead to a massive dwell-time problem, as you have a lot of passengers trying to disembark through a lower proportion of doors per passenger? ISTR this is the answer constantly floated in this newsgroup to the similar "why don't we have double-decker trains" question. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#10
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On Thu, 17 Mar 2005 20:25:59 +0000 (UTC), matt wrote:
Funnily enough, we were talking about this at work the other day. Someone had suggested making trains longer to reduce overcrowding and selective door opening to avoid lengthening platforms. When we pointed out that this was not allowed, and he said - but what about the doors on the other side of the train - what is to stop them opening accidentally? Did he *really* say that? -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p9632874.html (A 33/1+4-TC combination at London Waterloo: 33 104, 28 Mar 1981) |
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