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On Wed, 8 Jun 2005, James Farrar wrote:
On Wed, 8 Jun 2005 00:22:00 +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: It wasn't until Hutchison, in 1960, that interchanges went black: About the only good feature of that abomination. ! This is sensible, though, since it deals with the conundrum of which line interchange stations should take their colour from. That said, i really like Beck's pre-1960 maps, where interchanges consist of one circle on each line (in the line's colour). I think that in some locations (Charing Cross/Embankment springs to mind) it looks absurdly crowded. I don't. Compare the 1959 version, with separate circles: http://www.ursasoft.com/maps/LURS/big/london-1959.gif To the 2000, with joint ones: http://www.ursasoft.com/maps/LURS/big/london-2000.gif The 2000 map still needs multiple circles to capture Embankment / Charing Cross, so the 1959 isn't substantially more complex. That said, we can't see King's Cross or Euston on those maps! There's another device i quite like on the 1909 map: http://www.ursasoft.com/maps/LURS/extra/london-1909.gif Interchanges are shown as solid dots, like normal stations, but one on top of the other, with the one underneath a bit bigger, so it's visible as a ring around the one on top. They form concentric circles, basically. There's an echo of this in the way the 1959 map handles the Circle and District lines together at Charing Cross. Perhaps this would be a good way to show cross- or same-platform interchange, using 1959-style linked circles for different-platform interchanges, which would simplify big interchange stations, whilst also giving more information. Alternatively, it could be used for all interchanges (in which case the radial order could be used to indicate depth below ground!), but several stations would basically look like gobstoppers, which would be most unseemly. Mad props to this excellent website on the history of interchange symbology: http://www.ursasoft.com/maps/LURS/ A lovely diversion for twenty minutes or so. I actually really like the dot-in-circle for mainline interchanges. I really don't like the look, but it is clever. If one were to use the concentric rings, mainline interchange could be shown simply by having a white core - a ring which isn't part of a line, but which echoes the white design used for NR lines. tom -- SAWING CHASING CRUNCHING ROBOTIC DEMOLITION |
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