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#41
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On Thu, 8 Jun 2006 11:40:17 UTC, "John B" wrote:
: Ian Johnston wrote: : : Just : : makes me wonder if the money being invested in the ELL wouldn't have : : been better spent going towards Crossrail, given that the latter can't : : get the funding. : : It can't get the funding, though, because it's a completely crap idea : and would, if it were ever built, be the worst waste of infrastructure : money in living memory. At least the Chunnel might be useful, one day. : For that remark, you are sentenced to an eternity of travelling between : Liverpool Street and Tottenham Court Road on the Central Line every : morning peak hour. Great. Let's spend rough enough money to electrify every main line in the UK on relieving morning peak-hours congestion on a short length of one London underground line. What a wonderful, sensible use of money. : Seriously, nobody's suggesting (except, apparently, you) that Crossrail : won't immediately attract massive ridership. The question is whether : the benefits (pegged by several studies at somewhere between £10bn and : £50bn) Pegged? With a five-fold margin of error? That's not "pegged", that's "wildly guessed." And not being able to predict the costs to within a factor of two doesn't greatly inspire confidence either. And it's not just me. You'll notice that every organisation asked to stump up the cash has said "Erm, no". It's a truly terrible idea. Ian |
#42
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![]() "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... snippitty The ELLX may look odd on its own. The real issue is the service pattern to be provided over the whole set of TfL inherited routes. Thankfully there is already some innovative thinking going on which provides a range of through journeys not available at present. Somewhat off topic I know, but mention of the TfL inherited routes made me wonder if anyone knows what the situation with TfL staff passes will be once the routes pass to TfL control, will these lines become available to staff passes? -- Cheers, Steve. Change from jealous to sad to reply. |
#43
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![]() Steve Dulieu wrote: Somewhat off topic I know, but mention of the TfL inherited routes made me wonder if anyone knows what the situation with TfL staff passes will be once the routes pass to TfL control, will these lines become available to staff passes? -- Cheers, Steve. I suspect *not*. Had LU been the operator and the extended ELL (and maybe NLL) incorporated into the Underground proper, then clearly staff passes would have become valid on all sections. As things stand I guess "grandfather rights" will allow their use from Shoreditch to New Cross/New Cross Gate and from Harrow & Wealdstone to Watford Junction - i.e. as at present. A precedent was set a few years ago when LU single tickets from Tottenham Hale to zone 1 were also accepted on WAGN via Liverpool Street NR. Despite me raising the anomaly, holders of staff passes were not granted a similar choice in route. |
#44
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In article 5, Tristán
White writes Having an underground station nearby means that it's easy to get in and out without having to make your way through backstreets to the new alternative station on Shoreditch High Street. Which is not ready yet as an alternative (if it goes to schedule, we're looking at June 2010 - four years to go!) It's not practical to build the connection to the new route and keep the old one open. Do we really want to lose even more history? Do we want "history" to block all progress? You have to compromise. Could they not have gone up to Hoxton from the current station? No. Where are you going to put the incline to get over the GER main line (which, remember, is only 50m or so beyond Shoreditch station). I remember seeing PDFs and consultations and stuff on UTL when they were discussing the exact route north of Whitechapel, but I can't remember reading a completely convincing argument why they couldn't use the existing route that used to go to Liverpool Street pre-war (and which was a goods-only service until the 60s). Because it goes to Liverpool Street. But the basic issue isn't the route in plan, it's the elevations. You need to get *up* from below street level at Whitechapel to well above it at Hoxton. The only practical place for such an incline (look at a map) is east of Shoreditch and on to the old Bishopsgate viaduct. If they could have provided an interchange from the ELL-Extension at Bishopsgate/SHS to the Central Line, I would agree that there is sense in moving the station to Bishopsgate. But since there's not (another missed opportunity), I doubt the amount of interchange traffic (on to an already crowded Central Line, remember) would justify it. But no. So was it really necessary to get rid of another piece of functional history? Yes. -- 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: |
#45
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On Thu, 08 Jun 2006 13:46:21 GMT, "Steve Dulieu"
wrote: "Paul Corfield" wrote in message .. . snippitty The ELLX may look odd on its own. The real issue is the service pattern to be provided over the whole set of TfL inherited routes. Thankfully there is already some innovative thinking going on which provides a range of through journeys not available at present. Somewhat off topic I know, but mention of the TfL inherited routes made me wonder if anyone knows what the situation with TfL staff passes will be once the routes pass to TfL control, will these lines become available to staff passes? I doubt very much that that has yet been considered. I would expect the TUs to add it to the list of items for negotiation but the fact the routes are effectively a concession or franchise does not bode well. There have been very few positive changes to the staff pass or priv ticket validities since rail privatisation. The usual reasons are money and reciprocation of benefit for National Rail franchise / Network Rail employees. The relative sizes of the employee groupings in TfL vs Network Rail and the TOCs always tilts the cost / benefit balance in favour of NR and the TOCs and away from TfL. I don't see much reason for TfL to extend staff pass validity to these services when they do not own the infrastructure, the vehicles or directly employ the staff. The nearest parallel is DLR and I am not at all sure how it works there - do the people maintaining the Lewisham extension have TfL staff pass validity given they are employed by a private infrastructure company and no direct relationship with DLR Ltd or even Serco as the DLR operator? -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#46
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![]() "Kev" wrote: I bet you can't wait to go to West Croyden. Dalston of course used to have a station and look what happened to that. Is Dalston Kingsland not in Dalston, then? I just wonder how many many of the people who think that the ELL extension is wonderful never used the NLL in Broad Street days. Unless you were a City worker, Broad Street wasn't much of a destination either. Witness how quiet Fenchurch Street is at weekends and off peak, with circa 75% of pax now bailing out at West Ham for the Jubilee. Chris |
#47
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![]() O-V R:nen wrote: "Please ensure that you have a valid London Underground ticket or Oyster pay as you go before you board. Tickets are not sold on the bus." How are you supposed to start a journey at Shoreditch then? They give the addresses of three local shops, two in Brick Lane itself, and one in Bethnal Green Road, which sell Travelcards, but that's not much use if you only want to make one journey. As far as I can see, there will be no way to do that. They advise that journey times will be extended by up to twenty five minutes; it's walkable in ten! The bus stops are further from where most passengers probably want to go than Shoreditch station is. I predict that the usage of the replacement buses will be almost nil. It would be probably be cheaper to provide a free taxi on request for anybody who is not able to walk it. Until fairly recent times Brick Lane was not somewhere that most people wanted to go. In recent years that has changed; if it wasn't for the extension it might hae been worth extending the opening hours of the station. Is it really necessary to close it quite so soon; four years seems a long time for the construction work. |
#48
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Stephen Furley wrote:
Until fairly recent times Brick Lane was not somewhere that most people wanted to go. In recent years that has changed; if it wasn't for the extension it might hae been worth extending the opening hours of the station. I still think Aldgate East is a better stop for Brick Lane (and for most traffic it is quicker). It's good to walk the full length, not pop up two thirds of the way down. Maybe extending the opening hours would have done something, but I've rarely seen massive traffic at the station line even when it was open. Is it really necessary to close it quite so soon; four years seems a long time for the construction work. If they're going to get that link built, which is a key part of the extension, they need the track free for a good while. |
#49
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![]() "Mark Brader" wrote in message ... Chris Read: Just a quick reminder that Shoreditch station (East London Line) will close permanently this Friday. Last train appears to depart at 20:34 Tristán White: Thanks for the reminder. And a rap on the knuckles of the people who designed the latest map.... it says that the station would close on Saturday 10 June whereas technically it's late on Friday 9 June. I suggest that this is not an error as such, but the standard problem of whether to report a closure date as "last day of service" or "first day of no service". What's the actual wording on the map? Looking at the map tonight in Epping station shows that Shoreditch has a red line through the name and a 'footnote sword' beside it, the branch from Whitechapel is in the faded shade as normally used on lines being built and there is a bus symbol to show how you can get there instead. I assume details of that can be found on the base of the map by looking for the footnote. Nick |
#50
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TheOneKEA wrote:
They can't. There is literally no capacity for additional movements across the Aldgate triangle, How would the various proposals going around to scrap the Circle, turn the Hammersmith & City into a once round the loop Hammersmith to Edgeware Road route and send the Met Whitechapel way change this? |
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