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#31
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On Tue, 31 Jul 2007 07:58:41 -0400, David of Broadway
wrote: Michael Hoffman wrote: PigPOg wrote: On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 10:05:00 -0700, Nerdbird wrote: This web site may be of interest to the visitor to London. The Underground and taxis are discussed. http://hometown.aol.com/nerdbird1/LondonNYC.html Found this site very interesting. I'm a Londoner yet know nothing of NYC. I've never been able to find (or have someone explain) the Uptown/Downtown concept. I mean, where exactly is Uptown New York? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uptown%2C_Manhattan This New Yorker suspects that that page was not written by a New Yorker. It's not accurate in the slightest. (But I'm too lazy fix it, so I really have no right to complain.) Darn; your parenthetical comment means I can't really point you at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Sofixit :-) |
#32
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On Tue, 31 Jul 2007 05:57:34 -0700, sweek
wrote: 24 hour running and express services are things I really wish we had. The greatest advantage of the four-track system [1] is that it allows 24-hour running. The express trains often save you less time than you might think. [1] Well, it mostly is... I was particularly intrigued by the three-track layout on the 7 in Queens... |
#33
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On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 22:33:15 -0400, David of Broadway
wrote: Paul Corfield wrote: Not exactly. (But impressively close for someone who doesn't ride the buses in question!) MTA New York City Transit has operated a large number of express routes between Staten Island and Manhattan and several express routes between Queens and Manhattan and between Brooklyn and Manhattan for decades. (There's also an express route between Queens and the Bronx, but that's an anomaly.) OK - I was going from memory and failed to load up a MTA Bus Map ;-) The various city-subsidized private bus operators operated many local routes in Queens and Brooklyn, along with express routes between Queens and Manhattan, Brooklyn and Manhattan, and the Bronx and Manhattan. Those routes were recently taken over by the newly formed MTA Bus. I knew I'd got a bit of it correct. - What are New York's night buses like? Not dissimilar to the concept used in London - i.e. 24 hour service on key corridors. There is not the same need as in London for longer distance routes as the Subway is 24 hours in NYC. Generally, New York doesn't have any specific night buses. Some bus routes run all night - that's all. But many of London's routes are now on exactly this basis - the daytime route but running all night. London is now catching up with NYC with its never ending variants of what line or station is open or closed at any point in time! I think I'd struggle to cope with a Subway system that is subject to such frequent change to its operating pattern. Catching up? With three exceptions, every single subway station in New York is open around the clock. (The three exceptions are the two northernmost stations on the 3, which are replaced by bus service at night, and Broad Street on the J/M/Z, which is closed on weekends, when the J is cut back to Chambers Street.) What I meant was that with the scale of work going on in London we have almost as long lists of what is open, what is half open, closed and what is replaced by a bus as NYC used to have for its subway system. I wasn't alluding for a moment to our system being open 24 hours which it demonstrably is not (for LU). There are a few exceptions on rail routes. But our route patterns can certainly get confusing. Err yes. While I know you've had to close large sections of the network for rehabilitation works I do find it quite odd that the route and service pattern changes as much as it does. The statements about your lack of express services were probably referring to the Underground, where they're largely accurate, except on the western Piccadilly and Metropolitan. I don't think they were. The website author mentioned rail rather than Tube or Subway. - We do have a couple of jewish neighbourhoods, which you probably never ran into: Golders Green is the big one, and Stamford Hill is smaller, poorer and much more orthodox, with furry hats and curly sideburns everywhere you look. Don't forget Gants Hill and Barkingside. Not as obviously orthodox as GG or SH but plenty of Jewish businesses and synagogues. Also Hendon and Edgware. True but really just a continuation of the Golders Green area. (I didn't realize Gants Hill and Barkingside were Jewish. The various lists of kosher restaurants that I consulted didn't include any in those neighbo(u)rhoods.) Well there's certainly a synagogue and a range of kosher businesses that follow Sabbath opening and closing rules. Can't think of a kosher restaurant in the area but I'm just commenting from what I've seen from the bus. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#34
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"Michael Hoffman" wrote in message
... There are two terminals in Gatwick. I've never thought of either of them as being the "main bit." One happens to have a rail station, but they both have access via road (and coaches stop at each one). Weeell, the south terminal (which has the rail station) was built first so I always think of it as the "main bit". If you take off from or land at the north terminal you have to get the little shuttle thingy to the trains. Ian |
#35
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"Tom Anderson" wrote in message
h.li On Tue, 31 Jul 2007, Michael Hoffman wrote: Tom Anderson wrote: On Mon, 30 Jul 2007, Michael Hoffman wrote: Peter Robinson wrote: Michael Hoffman wrote: Luton does not have a one-seat rail journey to the centre--you have to take a shuttle to Luton Airport Parkway first. Eh? Half FCC train stop at Luton Airport Parkway. Or am I missing the point? Graham Harrison said that all London airports have direct rail links to the centre, as opposed to NYC where the "rail link" to two airports involves getting a rail shuttle from the mainline rail station. Actually, i think it was me who said that. I was pointing out that Luton is not any better than that. Using Google Maps' routes, Luton Airport Parkway to the terminal (well, the bus station) is 1.5 miles, Howard Beach or Jamaica to JFK is 4.9. I wouldn't say that was 'no better', but you're right, it's still not a distance you'd want to walk, so it's a two-seat ride. I've never taken the Luton bus, but the AirTrain is the same system used for intra-airport travel at both EWR and JFK. If you're going to count it as being a two-seat ride, perhaps you should also count the terminal at LGW that doesn't have a rail station (can never remember which is which). Fair enough. The criterion should probably be how many seats there are between baggage reclaim and city centre - i take it the reclaim (and check-in) for that terminal is in the terminal itself, and not the main bit? I've never used Gatwick myself ... You wouldn't normally sit on the short shuttle ride from the north to the south terminal (I don't remember there being any seats). It's not much different to the shuttle trains that take you to remote piers in airports like Stansted, except that it's land rather than air-side. In fact, it's probably quicker and easier than the walk to the HEx station from, say, Terminal 1 at Heathrow. |
#36
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Ian F. wrote:
"Michael Hoffman" wrote in message ... There are two terminals in Gatwick. I've never thought of either of them as being the "main bit." One happens to have a rail station, but they both have access via road (and coaches stop at each one). Weeell, the south terminal (which has the rail station) was built first so I always think of it as the "main bit". If you take off from or land at the north terminal you have to get the little shuttle thingy to the trains. Yes, but if you come via some other means of transportation, you don't. It's not like, say, a satellite terminal at Stansted. -- Michael Hoffman |
#37
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On Jul 31, 5:04 pm, James Farrar wrote:
The greatest advantage of the four-track system [1] is that it allows 24-hour running. I don't think this is actually as important as it's made out to be. The system has a lot of two track sections that are also 24 hour, and even in the four track sections one pair is generally in use 24 hours a day, with only occasional diversions for engineering. It'd be interesting to find out what working practices allow this and whether they could be applied in London. U -- http://londonconnections.blogspot.com/ A blog about transport projects in London |
#38
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David of Broadway wrote:
Michael Hoffman wrote: PigPOg wrote: On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 10:05:00 -0700, Nerdbird wrote: This web site may be of interest to the visitor to London. The Underground and taxis are discussed. http://hometown.aol.com/nerdbird1/LondonNYC.html Found this site very interesting. I'm a Londoner yet know nothing of NYC. I've never been able to find (or have someone explain) the Uptown/Downtown concept. I mean, where exactly is Uptown New York? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uptown%2C_Manhattan This New Yorker suspects that that page was not written by a New Yorker. It's not accurate in the slightest. (But I'm too lazy fix it, so I really have no right to complain.) In my experience, entries in Wikipedia are more often wrong than right. |
#39
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On Tue, 31 Jul 2007 18:38:51 +0100, Michael Hoffman
wrote: Ian F. wrote: "Michael Hoffman" wrote in message ... There are two terminals in Gatwick. I've never thought of either of them as being the "main bit." One happens to have a rail station, but they both have access via road (and coaches stop at each one). Weeell, the south terminal (which has the rail station) was built first so I always think of it as the "main bit". If you take off from or land at the north terminal you have to get the little shuttle thingy to the trains. Yes, but if you come via some other means of transportation, you don't. It's not like, say, a satellite terminal at Stansted. There are also shuttles to the satellite at the South terminal. -- Terry Harper Website Coordinator, The Omnibus Society http://www.omnibussoc.org |
#40
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"Terry Harper" wrote in message
On Tue, 31 Jul 2007 18:38:51 +0100, Michael Hoffman wrote: Ian F. wrote: "Michael Hoffman" wrote in message ... There are two terminals in Gatwick. I've never thought of either of them as being the "main bit." One happens to have a rail station, but they both have access via road (and coaches stop at each one). Weeell, the south terminal (which has the rail station) was built first so I always think of it as the "main bit". If you take off from or land at the north terminal you have to get the little shuttle thingy to the trains. Yes, but if you come via some other means of transportation, you don't. It's not like, say, a satellite terminal at Stansted. There are also shuttles to the satellite at the South terminal. Not any more there aren't, and not for several years. You now take travelators, outbound on the low level and inbound on the high level. I assume they did away with the airside shuttle a few years ago to fully segregate arriving and departing pax. There are still a few relics of the old shuttle track visible, which is one of the few (or only) airside abandoned railways in the UK. |
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