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St Pancras Thameslink Platforms (Midland Rd)
On Wed, 13 Jun 2007, Mr Thant wrote:
On Jun 13, 3:09 pm, Tom Anderson wrote: Reading between the lines at: http://www.alwaystouchout.com/project/23 Which part are you looking at? The list under "service pattern". The list under "service pattern" includes: # Bedford - London Bridge - Brighton (4tph) # Luton - Elephant & Castle - Sutton, Wimbledon (4tph) clockwise via Sutton then Wimbledon (2tph) anticlockwise via Wimbledon then Sutton (2tph) Which I believe is the same as the current basic service pattern, although without seeing calling patterns it's hard to say. I assumed as much. Right - and all the added services are long-distance ones which are very unlikely to call at Kentish Town, and won't go anyhwere near Elephant. The "St Albans - Elephant & Castle - Sevenoaks" train is new, and could conceivably call at both. I assumed it would, given that existing St Albans trains are local, and Sevenoaks is a similar sort of distance to Sutton. That service is 2 tph, so we get 6 tph total local trains; the other 18 tph are express. If you actually want to go from KX to Blackfriars, then i would certainly agree that Thameslink is probably your best bet. However, if you want to go from somewhere-north-of-KX to somewhere-south-of-Blackfriars, it probably isn't part of your route of choice. No. Especially if you're trying get to Kentish Town and you board a St Albans express, which I've obviously never done. Splendid, glad to hear it. Even if you had made that entirely hypothetical mistake, it could be worse - you could have done so and then fallen asleep ... tom -- intelligence, purity, the potential freedom of space, and the potential aesthetics of mathematical computations |
St Pancras Thameslink Platforms (Midland Rd)
On Tue, 12 Jun 2007 10:25:46 -0700, D7666 wrote:
On Jun 12, 12:45 pm, Neil Williams wrote: Muenchen Hbf It was in fact München Hbf I was thinking of in relation to SPI (as I shall now call St Pancras International) as the overall footprint is similar - a deeper train shed in the centre with two wings one on each side. IIRC, Muenchen Hbf was originally 3 separate stations. Certainly one wing is still known as the Holzkirchner bahnhof. Another station with the same layout is Budapest Keleti Palyaudvar, as I discovered when trying to change from a late running arrival to an on-time starter there once. That cost me a serious on-train supplement, and the conductor claimed not to speak English or German, so I couldn't even argue with him about it! -- mikedotroebuckatgmxdotnet posted from Cheb (Eger), CZ |
St Pancras Thameslink Platforms (Midland Rd)
"Arthur Figgis" wrote in message ... Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 18:29:53 on Mon, 11 Jun 2007, Matt Wheeler remarked: London Victoria with 3 sets ? South Eastern Side, then, two sets of "south central" platforms, the "middle" ones where Gatwick Express is located, and then the high-numbered ones for longer distance Southern services to the coast which are down past the escalators to Victoria Place. No, you can stand at the entrance to the concourse and see all the platforms at once, and they are numbers intuitively from left to right. Pedantically, can you see them all from one point, or would either WHS (Chatham side) or the escalators up (high numbers) be in the way? Heading for any of them is simply a case of going a bit left, right or straight ahead. It gets more complicated if a Royal Train is leaving from platform 2 (or, in the past, when the Night Ferry occupied that platform) and access to platform 1 was from outside the station Peter |
St Pancras Thameslink Platforms (Midland Rd)
"Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 16:11:50 on Mon, 11 Jun 2007, Sky Rider remarked: On a side note the new Thameslink station will (like the station above) be called St Pancras International. Will there be any other station in the UK with four distinct sets of platforms (not counting LUL platforms)? Waterloo perhaps has three: Main concourse, East (or is that different station altogether) and Eurostar (even post E* they might be entered separately). Manchester Piccadilly has two, as does London Bridge; any other offers for three or more? Four for Stratford? The NLL platforms (for the time being), the Electric Lines (with cross-platform interchange to the Central Line, the Main Line platforms 9, 10, 10a, and the Lea Valley platform(s). And it has, separately, Central Line, Jubilee Line, and DLR platforms. peter |
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