Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Check out page 12 of this week's Time Out, which includes a page on future
London transports and the likelihood of them ever being built. I was surprised that they only gave 35% chance for the CrossRiver tram, considerably less than 45% for the Oxford Street tram. There's also a nice picture of the MonoMetro as it passes down Liverpool Street. But they only give 10% chance for that one, sadly. Incidentally, in case some people here don't know about the MonoMetro Suspended Transport, some videos are he http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EOQyFYXQSEQ At the risk of sounding like a chavvy teenager, it is totally cool. The video is sexy - a bit repetitive but you just really wish it would happen. This project completely passed me by. Calling it MonoMetro 2012 is I'm sure utterly unrealistic, even if it happens at all. I see in Time Out that it was to link Liverpool Street with the Isle of Dogs and Stratford. I wonder whether, since there's no way it could happen by 2012, they'll still bother about Stratford. OK they'll miss the Olympics, but they'll still have the International station, and they'll still have Stratford City business centre that, if our mayor Sir Robin Wales is right, will turn Stratford into a major business and shopping centre - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratford_City Anyway... what's of all these projects? We've spoken at length about CrossRiver so probably not necessary to discuss much more. For the benefit of those not living in London, or too cheap to buy Time Out, I'll give you their likelihood of ever being made percentages - buy the magazine if you want to read why they give those percentages. OFFSHORE LONDON AIRPORT: 10% CROSSRIVER TRAM: 35% OXFORD STREET TRAM: 45% MONOMETRO: 10% BATTERSEA POWER STATION RIVERBUS: 40% EXHIBITION ROAD CLEAR-OUT: 85% THAMESLINK 2012: 60% |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() There's also a nice picture of the MonoMetro as it passes down Liverpool Street. But they only give 10% chance for that one, sadly. That's really sad. I think nobody will deny that the only unused space left in London, is space between house *above* roads - so such project could be very useful and really change transport situation for the better. |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
alex_t wrote:
There's also a nice picture of the MonoMetro as it passes down Liverpool Street. But they only give 10% chance for that one, sadly. That's really sad. I think nobody will deny that the only unused space left in London, is space between house *above* roads - so such project could be very useful and really change transport situation for the better. The sky isn't unused, it has amenity value. In America they have progressively torn down the Els and replaced them with subways on the same alignment. |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
John Rowland wrote:
alex_t wrote: There's also a nice picture of the MonoMetro as it passes down Liverpool Street. But they only give 10% chance for that one, sadly. That's really sad. I think nobody will deny that the only unused space left in London, is space between house *above* roads - so such project could be very useful and really change transport situation for the better. The sky isn't unused, it has amenity value. In America they have progressively torn down the Els and replaced them with subways on the same alignment. Exactly - elevated monorails are very visually intrusive, despite the slimmer supports and tracks. If they are intended to go down existing streets, most streets in London would look completely closed in if an elevated monorail were running down them. The video shows them on Waterloo Bridge, Euston Road, at Canary Wharf - where there is a lot of space. A central London monorail system was proposed in the 1960s but soon abandoned. A key sticking point was the station infrastructure. A monorail may look slimline, but an elevated station certainly does not - you need platforms, stairs and lifts. The station shown on Euston Road in the video already makes the street look very enclosed - imagine what it would look like on a narrower typical street such as Regent St or Oxford Street. People already complain about the intrusiveness of tram overhead power lines - imagine the reaction to a two-track monorail down Oxford Street! Another irritation for office workers or residents of flats and houses next to a monorail route is that their reasonably private first or second floor room suddenly becomes a fishbowl for thousands of people gawping in every hour. Pie-in-the-sky impractical idea. Nice video though. -- Dave Arquati www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Pie-in-the-sky impractical idea. Nice video though. Do you have anything better? Redecorating old tube? Even if they will fix it, it will still be crowded, tiny, and hot. The only other real long-term solution is to dig a new underground with at least the same scope as the current tube (and preferably even larger, including south). But I'm sure it won't happen in our lifetimes. |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 16 Nov 2006, Tristán White wrote:
Check out page 12 of this week's Time Out, which includes a page on future London transports and the likelihood of them ever being built. I was surprised that they only gave 35% chance for the CrossRiver tram, considerably less than 45% for the Oxford Street tram. Rings a bell: http://www.newlondonarchitecture.org/exhibitions.php OFFSHORE LONDON AIRPORT: 10% CROSSRIVER TRAM: 35% OXFORD STREET TRAM: 45% MONOMETRO: 10% BATTERSEA POWER STATION RIVERBUS: 40% EXHIBITION ROAD CLEAR-OUT: 85% THAMESLINK 2012: 60% Now that *really* rings a bell: http://www.newlondonarchitecture.org...donsMoving.pdf Bar rounding to the nearest 5%, and knocking the riverbus down a few points, the scores are exactly as given in the NLA exhibition! Did they claim this was their own work, or do they mention the NLA? Given that the NLA gallery is all of 300 metres walk from Time Out's offices, this is probably the laziest journalism i've seen in a while. tom -- It's worth remembering that if you chain a thousand monkeys to a thousand typewriters, they will all eventually die of starvation. -- themanwhofellasleep |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave Arquati wrote:
Another irritation for office workers or residents of flats and houses next to a monorail route is that their reasonably private first or second floor room suddenly becomes a fishbowl for thousands of people gawping in every hour. Singapore has an interesting solution to that; their residential-zone "mini-metros" have LCD windows, which are automatically blacked out at predefined locations where privacy might be an issue. Neil |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Neil Williams" wrote in message oups.com... Dave Arquati wrote: Another irritation for office workers or residents of flats and houses next to a monorail route is that their reasonably private first or second floor room suddenly becomes a fishbowl for thousands of people gawping in every hour. Singapore has an interesting solution to that; their residential-zone "mini-metros" have LCD windows, which are automatically blacked out at predefined locations where privacy might be an issue. Neil I live on the (raised) first floor and I'd love a monorail gliding past every 5 minutes - and if the passengers get the occasional eyeful, good for them! x |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave Arquati wrote in
: SNIP A central London monorail system was proposed in the 1960s but soon abandoned. A key sticking point was the station infrastructure. A monorail may look slimline, but an elevated station certainly does not - you need platforms, stairs and lifts. The station shown on Euston Road in the video already makes the street look very enclosed - imagine what it would look like on a narrower typical street such as Regent St or Oxford Street. People already complain about the intrusiveness of tram overhead power lines - imagine the reaction to a two-track monorail down Oxford Street! SNIP I know the video has other parts of London such as Euston Road and various bridges with a MonoMetro, but as far as I know, the plan is just for a connection between Liverpool Street, Isle of Dogs and Stratford City, isn't it? So it shouldn't be too intrusive. |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Tom Anderson wrote in
h.li: SNIP Bar rounding to the nearest 5%, and knocking the riverbus down a few points, the scores are exactly as given in the NLA exhibition! Riverbus is knocked down because of the recent worrying news about the future (or not) of the Power Station itself. Did they claim this was their own work, or do they mention the NLA? They mention the NLA, and at the end of the article they plug the exhibition and give the website reference. Given that the NLA gallery is all of 300 metres walk from Time Out's offices, this is probably the laziest journalism i've seen in a while. Not really - I guess a deal was struck: we plug your exhibition, if we can use your facts and figures to make a page up. I for one am delighted they did as I may not have heard of this exhibition otherwise. And it's good that the public are more informed of what's going on. I for one would have loved more information when they considered stopping the NLL south of Stratford, as you know. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Come join the greatest online Gambling Experience | London Transport | |||
How come the entire system collapsed this morning? | London Transport | |||
2012 Olympics come to London | London Transport | |||
Come to geneva for the LakeParade 2004 | London Transport | |||
does the tube come above ground at all? | London Transport |