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#11
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Michael Bell writes
Rather than very expensively create NEW, it might be much better value to make best use of what ALREADY IS. Things like create interchange at the dozens of places in London where lines cross without any interchange at all or stations just too far apart to be really "the same place" the remnant of the railway politics of the 19th century. Places like :- * The crossing of the North London line with the Northern line. A pair of underground stations to be dug out. Simple but expensive! [...] It all looks possible, and VERY worthwhile. And where is the extra capacity to shift all those extra passengers going to be found? -- Dave |
#12
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On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 07:13:55 +0100 in uk.transport.london, Michael
Bell tapped out on the keyboard: In article , david stevenson wrote: nmtop40 wrote: It's a connecting line around London we need, not more lines going through the middle of it. Can you point me to the traffic survey that came to this conclusion? (The bit about not needing more lines through the middle) It wasn't just guesswork, was it? My thought exactly. I fear it wasn't even guesswork. I fear it was people who looked at a map and drew lines on it and said "wouldn't it be nice...." (like Hollywood films of WWII generals, planning their strategy by stabbing at maps with their cigars. Real generals were more professional) and that's the crossrail plan. I hear that a Parliamentary committee judged that Crossrail was "poor value for money" I have seen commentators criticise national railway projects, such as the West Coast Modernisation, as "a black hole", and I thought it was shamefully obvious that this was a narrow London interest which thought that money was only well spent in London, and wanted West Coast modernisation to be stopped, so that the money could be diverted to the likes of Crossrail. Rather than very expensively create NEW, it might be much better value to make best use of what ALREADY IS. Things like create interchange at the dozens of places in London where lines cross without any interchange at all or stations just too far apart to be really "the same place" the remnant of the railway politics of the 19th century. Places like :- * The crossing of the North London line with the Northern line. A pair of underground stations to be dug out. Simple but expensive! * Putney and East Putney. Join them with a Birmingham airport-type shuttle? That cost £10M for 1Km, (wow!) and the trackbed was already in existence. * At the crossing of more routes than I can list just west of Old Oak Common depot, roof over the whole area with a concrete slab, build flats, offices, etc on top of it, which could be sold for a tidy sum, and connecting stations beneath it. It all looks possible, and VERY worthwhile. Michael Bell There's enormous potential for interchanges in South London - Penge, Brockley, and where the SE lines to Victoria cross over the lines to Waterloo spring to mind. -- 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/ |
#13
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![]() "Bob Adams" wrote in message ... In message , John writes By the way what has happened to the Dome? It is still there and continues to be as popular as it ever was. What's it used for these days? |
#14
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![]() It's a connecting line around London we need, not more lines going through the middle of it. I disagree completely. A major reason why rail is not used more in this country is that journeys via London are a complete pain in the neck. For example I am travelling from Norwich to Torquay shortly which entails dragging luggage from Liverpool Street to Paddington. The ideal, which will never happen, is a megastation in the middle of London where all the inter-city services connect. 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!. Michael Bell -- |
#15
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In article , Dave
wrote: Michael Bell writes Rather than very expensively create NEW, it might be much better value to make best use of what ALREADY IS. Things like create interchange at the dozens of places in London where lines cross without any interchange at all or stations just too far apart to be really "the same place" the remnant of the railway politics of the 19th century. Places like :- * The crossing of the North London line with the Northern line. A pair of underground stations to be dug out. Simple but expensive! [...] It all looks possible, and VERY worthwhile. And where is the extra capacity to shift all those extra passengers going to be found? ************************************************ With an improvement like this, I should think that most of the increase in traffic will be outside the peak, because :- * People make the work journey they have to make, no matter how inconvenient. * If they can make their work journey shorter by using one of the links I propose, then they will cut out rail miles. * Mostly the current layout does not hinder journeys into and out of the city centre, this reform will make it easier to move jobs out of the city centre. BUT :- * Out of peak hours people's journeys are mostly not into and out of the city centre, they are cross-suburban, and the links I propose will these journeys very much more convenient. Michael Bell -- |
#16
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On Mon, 14 Jul 2003 20:21:26 +0100 CJG wrote:
} } By the way what has happened to the Dome? } } A tragic waste of something new and different which people didn't really } understand because it wasn't square with windows, a door and chimney } pot? But it _has_ got a chimney pot! To the left of the pic on http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sta...ur/default.stm } I think its going to be turned into a sports ground or Wembley Arena } type place. That's one of several suggestions - and a good one. But no one so far has the money for it. Matthew -- Il est important d'être un homme ou une femme en colère; le jour où nous quitte la colère, ou le désir, c'est cuit. - Barbara http://www.calmeilles.co.uk/ |
#18
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In message , Steve Moore
writes What's it used for these days? One weekend soon its being used for a music festival to promote racial equality. Free entry. Just turn up. -- CJG |
#19
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#20
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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. 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. -- John |
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