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#1
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Further to out thread of November last year
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5301366.stm Is there any further detail ?- I still unsure as to whether this is the first installment of the West London scheme - then heading via Holland park and Shepherd's Bush to Uxbridge or a link to the Cross River Scheme or both. It does however seem eminently sensible. What has been the response of the taxi driving community? |
#2
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"Bob" wrote in news:1158689984.356980.88880
@k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: Further to out thread of November last year http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5301366.stm Is there any further detail ?- I still unsure as to whether this is the first installment of the West London scheme - then heading via Holland park and Shepherd's Bush to Uxbridge or a link to the Cross River Scheme or both. It does however seem eminently sensible. What has been the response of the taxi driving community? The best question is "where is the depot?". Unless the plan is to dig up Hyde Park (unlikely) an isolated Oxford Street tramway with steel wheeled cars doesn't work. |
#3
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David Jackman wrote:
"Bob" wrote in news:1158689984.356980.88880 @k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: Further to out thread of November last year http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5301366.stm Is there any further detail ?- I still unsure as to whether this is the first installment of the West London scheme - then heading via Holland park and Shepherd's Bush to Uxbridge or a link to the Cross River Scheme or both. It does however seem eminently sensible. What has been the response of the taxi driving community? The best question is "where is the depot?". Unless the plan is to dig up Hyde Park (unlikely) an isolated Oxford Street tramway with steel wheeled cars doesn't work. Could it share one with Cross River Transit? Then you'd just need a connexion from TCR to Holborn or Russell Square, which isn't too far. The TfL site doesn't expect CRT to be open till 2016, but the plan for 'trams by 2013' for Oxford St seems optimistic... |
#4
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On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 13:41:37 -0500, David Jackman
wrote: "Bob" wrote in news:1158689984.356980.88880 : Further to out thread of November last year http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5301366.stm Is there any further detail ?- I still unsure as to whether this is the first installment of the West London scheme - then heading via Holland park and Shepherd's Bush to Uxbridge or a link to the Cross River Scheme or both. It does however seem eminently sensible. What has been the response of the taxi driving community? The best question is "where is the depot?". Unless the plan is to dig up Hyde Park (unlikely) an isolated Oxford Street tramway with steel wheeled cars doesn't work. Either run it as a 24 hour or near 24 hour service, with just a few sidings here and there to drop a few cars out of service at night; plus a ramp down to the Central Line, and trundle off to another ramp up to the West London tram, and go to their depots once a week for a major clean etc? That, or maybe one of those very large university/medical buildings up TCR way might fancy being rebuilt and could accomodate some sort of fancy dual-level depot on the ground floor and basement? But in seriousness you are right, if anything is a showstopper, the lack of a depot space must be. |
#5
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Peter Frimberley wrote:
Further to out thread of November last year http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5301366.stm Either run it as a 24 hour or near 24 hour service, with just a few sidings here and there to drop a few cars out of service at night; plus a ramp down to the Central Line, and trundle off to another ramp up to the West London tram, and go to their depots once a week for a major clean etc? No tram currently made would fit in the Central Line tunnels. That, or maybe one of those very large university/medical buildings up TCR way might fancy being rebuilt and could accomodate some sort of fancy dual-level depot on the ground floor and basement? There's a vacant lot at Cramer Street. It's the exact size of the tram depot (building only) at Therapia St. Since the distance from TCR to Marble Arch is only about 2.5 times as long as one of the gate accesses in Schiphol, I think a series of travolators would be a better solution, but less disabled-friendly |
#6
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On Tue, 19 Sep 2006, Peter Frimberley wrote:
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 13:41:37 -0500, David Jackman wrote: "Bob" wrote in news:1158689984.356980.88880 @k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: Further to out thread of November last year http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5301366.stm Is there any further detail ? The best question is "where is the depot?". Unless the plan is to dig up Hyde Park (unlikely) an isolated Oxford Street tramway with steel wheeled cars doesn't work. Either run it as a 24 hour or near 24 hour service, with just a few sidings here and there to drop a few cars out of service at night; plus a ramp down to the Central Line, and trundle off to another ramp up to the West London tram, and go to their depots once a week for a major clean etc? Store them on-street, and have some specialised low-loaders to cart them off, broken into separate cars, for maintenance? That, or maybe one of those very large university/medical buildings up TCR way might fancy being rebuilt and could accomodate some sort of fancy dual-level depot on the ground floor and basement? I'm sure Dave would be only too happy to see this patch of ground dug up: http://maps.google.co.uk/?z=19&ll=51...,-0.133955&t=k ![]() Slightly more seriously, how about the Royal Mail sorting office on Rathbone Place? Their carpark is almost exactly the same size as the Therapia Lane building. I've no idea what's under it (apart from a defunct Mail Rail station), but it's conceivable that you could have a two-storey setup, with a floor of stabling (maybe even two, as mezzanines) and a floor of workshops above it, linked by a lift, with the Royal Mail vans parking on top of that. Could even synergise and run mail trams ... tom -- Formal logical proofs, and therefore programs, are *utterly meaningless*. -- Dehnadi and Bornat |
#7
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Tom Anderson wrote:
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006, Peter Frimberley wrote: On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 13:41:37 -0500, David Jackman wrote: "Bob" wrote in news:1158689984.356980.88880 @k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: Further to out thread of November last year http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5301366.stm Is there any further detail ? The best question is "where is the depot?". Unless the plan is to dig up Hyde Park (unlikely) an isolated Oxford Street tramway with steel wheeled cars doesn't work. Either run it as a 24 hour or near 24 hour service, with just a few sidings here and there to drop a few cars out of service at night; plus a ramp down to the Central Line, and trundle off to another ramp up to the West London tram, and go to their depots once a week for a major clean etc? Store them on-street, and have some specialised low-loaders to cart them off, broken into separate cars, for maintenance? That, or maybe one of those very large university/medical buildings up TCR way might fancy being rebuilt and could accomodate some sort of fancy dual-level depot on the ground floor and basement? I'm sure Dave would be only too happy to see this patch of ground dug up: http://maps.google.co.uk/?z=19&ll=51...,-0.133955&t=k ![]() My loyalty lies with Imperial, you can insert a tram depot in UCL if you want! Slightly more seriously, how about the Royal Mail sorting office on Rathbone Place? Their carpark is almost exactly the same size as the Therapia Lane building. I've no idea what's under it (apart from a defunct Mail Rail station), but it's conceivable that you could have a two-storey setup, with a floor of stabling (maybe even two, as mezzanines) and a floor of workshops above it, linked by a lift, with the Royal Mail vans parking on top of that. Could even synergise and run mail trams ... Sounds like too efficient a plan to me. I think various surface stabling points are possible. The gyratory system at Marble Arch probably won't survive any improvements to Oxford Street (thankfully), so any space released could provide a tram terminus/stable. If there's enough space, it could be made reasonably secure. Additionally, numerous bus stands would be freed up around Oxford Street. Ken also mentioned replacing various buildings by St Giles Circus with a convention centre - which might incorporate a basement (or even surface undercroft) tram depot. However, I think the easiest option would be to plug it into CRT. Through running might only be possible outside the peaks, when CRT will be at capacity with 40tph. -- Dave Arquati www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#8
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![]() Dave Arquati wrote: Tom Anderson wrote: On Tue, 19 Sep 2006, Peter Frimberley wrote: On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 13:41:37 -0500, David Jackman wrote: "Bob" wrote in news:1158689984.356980.88880 @k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: Further to out thread of November last year http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5301366.stm Is there any further detail ? The best question is "where is the depot?". Unless the plan is to dig up Hyde Park (unlikely) an isolated Oxford Street tramway with steel wheeled cars doesn't work. Either run it as a 24 hour or near 24 hour service, with just a few sidings here and there to drop a few cars out of service at night; plus a ramp down to the Central Line, and trundle off to another ramp up to the West London tram, and go to their depots once a week for a major clean etc? Store them on-street, and have some specialised low-loaders to cart them off, broken into separate cars, for maintenance? That, or maybe one of those very large university/medical buildings up TCR way might fancy being rebuilt and could accomodate some sort of fancy dual-level depot on the ground floor and basement? I'm sure Dave would be only too happy to see this patch of ground dug up: http://maps.google.co.uk/?z=19&ll=51...,-0.133955&t=k ![]() My loyalty lies with Imperial, you can insert a tram depot in UCL if you want! Slightly more seriously, how about the Royal Mail sorting office on Rathbone Place? Their carpark is almost exactly the same size as the Therapia Lane building. I've no idea what's under it (apart from a defunct Mail Rail station), but it's conceivable that you could have a two-storey setup, with a floor of stabling (maybe even two, as mezzanines) and a floor of workshops above it, linked by a lift, with the Royal Mail vans parking on top of that. Could even synergise and run mail trams ... Sounds like too efficient a plan to me. I think various surface stabling points are possible. The gyratory system at Marble Arch probably won't survive any improvements to Oxford Street (thankfully), so any space released could provide a tram terminus/stable. If there's enough space, it could be made reasonably secure. Additionally, numerous bus stands would be freed up around Oxford Street. Ken also mentioned replacing various buildings by St Giles Circus with a convention centre - which might incorporate a basement (or even surface undercroft) tram depot. However, I think the easiest option would be to plug it into CRT. Through running might only be possible outside the peaks, when CRT will be at capacity with 40tph. As of yesterday I couldn't find anything on the TFL, the Mayors or the Oxford street companies website about this. Are they just slow putting this up or is this just a PR stunt they have no intention of implementing? |
#9
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![]() Bob wrote: Further to out thread of November last year http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5301366.stm From the article: 'A spokesman for the New West End Company said: "Everyone recognises that Oxford Street's challenge is congestion. We are pleased that the decision makers are looking at effective ideas that will address this issue and turn it into a people place."' It's a relief to hear an interest group actually keeping an open mind on a possible project, rather than screaming loudly about loss of trade due to people not being able to park outside the stores etc. Patrick |
#10
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kytelly wrote:
Dave Arquati wrote: Tom Anderson wrote: On Tue, 19 Sep 2006, Peter Frimberley wrote: On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 13:41:37 -0500, David Jackman wrote: "Bob" wrote in news:1158689984.356980.88880 @k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: Further to out thread of November last year http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5301366.stm Is there any further detail ? The best question is "where is the depot?". Unless the plan is to dig up Hyde Park (unlikely) an isolated Oxford Street tramway with steel wheeled cars doesn't work. Either run it as a 24 hour or near 24 hour service, with just a few sidings here and there to drop a few cars out of service at night; plus a ramp down to the Central Line, and trundle off to another ramp up to the West London tram, and go to their depots once a week for a major clean etc? Store them on-street, and have some specialised low-loaders to cart them off, broken into separate cars, for maintenance? That, or maybe one of those very large university/medical buildings up TCR way might fancy being rebuilt and could accomodate some sort of fancy dual-level depot on the ground floor and basement? I'm sure Dave would be only too happy to see this patch of ground dug up: http://maps.google.co.uk/?z=19&ll=51...,-0.133955&t=k ![]() My loyalty lies with Imperial, you can insert a tram depot in UCL if you want! Slightly more seriously, how about the Royal Mail sorting office on Rathbone Place? Their carpark is almost exactly the same size as the Therapia Lane building. I've no idea what's under it (apart from a defunct Mail Rail station), but it's conceivable that you could have a two-storey setup, with a floor of stabling (maybe even two, as mezzanines) and a floor of workshops above it, linked by a lift, with the Royal Mail vans parking on top of that. Could even synergise and run mail trams ... Sounds like too efficient a plan to me. I think various surface stabling points are possible. The gyratory system at Marble Arch probably won't survive any improvements to Oxford Street (thankfully), so any space released could provide a tram terminus/stable. If there's enough space, it could be made reasonably secure. Additionally, numerous bus stands would be freed up around Oxford Street. Ken also mentioned replacing various buildings by St Giles Circus with a convention centre - which might incorporate a basement (or even surface undercroft) tram depot. However, I think the easiest option would be to plug it into CRT. Through running might only be possible outside the peaks, when CRT will be at capacity with 40tph. As of yesterday I couldn't find anything on the TFL, the Mayors or the Oxford street companies website about this. Are they just slow putting this up or is this just a PR stunt they have no intention of implementing? It was apparently revealed in a chat the Mayor had on BBC London 94.9. The actual report doesn't come out for another month. -- Dave Arquati www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
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