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#11
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Terry Harper wrote:
On Thu, 07 Apr 2005 22:18:25 +0100, Dave Arquati wrote: I don't know whether TL2K is pitched to try to attract some people out of their cars for M25-based journeys, as the "Superlink" alternative to Crossrail was. If so, they're probably making a mistake - there's not much rail can do to solve M25 congestion. It may not solve M25 congestion, but it would allow individuals to avoid it by encouraging park and ride. Park and ride to where? If to central London, then those individuals won't use the M25 for the greater part of their journey. The M25 has encouraged a whole host of local and medium distance orbital journeys which are extremely difficult to address with public transport. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#12
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Dave Arquati wrote:
Park and ride to where? If to central London, then those individuals won't use the M25 for the greater part of their journey. The M25 has encouraged a whole host of local and medium distance orbital journeys which are extremely difficult to address with public transport. I'm interested by this, you saying that because the M25 was built and people started making different journeys, those journeys are now hard to satisfy by rail? Doesn't a (further) orbital rail system provide this? Dan |
#13
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Dan Gravell wrote:
Dave Arquati wrote: Park and ride to where? If to central London, then those individuals won't use the M25 for the greater part of their journey. The M25 has encouraged a whole host of local and medium distance orbital journeys which are extremely difficult to address with public transport. I'm interested by this, you saying that because the M25 was built and people started making different journeys, those journeys are now hard to satisfy by rail? That's precisely what I'm saying. I think the ORBIT multimodal study pointed this out too, but I'm afraid I don't have any links to hand. Doesn't a (further) orbital rail system provide this? No. The M25 doesn't just generate journeys solely along its own route, it encourages them along radial routes too - so a huge number of journeys are now made which use the M25 as part of a longer journey. For example, Maidenhead to Watford, Luton to Uxbridge, Tunbridge Wells to Croydon... the list is practically endless. Although you might be able to provide a rail-based alternative to M25-only journeys (which would be incredibly expensive!), it wouldn't really help with the part-M25 journeys. If we constructed an interchange station for every point our hypothetical M25 railway crossed a radial route, then there would be a possible public transport journey between any two M25-area towns - but it would often require two changes, and would therefore be slower and less attractive than a car. Now, of course, the M25 has not only generated new and diverse journeys but has encouraged development along its route - notably at Lakeside and Bluewater - which totally depends on the M25 for access. The only way to combat M25 congestion now is to introduce area-wide road user charging and widen it all to at least 4 lanes each way. That way, the growth induced by widening will be curtailed by the charges, and the result should (in theory) be a more reliable and useful motorway. The more likely result is that the government will decide to widen, but won't have the political willpower to introduce charging, and we'll be back to square one (or more like square -1) in a few years' time. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#14
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In article , (Dave
Arquati) wrote: Now, of course, the M25 has not only generated new and diverse journeys but has encouraged development along its route - notably at Lakeside and Bluewater - which totally depends on the M25 for access. I live in Basingstoke, and shop in both Lakeside and Bluewater. I don't use the M25 to get to either of them... -- Paul Cummins - Always a NetHead Wasting Bandwidth since 1981 I'm Backing Blair - www.backingblair.co.uk |
#15
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![]() Dan Gravell wrote: Hmm... the wording with respect to funding approval was decidedly vague - but at least there seems to be a will from the ODPM to get something done. In the meantime, they better get a bloody move on fitting out the St Pancras Thameslink box, or there will be a lot of ****ed off Thameslink commuters come 2007. Don't be silly , this is Britain. They might be able to build and fit out an entire motor racing circuit in Dubai in 9 months or put up a new skyscraper in 2 years in new york, but in good old blighty it takes a year to overhaul a couple of bloody escalators, never mind build a few box tunnels. You should think yourself lucky its being build at all! /sarcasm B2003 |
#16
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In article ,
Paul Cummins wrote: I live in Basingstoke, and shop in both Lakeside and Bluewater. I don't use the M25 to get to either of them... I suspect you're unusual in that. -- Mike Bristow - really a very good driver |
#17
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Paul Cummins wrote:
In article , (Dave Arquati) wrote: Now, of course, the M25 has not only generated new and diverse journeys but has encouraged development along its route - notably at Lakeside and Bluewater - which totally depends on the M25 for access. I live in Basingstoke, and shop in both Lakeside and Bluewater. I don't use the M25 to get to either of them... Well, if we all had Tardises, we wouldn't need the M25... -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#18
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![]() "Dave Arquati" wrote in message ... Mrs Redboots wrote: Dave Arquati wrote to uk.transport.london on Wed, 6 Apr 2005: Interestingly, it also says that DEFRA have commissioned a studies (not that that means anything useful) into the East-West rail link between Oxford and Cambridge via Bletchley and Bedford, as part of an investigation into supporting the new Milton Keynes & South Midlands housing plans around Milton Keynes. Would this be the same Oxford-Cambridge rail link via Bedford that was dug up 40-something years ago? Yup. They've decided they need it again. -- Or it could be a counter to the road lobby "outer M25" Consisting A34, part dualled A43.A421,A428,A14 Alan Quick |
#19
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On Fri, 08 Apr 2005 01:06:41 +0100, Dave Arquati
wrote: Terry Harper wrote: It may not solve M25 congestion, but it would allow individuals to avoid it by encouraging park and ride. Park and ride to where? If to central London, then those individuals won't use the M25 for the greater part of their journey. The M25 has encouraged a whole host of local and medium distance orbital journeys which are extremely difficult to address with public transport. A large part of then M25 traffic is transferring from one motorway to another. It draws traffic out from the inner area, and in from the outer sector, simply because there are no better alternatives. I went to a family funeral in Sunbury on Tuesday, and my route took me via the M23, then M25 and then M3. Before the M25 I would probably have gone A272, A24, A244 then A3 to the Scilly lsles, then via Hampton Court bridge, or else over Walton bridge from Esher. Both shorter routes, but much more congested and taking considerably longer. People heading in towards London are frequently looking for somewhere to leave their cars and continue by public transport, as many threads on this board will testify. Depending on their ultimate destination, they may well use the M25 to get to another motorway, which is a better approach to that place than is ploughing through the centre. In other cases, they would like a railway line which gets them to their destination. Only Thameslink offers a cross-London route for this purpose, ignoring the West London Line as being orbital. -- Terry Harper Website Coordinator, The Omnibus Society http://www.omnibussoc.org |
#20
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"Mrs Redboots" wrote in message
... Would this be the same Oxford-Cambridge rail link via Bedford that was dug up 40-something years ago? Mostly - from memory the bit between Biggleswade (or Sandy or somewhere) and Cambridge will not be reinstated, replaced instead with a cheaper brand new curve from Arlesey to Letchworth. -- 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 |
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