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Tube could close in future heatwaves
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5143388.stm
There are no such plans to close anything this summer. I think Livingstone is just thinking aloud on this issue - which is fair enough, given that much of the Underground system wasn't built with the possibilities of sustained heatwaves in mind. |
Tube could close in future heatwaves
In message .com,
Mizter T writes http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5143388.stm There are no such plans to close anything this summer. I think Livingstone is just thinking aloud on this issue - which is fair enough, given that much of the Underground system wasn't built with the possibilities of sustained heatwaves in mind. We're all getting too damn soft and the media don't help. When I was a kid we just called it hot weather and got on with it. Now there are endless announcements to carry water and if you believe the news we're all about to suffer heat stroke. They'll be putting heat councillors on trains next :-) The stress of not being able to get home will far outweigh the stress of being a bit hot, so get Ken off his latest hobby horse and leave the Underground running. I could go on about the new improved London Transport that Ken promised us would be bought with the congestion charge money, but I think he's spent it all on community policing and the damn Olympics. -- Edward Cowling London UK |
Tube could close in future heatwaves
Edward Cowling London UK wrote: In message .com, Mizter T writes http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5143388.stm There are no such plans to close anything this summer. I think Livingstone is just thinking aloud on this issue - which is fair enough, given that much of the Underground system wasn't built with the possibilities of sustained heatwaves in mind. We're all getting too damn soft and the media don't help. When I was a kid we just called it hot weather and got on with it. Now there are endless announcements to carry water and if you believe the news we're all about to suffer heat stroke. They'll be putting heat councillors on trains next :-) The stress of not being able to get home will far outweigh the stress of being a bit hot, so get Ken off his latest hobby horse and leave the Underground running. I could go on about the new improved London Transport that Ken promised us would be bought with the congestion charge money, but I think he's spent it all on community policing and the damn Olympics. -- Edward Cowling London UK Something that I have always puzzled over is that if people now wander off for more than 5 minutes from their home they have to take water with them to prevent dehydration. My journey into work this morning was an hour and a half, I drank tea before I left home and I reached work without dieing of thirst. Kevin |
Tube could close in future heatwaves
In message .com,
Mizter T writes I think Livingstone is just thinking aloud on this issue - which is fair enough, given that much of the Underground system wasn't built with the possibilities of sustained heatwaves in mind. Although average temperatures are now one degree higher than a century ago, there were several heatwaves in the Edwardian period - particularly 1911, which saw five months' of sustained high temperatures with a number of days exceeding 35C. But in those days much of the rolling stock was better designed for a through-flow of air, with relatively large "hopper" windows and, in a number of cases, open (but gated) platforms at the ends of carriages. I also suspect that staff were able to be much more pragmatic in dealing quickly with breakdowns. These days, H&S procedures often seem to endanger health and safety by causing long delays. As for all the reminders about carrying water (I was bombarded with them on the tube yesterday) - what next? Will nanny remind us to wrap up warm in cold weather and check that we have tied our shoelaces for fear that we might drip and fall down the gap? -- Paul Terry |
Tube could close in future heatwaves
Mizter T wrote:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5143388.stm "As temperatures inside carriages rose to well above 30C on Monday, Ken" 30C? Oh no, whatever will we do! When it reaches 45C I'll start to worry, temperature in the med never drops below 30C in summer. Of course, a 500ml bottle of water costs 50p in med countries, £2 in London. |
Tube could close in future heatwaves
Paul Weaver ) gurgled happily, sounding much like they
were saying : http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5143388.stm "As temperatures inside carriages rose to well above 30C on Monday, Ken" 30C? Oh no, whatever will we do! Mmm. Quite. Temperatures *outside* rose to well above 30C, ffs... |
Tube could close in future heatwaves
Kev wrote:
Something that I have always puzzled over is that if people now wander off for more than 5 minutes from their home they have to take water with them to prevent dehydration. Or is it because mineral water is becoming a fashion statement? My journey into work this morning was an hour and a half, I drank tea before I left home and I reached work without dieing of thirst. Depends on the individual. I dehydrate very easily, especially in this kind of weather, so if I'm carrying any sort of bag it'll likely have a bottle of diluted squash in it somewhere (or similar). I've done this for years. Not everyone's the same, though. Neil |
Tube could close in future heatwaves
In message om, Paul
Weaver writes Mizter T wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5143388.stm "As temperatures inside carriages rose to well above 30C on Monday, Ken" 30C? Oh no, whatever will we do! When it reaches 45C I'll start to worry, temperature in the med never drops below 30C in summer. Of course, a 500ml bottle of water costs 50p in med countries, £2 in London. Not if you fill it from the tap :-) -- Edward Cowling London UK |
Tube could close in future heatwaves
Edward Cowling London UK wrote: We're all getting too damn soft and the media don't help. When I was a kid we just called it hot weather and got on with it. Now there are endless announcements to carry water and if you believe the news we're all about to suffer heat stroke. They'll be putting heat councillors on trains next :-) -- Edward Cowling London UK To some extent what you say about us getting soft is true. On the other hand, when there was last a prolonged period of heat like this there were 2000 deaths in this country and 11000 in France. Presumably, there were as many, if not more, cases in the UK which required hospitalization. So too remind us to take sensible precautions is not stupid if it stops the NHS having to expend resources on treating people unnecessarily. It's a long, long time since I had to suffer the Tube in very hot weather - it is over 30 years, in fact, since I was a regular commuter. It was foul in those days - my understanding is that it is even more crowded now than it was then and, of course, the more people there are, the more heat is created just by the bodies. |
Tube could close in future heatwaves
Paul Weaver wrote:
When it reaches 45C I'll start to worry, temperature in the med never drops below 30C in summer. We have poorly ventilated trains and that's a problem, but to buy/lease new buses without air con is a joke (even in the winter, it's a good thing and keeps the windows from misting up). All this fuss about not being able to put air-con on the tube is one thing, but aircon isn't an expensive premium on a bus these days! Didn't TfL realise that our buses are still for a lot of the time? No movement means no airflow (especially with such tiny windows, presumably to stop people throwing things out). Of course, a 500ml bottle of water costs 50p in med countries, £2 in London. I thought the shops at Kings Cross were expensive, but I still only pay 95p for a bottle, or £1.20 for two bottles. Not cheap, but not a major rip off either. However, I don't care because whenever possible I simply refill a bottle with (cold) water from our office water machine, or before I leave in the morning! Sod expensive mineral water! Jonathan |
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