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#41
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In article .com, MIG
writes According to the Hendon Times, Mill Hill East services will be reduced to a shuttle to Finchley Central off-peak and weekends from October 2006. And closure following closely no doubt. Not necessarily - look at Chesham, which runs in that way. Why don't they genuinely improve reliability by doubling the track? How will that improve reliability with the present service? -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
#42
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![]() Dave Arquati wrote: MIG wrote: Dave Arquati wrote: MIG wrote: John B wrote: Kev wrote: This does sound like the thin end of the wedge. Ask people who used to use the Watford Junc to Broad St (Liverpool St) and Watford to Croxley service what they think of this. OK, so in the first case a poor frequency service has been replaced partly with the current NLL clockface 4tph timetable (set for further improvements under TfL Rail) and will be replaced further with the ELLX between Dalston and Shoreditch. In the second case, the link is set to be rebuilt with more useful connections. During London's decades of stagnation and decline, many useful rail links were short-sightedly destroyed. The ideological antipathy of a progression of governments and transport ministers towards public transport didn't help matters. However, it's now clear that the default mode for public transport in London is one of expansion not contraction. Since Mill Hill East isn't an Aldwych or an Ongar but somewhere with decent loadings, it would therefore be hard to see why anyone would choose to close it... But once it loses the through service it will have poor loadings. Aldwych is right in the centre of London, but that didn't save it. I don't suppose for a moment it would have closed if it had a through service (or why not close Temple, St Pauls or Chancery Lane?). Not sure of the logic here - St Paul's and Chancery Lane are extremely busy during the week. I was mentioning non-interchange stations that have a through service, in the same general area as Aldwych, which didn't, and wasn't as busy. I'm suggesting that the lack of through service reduced demand for Aldwych rather than its location. As other posters have suggested, Aldwych was probably doomed from its birth. If Aldwych were reopened today with through services to Cockfosters (which in itself is physically difficult), I think demand would still be poor for two reasons: 1. The frequency with which Aldwych could be served would be limited by capacity considerations on the rest of the line (it's not as though you can just slot extra trains in the timetable between Holborn and Arnos Grove, and the existing trains are busy with people heading to and from places like Piccadilly Circus). In turn, sending trains to Aldwych would pose reliability problems. 2. Even if served by a relatively high frequency, it's just too near other Piccadilly stations to be particularly useful - even Holborn is only a few minutes' walk away, and Covent Garden is much more useful for the key theatre-going market. I think we are both saying that the inevitable poor service made the station unattractive. The poor service at Alwych follows from it being on a stub with necessarily either a shuttle or infrequent through service. A station on an imaginary through line at that location might well have been popular. The first of these applies equally to Mill Hill East, particularly from a reliability point of view. The second does not. Roding Valley, Chigwell and Grange Hill are still open, despite having much poorer demand (only about enough to support a bus service, let alone rail). At least partly because they are a pain to get to by train, either a long way round (and infrequently) via Hainault or changing at Woodford. If some expensive repairs cropped up which no one was keen to fund, I suspect that the line would be under threat. Demand at those stations is surely limited by local geography rather than frequency - there are so few people living in their catchment areas (at least on foot). Even if a high-frequency through service were provided, it would probably be carting around air. The only way significant demand increases might occur would be through park-and-ride, and even then there are other equally suitable stations either south of Hainault or on the main Epping route. This would also seem to be a major consideration at Mill Hill East - low population density around the station severely limits demand, and even park-and-ride (or bus feeder) demand would probably be limited to passengers from quite nearby because of the poor road connectivity of the area. But a good through service does create demand. A lot of the Underground was financed by property speculators on that basis. |
#43
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MIG wrote:
Why don't they genuinely improve reliability by doubling the track? How will that improve reliability with the present service? Not at all, if single track doesn't cause reliability problems. I am not actually proposing doubling, I am rejecting the "reliability" excuse for cutting services. The point is not that the services on the MHE branch are unreliable in themselves, it's that having an irregular sequence of trains coming from the northeast reduces reliability at Camden Town, messes about with train frequencies through central London, exacerbates problems on the line and leads to greater system-wide delays. -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
#44
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Dave Arquati wrote:
As other posters have suggested, Aldwych was probably doomed from its birth. If Aldwych were reopened today with through services to Cockfosters (which in itself is physically difficult), I think demand would still be poor for two reasons: .... 2. Even if served by a relatively high frequency, it's just too near other Piccadilly stations to be particularly useful - even Holborn is only a few minutes' walk away, and Covent Garden is much more useful for the key theatre-going market. And yet which station on the Picadilly Line is so over capacity that it frequently has to limit passenger access and could really benefit from a nearby alternative station? |
#45
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Tim Roll-Pickering wrote:
Dave Arquati wrote: As other posters have suggested, Aldwych was probably doomed from its birth. If Aldwych were reopened today with through services to Cockfosters (which in itself is physically difficult), I think demand would still be poor for two reasons: .... 2. Even if served by a relatively high frequency, it's just too near other Piccadilly stations to be particularly useful - even Holborn is only a few minutes' walk away, and Covent Garden is much more useful for the key theatre-going market. And yet which station on the Picadilly Line is so over capacity that it frequently has to limit passenger access and could really benefit from a nearby alternative station? The only feasible alternatives are Holborn and Leicester Square. As an alternative to Covent Garden, Aldwych would be fairly useless, given the slow access and egress, and its northbound orientation. I also wouldn't separate point one (the effect on the rest of the line) from point two. Trains that went to Aldwych wouldn't be able to go to Covent Garden or Leicester Square, making overcrowding at those stations worse. The solution to Covent Garden overcrowding is to increase capacity at Covent Garden, not to reopen a station that would be of little use to the majority of people heading to the area. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#46
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MIG wrote:
Dave Arquati wrote: MIG wrote: Dave Arquati wrote: MIG wrote: John B wrote: Kev wrote: This does sound like the thin end of the wedge. Ask people who used to use the Watford Junc to Broad St (Liverpool St) and Watford to Croxley service what they think of this. OK, so in the first case a poor frequency service has been replaced partly with the current NLL clockface 4tph timetable (set for further improvements under TfL Rail) and will be replaced further with the ELLX between Dalston and Shoreditch. In the second case, the link is set to be rebuilt with more useful connections. During London's decades of stagnation and decline, many useful rail links were short-sightedly destroyed. The ideological antipathy of a progression of governments and transport ministers towards public transport didn't help matters. However, it's now clear that the default mode for public transport in London is one of expansion not contraction. Since Mill Hill East isn't an Aldwych or an Ongar but somewhere with decent loadings, it would therefore be hard to see why anyone would choose to close it... But once it loses the through service it will have poor loadings. Aldwych is right in the centre of London, but that didn't save it. I don't suppose for a moment it would have closed if it had a through service (or why not close Temple, St Pauls or Chancery Lane?). Not sure of the logic here - St Paul's and Chancery Lane are extremely busy during the week. I was mentioning non-interchange stations that have a through service, in the same general area as Aldwych, which didn't, and wasn't as busy. I'm suggesting that the lack of through service reduced demand for Aldwych rather than its location. As other posters have suggested, Aldwych was probably doomed from its birth. If Aldwych were reopened today with through services to Cockfosters (which in itself is physically difficult), I think demand would still be poor for two reasons: 1. The frequency with which Aldwych could be served would be limited by capacity considerations on the rest of the line (it's not as though you can just slot extra trains in the timetable between Holborn and Arnos Grove, and the existing trains are busy with people heading to and from places like Piccadilly Circus). In turn, sending trains to Aldwych would pose reliability problems. 2. Even if served by a relatively high frequency, it's just too near other Piccadilly stations to be particularly useful - even Holborn is only a few minutes' walk away, and Covent Garden is much more useful for the key theatre-going market. I think we are both saying that the inevitable poor service made the station unattractive. The poor service at Alwych follows from it being on a stub with necessarily either a shuttle or infrequent through service. A station on an imaginary through line at that location might well have been popular. I think we're getting the concepts of through *services* and through *lines* muddled up here. I was saying that a through *service* to Aldwych would have never have been able to attract high levels of demand. A through *line* is an entirely different kettle of fish. The first of these applies equally to Mill Hill East, particularly from a reliability point of view. The second does not. Roding Valley, Chigwell and Grange Hill are still open, despite having much poorer demand (only about enough to support a bus service, let alone rail). At least partly because they are a pain to get to by train, either a long way round (and infrequently) via Hainault or changing at Woodford. If some expensive repairs cropped up which no one was keen to fund, I suspect that the line would be under threat. Demand at those stations is surely limited by local geography rather than frequency - there are so few people living in their catchment areas (at least on foot). Even if a high-frequency through service were provided, it would probably be carting around air. The only way significant demand increases might occur would be through park-and-ride, and even then there are other equally suitable stations either south of Hainault or on the main Epping route. This would also seem to be a major consideration at Mill Hill East - low population density around the station severely limits demand, and even park-and-ride (or bus feeder) demand would probably be limited to passengers from quite nearby because of the poor road connectivity of the area. But a good through service does create demand. A lot of the Underground was financed by property speculators on that basis. Same confusion - a good through *line* might create demand (although at Mill Hill East demand would still be limited by geography - making it a through line would increase demand because more destinations would be served, but the demand would still be drawn from a limited pool). I was talking about the through *service* from Mill Hill East to Morden, for which demand is limited because of the low population density around Mill Hill East station. High Barnet, on the other hand, is different (and the reduction of a MHE to a shuttle service is permitting an improved frequency to High Barnet). -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#47
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John B wrote:
MIG wrote: Why don't they genuinely improve reliability by doubling the track? How will that improve reliability with the present service? Not at all, if single track doesn't cause reliability problems. I am not actually proposing doubling, I am rejecting the "reliability" excuse for cutting services. The point is not that the services on the MHE branch are unreliable in themselves, it's that having an irregular sequence of trains coming from the northeast reduces reliability at Camden Town, messes about with train frequencies through central London, exacerbates problems on the line and leads to greater system-wide delays. ....and according to the article originally quoted, the service frequency to High Barnet will be increased as a result of the MHE changes, which means benefits to the four other stations north of Finchley Central. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#48
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On Thu, 6 Apr 2006, Aidan Stanger wrote:
Tom Anderson wrote: On Tue, 4 Apr 2006, Aidan Stanger wrote: John B wrote: MIG wrote: Peter Smyth wrote: Mill Hill East services will be reduced to a shuttle to Finchley Central off-peak and weekends from October 2006. Yet another service reduction disguised as "reliability", If the result is to make a substantial reduction in total Misery Line misery, which it should be, then it seems like a good plan... It would be a good plan if they did it right! There's presumably room to throw in a passing loop halfway along the branch; that would cost money, but be cheaper than doubling, but would allow the frequency to be doubled, so that every mainline train could link up with a shuttle. It could if the passing loop were long, though it would be harder to coordinate the service to connect with southbound trains as well. Perhaps things could be timed so that the shuttles connect to the southbound trains in the morning, and the northbound ones in the evening. Not sure what you'd do in the middle of the day! But the biggest problem would be getting it to connect properly in the peaks when trains run more frequently than every 4 minutes. True. If they shortened the train length proportionally, it wouldn't even cost any more to run. What's the train length got to do with it? Going from 15 to 8 minutes would be done by cutting down waiting time, not running more trains, AIUI. Shorter trains use less electricity. Aha. Is that a significant cost in running a train, then? I'd never though of that. The interesting thing to consider is how the MHE branch can be made more useful in the long term. One idea I put on my website is to have it as a branch of Crossrail Line 2, and extend it to Watford Junction via MHB, Edgware and Stanmore. This would mean that nobody in North London would have to detour to Euston to catch a train to The North, Er, provided they can get to the High Barnet branch of the Northern line, No, it would interchange with the other lines as well. Where would it go south of Finchley? and they don't want the ECML or MML! If they did, they'd be detouring to Kings Cross or St.Pancras, not Euston. However there would be a stop at Mill Hill Broadway to connect with the Thameslink service, so some MML passengers would also benefit albeit not to the same extent as the WCML passengers. I suppose if this function was considered important enough, more trains could be stopped at MHB. There's no GNER equivalent of Watford Junction. Stevenage is too far out, and they couldn't get planning permission for their Hadley Wood proposals. Potters Bar might be a better location, but their trains don't stop there yet. The closest equivalent is probably Finsbury Park. In terms of distance, that's more like Willesden Junction, but i think it gets more trains stopping there than that. If they, or their successors, ever do start stopping their trains there, it might be worth considering extending the Jubilee Line there. But it's not going to become as important a station as Watford Junction any time in the forseeable future. The Northern or Piccadilly look better placed for that to me. and more passengers would be attracted to the outer ends of lines, where there's plenty of spare capacity. Not sure i get that bit - anyone at Watford is going to catch a fast train to Euston, not sit on a tube train that stops at a dozen places on the way. Wrong! Not everyone at Watford is going to Central London. Millions of people live in North London, and detouring to Euston would be more expensive and in many cases slower and less convenient. By interchanging with the ELL, GN, Victoria and Piccadilly Lines, two branches of the Northern Line, Thameslink and the Jubilee Line, it would serve most of N London. Okay, i think i see what you mean. Does anyone else have any other ideas for it? The trouble with resurrecting the Northern Heights plan is the green belt; the intention was always to drive development of new suburbs in the north, as the Met did for Metroland, but post-WW2 planning policy has put the kybosh on that. If the illustrious Mr Prescott or his successor waves a wand and lets the golf courses and subsidy sinks of Bushey be buried under an avalanche of Barratt boxes, this plan might regain wings. It wouldn't require that. There's enough of Bushey not already served by rail to justify a station. The main destination's Watford. It's not about justifying a station - it's about justifying a new railway, a much more expensive proposition. However, linking it to the ELL would be folly, IMHO; better would be to link it to the GN electrics from Finsbury Park to Moorgate. A graded junction at Moorgate would allow this to be done without conflicting with mainline traffic to KX; the branch to Moorgate itself might need some upgrading to cope, but the frequency would be well within the capability of modern (ie early 20th century signalling systems). Of course, this all comes to pass anyway under my glorious plan to drive the tunnel further south from Moorgate, under the Bank and the Thames, to link up with the lines at London Bridge ... Where would you link them up? Do you mean where would the portal be? Good question. Is there room for a portal around the bulge in the formation where the railway crosses Dockley Road? if not, you'd need to take some land away from buildings beside the line; some grim industrial buildings would be the cheapest option, perhaps those by Tanner Road, Rouel Road, Saint James's Road, etc. Where you put the portal depends to some extent on which lines you want to join up with, and i don't have strong views on that - i don't know enough about the traffic patterns. I also wondered whether that line could be extended. There's nowhere around London Bridge to surface, but some passengers would get a much more direct journey if it ran straight to Denmark Hill and surfaced somewhere around Dulwich or Tulse Hill. That's quite a bit of tunnelling, though. I also wonder whether rather than being extended from Moorgate it could be extended from Old Street to Liverpool Street to give better interchange, then run under Gracechurch Street to London Bridge. Moorgate is a stone's throw from Liverpool Street anyway - it's a shorter walk between them than between some of the more distant platforms at Bank, i'd say. Ideally, there'd be a direct underground passage; Crossrail will join the two stations up, although i would guess that the Crossrail platform won't be usable as an ad hoc foot tunnel. tom -- Who would you help in a fight, Peter van der Linden or Bill Gates? |
#49
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Dave Arquati wrote:
And yet which station on the Picadilly Line is so over capacity that it frequently has to limit passenger access and could really benefit from a nearby alternative station? The only feasible alternatives are Holborn and Leicester Square. As an alternative to Covent Garden, Aldwych would be fairly useless, given the slow access and egress, and its northbound orientation. I also wouldn't separate point one (the effect on the rest of the line) from point two. Trains that went to Aldwych wouldn't be able to go to Covent Garden or Leicester Square, making overcrowding at those stations worse. The solution to Covent Garden overcrowding is to increase capacity at Covent Garden, not to reopen a station that would be of little use to the majority of people heading to the area. How serious are the suggestions in circulation for both a Waterloo-King's Cross St. Pancras route and reviving the old Fleet Line plans for Charing Cross to Ludgate Circus and beyond? The natural interchange for them is Aldwych and the former project could make use of the branch tunnels, although frankly at Holborn they'd either need a proper connection to the Picadilly (I saw the other day that Aldwych was built with three lift shafts and multiple exit routes from the platforms - yet another example of an over elaborate station being uselessly inaccessible for through services) or else build a new line to King's Cross St Pancras. |
#50
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On Thu, 6 Apr 2006 20:22:34 +0100, "Tim Roll-Pickering"
wrote: How serious are the suggestions in circulation for both a Waterloo-King's Cross St. Pancras route Fairly serious, but it would be a surface tramway running Camden Town - Peckham/Brixton (ish). -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
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