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#21
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In article , John Youles
URL:mailto:mines.a.pint@localhost wrote: On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 14:12:07 +0100 in uk.transport.london, Michael Bell tapped out on the keyboard: In the 19th century the railway companies made a plan to have a huge central London station, but Parliament stepped in and forced them to stop at the edge of the city centre and join them all using the circle line. It would be a very different London today if that had not happened. Would it have been better? An interesting question!. Michael Bell Fascinating ! Would you happen to know any books, websites etc. on the subject please ? John I'm afraid I don't know of any books about it that would be likely to be available today, I learned of it from a history book when I was at school. A long time ago! You might find references you could follow up in histories of the Circle line - the Circle line was the alternative to the Grand Central station - presumably the New York station of that name was the sucessful implementation of that idea in New York? One of Colin Buchanan's books refers to a quite separate idea of about 1900, put forwards by entrepreneurs, to create two cross-routes, one East-West, the other North-South, with an overhead railway for express traffic, a surface tramway underneath it (this was 1900!) for short-distance traffic and massive property development along the route, this is where they would recoup their investment. It was to be simply chopped through the existing built-up area. Once again Parliament wouldn't allow it, but it may also be that the promoters didn't have the necessary money. Once again, it would have made London into a completely different place. To think about it is almost like a Sci-fi alternative future story. But we live in the boring old world we have drifted into rather than the exciting world we might have got into by planning and vision! Michael Bell |
#22
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On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 21:53:51 +0100 in uk.transport.london, Michael Bell
tapped out on the keyboard: In article , John Youles URL:mailto:mines.a.pint@localhost wrote: On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 14:12:07 +0100 in uk.transport.london, Michael Bell tapped out on the keyboard: In the 19th century the railway companies made a plan to have a huge central London station, but Parliament stepped in and forced them to stop at the edge of the city centre and join them all using the circle line. It would be a very different London today if that had not happened. Would it have been better? An interesting question!. Michael Bell Fascinating ! Would you happen to know any books, websites etc. on the subject please ? John I'm afraid I don't know of any books about it that would be likely to be available today, I learned of it from a history book when I was at school. A long time ago! You might find references you could follow up in histories of the Circle line - the Circle line was the alternative to the Grand Central station - presumably the New York station of that name was the sucessful implementation of that idea in New York? One of Colin Buchanan's books refers to a quite separate idea of about 1900, put forwards by entrepreneurs, to create two cross-routes, one East-West, the other North-South, with an overhead railway for express traffic, a surface tramway underneath it (this was 1900!) for short-distance traffic and massive property development along the route, this is where they would recoup their investment. It was to be simply chopped through the existing built-up area. Once again Parliament wouldn't allow it, but it may also be that the promoters didn't have the necessary money. Once again, it would have made London into a completely different place. To think about it is almost like a Sci-fi alternative future story. But we live in the boring old world we have drifted into rather than the exciting world we might have got into by planning and vision! Michael Bell Thanks, Michael, I'll keep a look out. -- John Youles Norwich England UK j dot y.o.u.l.e.s at n.t.l.w.o.r.l.d dot c.o.m http://www.ukip.org/ |
#23
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On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 19:42:41 +0100, John wrote:
In article , Paul Corfield writes On 14 Jul 2003 14:15:59 -0700, (nmtop40) wrote: [crossrail] It's a connecting line around London we need, not more lines going through the middle of it. I agree with the orbital line idea in addition to Crossrail and I think it could be done relatively cheaply if people employed some imagination as to the execution of the concept. People in favour of crossrail often quote people wanting to travel from the GE lines to Paddington - but how many want to? Surely lots want to travel from GE to Waterloo/Victoria - I do quite often, and others want to go to go from Marylebone to London Bridge. But that is not the whole story is it. Crossrail will relieve a lot of other lines as well as provide very quick links across the centre. If you live in Ilford and want to go to Oxford St you currently get a GE train and then a tube. In future one train to TCR that is much faster overall as the line speed will be far higher than the Tube. Let's say you want to go Romford to Gatwick. In future one fast train to Farringdon then one fast Thameslink to Gatwick. There are a myriad of options opened up with Crossrail. I think people need to use the RER in Paris to see how good a concept it is in comparison to the Metro (which is good at what it does too but it is comparatively slow and nearly always requires one change to get anywhere). I commute to Kings Cross from the GE - it would probably ease my travel a bit, but I am not convinced by the plan - given the number of people or orbit the M25 I can see advantages in an orbital line linking key interchanges. so in future you get one direct train to Farringdon and then Thameslink or a Tube one stop. Sounds fine and dandy to me (assuming it all works, of course). I'd like to see Thameslink 2050 (!) built, Crossrail 1 then something doing KX- Victoria (Crossrail 2) and then Waterloo / Vauxhall - Euston preferably linking into Holborn / Aldwych. The only really difficult option would be whether we could create a London version of Chatelet Les Halles (Paris) with (nearly) all the lines linked or whether you'd have a couple of big Central London interchange stations. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#24
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![]() "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 19:42:41 +0100, John wrote: In article , Paul Corfield writes On 14 Jul 2003 14:15:59 -0700, (nmtop40) wrote: [crossrail] It's a connecting line around London we need, not more lines going through the middle of it. I agree with the orbital line idea in addition to Crossrail and I think it could be done relatively cheaply if people employed some imagination as to the execution of the concept. People in favour of crossrail often quote people wanting to travel from the GE lines to Paddington - but how many want to? Surely lots want to travel from GE to Waterloo/Victoria - I do quite often, and others want to go to go from Marylebone to London Bridge. (snip) I commute to Kings Cross from the GE - it would probably ease my travel a bit, but I am not convinced by the plan - given the number of people or orbit the M25 I can see advantages in an orbital line linking key interchanges. so in future you get one direct train to Farringdon and then Thameslink or a Tube one stop. Sounds fine and dandy to me (assuming it all works, of course). I'd like to see Thameslink 2050 (!) built, Crossrail 1 then something doing KX- Victoria (Crossrail 2) and then Waterloo / Vauxhall - Euston preferably linking into Holborn / Aldwych. The only really difficult option would be whether we could create a London version of Chatelet Les Halles (Paris) with (nearly) all the lines linked or whether you'd have a couple of big Central London interchange stations. The problem already with that is that Crossrail 2 is currently proposed to run Victoria - TCR - KX... so you already have three interchange stations (KX, Farringdon, TCR) in a triangle for TL2K/XR1/XR2. Crossrail 2 could be changed at this early stage but it wouldn't be sensible to run it via Farringdon just for ease of use. I'm not sure of my Paris geography - does it have several main centres like London's West End, City & Canary Wharf - or just one main one at Chatelet? -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 |
#25
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In article , John Youles
writes In the 19th century the railway companies made a plan to have a huge central London station, but Parliament stepped in and forced them to stop at the edge of the city centre and join them all using the circel line. It would be a very different London today if that had not happened. Would it have been better? An interesting question!. Fascinating ! Would you happen to know any books, websites etc. on the subject please ? The above isn't quite right though it grasps many of the essentials. There were many proposals for a central London interchange/terminus. However, Parliament refused to allow railways to enter from the north nearer than the "New Road", which is why Paddington, Euston, King's Cross, St.Pancras, and Liverpool Street are where they are. The lines from the south were given more leeway. The Metropolitan was conceived as a way to link all these stations and lines, at the same time carrying passenger and goods trains from the first four to the City. The Euston link never happened, but the others all did. Permission was granted to link the LC&DR in from Blackfriars as well, forming what is now Thameslink. The District (and later the Inner Circle) was based on a later proposal to extend the Metropolitan south from Paddington and then east along the north bank of the Thames to Liverpool Street to link the southern termini into the Metropolitan (though with no connecting tracks). -- Clive D.W. Feather, writing for himself | Home: Tel: +44 20 8371 1138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Written on my laptop; please observe the Reply-To address |
#26
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