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#31
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I've already stated that I don't use the car to drive to Amersham, I
take it that you mean environmental costs, pollution etc, well as I don't use the car to get to work (unless I have to) they don't really count. My point is that at 23p per mile for a 15 mile journey (It's probably more as I get more AL than the assumed figures) I think that it is expensive and I could do the journey for less in the car. Incidently an annual season ticket all the way is about £3000 from Aylesbury to Marylebone, anyone know how much that works out at per mile? Brimstone wrote: General Von Clinkerhoffen wrote: I already own the car, I already tax it, I already fill it with petrol (petrol is cheaper in amersham as well), I already MOT and service it, there really aren't many other factors to take in. So you don't take into accout all the costs of driving to the station? |
#32
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![]() Tony Polson wrote: I really wonder if you are talking about the Aylesbury I know, because that is where I live. Let us assume that your question is rhetorical and leave it at that. Aylesbury has superb rail links to London, with fast, modern, clean trains offering a punctual and reliable service. There are excellent connections into the London Underground system, with whose services the Aylesbury service of Chiltern Railways is well coordinated. Chiltern have been an outstanding operator. Probably one of the few success stories to emerge from privatization. There are two routes to London, one via Amersham and the other via High Wycombe. The latter route offers an easy interchange at Princes Risborough with express trains to Banbury, Leamington Spa and Birmingham, which have recently doubled in frequency. One is aware of the above. And, again Chiltern can be commended for their improvements. Presumably you would like the little-used rural lines that used to radiate from Aylesbury to be kept open with large government subsidy, rather than spending the money on services that people actually want to use, in very large numbers. No I don't think Waddesden Manor should re-open. No do I think the Brill Branch has a place in the modern world except possible and a preservation project. I do think that extending, or re-opening, lines to centers of population like Banbury and Milton Keynes has real value. Not only would this offer local service but the opportunities for connection to longer distance services. I do not think re-opening the line to Cheddington has any merit, but I think re-connecting Aylesbury to the WCML at Watford and/or Milton Keynes offers real travel possibilities. Can you explain why the citizens of Reading, Oxford, Watford, Leighton Buzard, Luton, Bedford and Welwyn should all enjoy through services to the North whilst those residing in Buckinghamshire's County seat do not? Chiltern Railways is a great success, and enjoys strong local support. As it should. They are a good company. Please don't knock it. I think your criticism of Aylesbury's excellent rail services is wholly misplaced, being based on old fashioned sentiment rather than common sense rooted in reality. Does "Old" equal "Bad"? I happen to think the loss of the Great Central Route was a bad thing. Evidently Chiltern Railways agree with me. They have discussed extending northwards. Moreover I believe the Pacific Electric Railway better served Los Angeles and its environs better than the present day freeway system. In that respect my view is a minority one. But my view on that is far from unique. New and shining is NOT always better. All that glitters is not gold. When the Great Central main line was closed, the SW main line to Exeter was also slated for closure. Now that line is viewed as a valuable aset. Yet if I apply your logic to that line, it should also have been closed. I doubt you really believe that. Your response appears to come from a man who is tired and whose pet project has gone badly wrong. Neither of which will I hold against you :-) A. LACo, CA. |
#33
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Upon the miasma of midnight, a darkling spirit identified as Tony Polson
gently breathed: Presumably you would like the little-used rural lines that used to radiate from Aylesbury to be kept open with large government subsidy, rather than spending the money on services that people actually want to use, in very large numbers. I don't know the area, but given that the govt seems hell-bent on converting the entire SouthEast into one vast sea of Barrat box houses, I suspect those same "little used rural lines" will indeed be needed before much longer, except they'll no longer be rural, and be running at inner-city-metro type frequencies in a desperate attempt to stave off the inevitable gridlock. Just why does gov.uk seem so utterly convinced that the entire population of England, bar a few west-country hoteliers and the landed gentry, should live within 50 miles of Central London? NP: Razed In Black - Oh My Goth! -- - Pyromancer Stormshadow. http://www.inkubus-sukkubus.co.uk -- Pagan Gothic Rock! http://www.littlematchgirl.co.uk -- Electronic Metal! http://www.revival.stormshadow.com -- The Gothic Revival. |
#34
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Upon the miasma of midnight, a darkling spirit identified as Martin
Edwards gently breathed: Adrian Auer-Hudson wrote: Nevertheless having grown up near a town (Aylesbury) with fine rail links both north and south. Said routes having the potential for development into a fine network, you will understand my disappointment at the leftovers that Aylesbury has for it rail link today. This is particularly strange in so far as Aylesbury was part of an area that was expected to see, and did see, expanded housing and employment as companies and individual were encouraged to relocate away from London in the 1960s and 1970s. This was typical of planning in the period, which assumed universal car ownership. After all, we all watched Perry Mason, didn't we? Back in the 1980s I recorded a long Channel 4 series about public transport. Alas I never got round to watching all of it (what was that Douglas Addams said about having videos to watch programmes so you didn't have to? g), but from one of the episodes I did watch I remember someone commenting that the New Towns had been based on the concept of universal car ownership, but completely ignored the fact that one car per household does not mean one car per person, as usually the main breadwinner will drive the car to work and leave the rest of the family marooned in their impossible-to-serve-sensibly-with-public-transport house for the day. NP: Paralysed Age - Bloodsucker 2000 (Empire Of The Vampire). -- - Pyromancer Stormshadow. http://www.inkubus-sukkubus.co.uk -- Pagan Gothic Rock! http://www.littlematchgirl.co.uk -- Electronic Metal! http://www.revival.stormshadow.com -- The Gothic Revival. |
#35
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Pyromancer wrote:
Upon the miasma of midnight, a darkling spirit identified as Tony Polson gently breathed: Presumably you would like the little-used rural lines that used to radiate from Aylesbury to be kept open with large government subsidy, rather than spending the money on services that people actually want to use, in very large numbers. I don't know the area, but given that the govt seems hell-bent on converting the entire SouthEast into one vast sea of Barrat box houses, I suspect those same "little used rural lines" will indeed be needed before much longer, except they'll no longer be rural, and be running at inner-city-metro type frequencies in a desperate attempt to stave off the inevitable gridlock. Just why does gov.uk seem so utterly convinced that the entire population of England, bar a few west-country hoteliers and the landed gentry, should live within 50 miles of Central London? Because it has long been the case that people running businesses and other organisation think they have to be near the seat of government which in turn drags in other businesses and so it goes on. It's nothing new and if one casts one's mind back governments spent large sums of money persuading businesses to move out of London. |
#36
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In message , Pyromancer
writes Just why does gov.uk seem so utterly convinced that the entire population of England, bar a few west-country hoteliers and the landed gentry, should live within 50 miles of Central London? Because the asking price of an ordinary terraced house in Reading is GBP 215k http://www.austinandco.co.uk/details.php?prop=AUCO206 and for something similar in Bolton, it's GBP 80k? http://www.regencyestates.co.uk/detail.asp?PID=479 Which is not to say they shouldn't be doing something to reduce demand in the south east and increase it elsewhere. -- Goalie of the Century |
#37
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In message , at 07:59:00 on Thu, 7 Jul
2005, Goalie of the Century remarked: Just why does gov.uk seem so utterly convinced that the entire population of England, bar a few west-country hoteliers and the landed gentry, should live within 50 miles of Central London? Because the asking price of an ordinary terraced house in Reading is GBP 215k http://www.austinandco.co.uk/details.php?prop=AUCO206 and for something similar in Bolton, it's GBP 80k? http://www.regencyestates.co.uk/detail.asp?PID=479 Which is not to say they shouldn't be doing something to reduce demand in the south east and increase it elsewhere. Which has a lot to do with rail transport. There are many businesses, which even if relocated away from London, will involve significant movements of senior management to and from London where they will meet with all the people who haven't yet relocated. (And who probably never will, as if they were dispersed then such meetings would be even more difficult to arrange). These are the people who buy the expensive open tickets, with "other" people's money. But they aren't completely blind to the cost or to the personal sacrifice on a day to day basis. Their experience does little to encourage others to make the same lifestyle change. -- Roland Perry |
#38
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Adrian Auer-Hudson wrote:
Moreover I believe the Pacific Electric Railway better served Los Angeles and its environs better than the present day freeway system. In that respect my view is a minority one. But my view on that is far from unique. New and shining is NOT always better. All that glitters is not gold. Don't jump up and down on the bridge, if you get my drift. -- You can't fool me: there ain't no Sanity Clause. -Chico Marx http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/1955 |
#39
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On Wed, 6 Jul 2005, Colin Rosenstiel wrote:
In article , (Tom Anderson) wrote: I think there was a bit more order to it than that, even if only a bit more. For example, i understand that the government required railway companies to build connections to other companies' tracks wherever possible; it's only thanks to that that we have a single network at all! ROFL! They had to put some in after the grouping or during the war but few if any connections were Government-imposed. But ... but ... i read it on a website! Specifically, Chris Tolley's Railway Junction Diagrams site: http://web.ukonline.co.uk/cj.tolley/rjd/rjd-intro.htm Which says: "Although laws from the mid-1800's required newly-built railways to connect to existing railways wherever practicable, thus building up a network, like many well-intentioned pieces of legislation, this did not lead to complete co-operation between the multiplicity of companies." Have i been bamboozled? tom -- They travel the world in their ice cream van ... |
#40
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On Thu, 7 Jul 2005 01:33:12 +0100, Pyromancer
wrote: Back in the 1980s I recorded a long Channel 4 series about public transport. Alas I never got round to watching all of it (what was that Douglas Addams said about having videos to watch programmes so you didn't have to? g), but from one of the episodes I did watch I remember someone commenting that the New Towns had been based on the concept of universal car ownership, but completely ignored the fact that one car per household does not mean one car per person, as usually the main breadwinner will drive the car to work and leave the rest of the family marooned in their impossible-to-serve-sensibly-with-public-transport house for the day. That certainly was not the case in Crawley, where the provision of both garages and parking places assumed a very low level of car ownership in the initial developments. The thinking seemed to be that, if you relocated people from inner London, they would not want to own cars, and would be happy with public transport. They were wrong. -- Terry Harper Website Coordinator, The Omnibus Society http://www.omnibussoc.org |
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