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#1
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The new issue of Private Eye, out today, has the following interesting
section on the much-delayed Shepherd's Bush WLL station: --- At the heart of the new £1.6bn mega-development in London, just north of Shepherd's Bush, there is to be a new railway station on the West London line. It is a key part of the plan to ensure good public access to the 300 shops, 14-screen cinema and all the rest of this huge scheme. All very Green. The station is virtually complete but surprisingly there is no announcement about when it will open. Although it should have been handed over to operators Silverlink at the end of August, the handover has now been postponed indefinitely. That's because one of the platforms is 18 inches shorter than the minimum specified by the Railway Inspectorate. This might not sound like much, but with the numbers expected to use the station, it is enough to pose a genuine safety risk. It might sound simple to resolve, too, with a bit of extra concrete, but unfortunately there is a huge wall in the way and the estimated cost is a staggering £7n. The issue is now the subject of a major dispute between all the players - developer Westfield, Transport for London and the safety inspectors. There seems no easy resolution, but someone is going to have to cough up £7m for what will be the most expensive 18 inches of railway platform in the world. |
#2
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On 10 Oct, 07:56, James Farrar wrote:
The new issue of Private Eye, out today, has the following interesting section on the much-delayed Shepherd's Bush WLL station: --- At the heart of the new £1.6bn mega-development in London, just north of Shepherd's Bush, there is to be a new railway station on the West London line. It is a key part of the plan to ensure good public access to the 300 shops, 14-screen cinema and all the rest of this huge scheme. All very Green. The station is virtually complete but surprisingly there is no announcement about when it will open. Although it should have been handed over to operators Silverlink at the end of August, the handover has now been postponed indefinitely. That's because one of the platforms is 18 inches shorter than the minimum specified by the Railway Inspectorate. This might not sound like much, but with the numbers expected to use the station, it is enough to pose a genuine safety risk. It might sound simple to resolve, too, with a bit of extra concrete, but unfortunately there is a huge wall in the way and the estimated cost is a staggering £7n. The issue is now the subject of a major dispute between all the players - developer Westfield, Transport for London and the safety inspectors. There seems no easy resolution, but someone is going to have to cough up £7m for what will be the most expensive 18 inches of railway platform in the world. Can they not just use platform edge doors? |
#3
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On Oct 10, 8:20 am, lonelytraveller
wrote: On 10 Oct, 07:56, James Farrar wrote: The new issue of Private Eye, out today, has the following interesting section on the much-delayed Shepherd's Bush WLL station: --- At the heart of the new £1.6bn mega-development in London, just north of Shepherd's Bush, there is to be a new railway station on the West London line. It is a key part of the plan to ensure good public access to the 300 shops, 14-screen cinema and all the rest of this huge scheme. All very Green. The station is virtually complete but surprisingly there is no announcement about when it will open. Although it should have been handed over to operators Silverlink at the end of August, the handover has now been postponed indefinitely. That's because one of the platforms is 18 inches shorter than the minimum specified by the Railway Inspectorate. This might not sound like much, but with the numbers expected to use the station, it is enough to pose a genuine safety risk. It might sound simple to resolve, too, with a bit of extra concrete, but unfortunately there is a huge wall in the way and the estimated cost is a staggering £7n. The issue is now the subject of a major dispute between all the players - developer Westfield, Transport for London and the safety inspectors. There seems no easy resolution, but someone is going to have to cough up £7m for what will be the most expensive 18 inches of railway platform in the world. Can they not just use platform edge doors? Sensible suggestion but will it work with variable train lengths and differing stock types with differing door spacing. It works on the Jubilee because of uniform stock types and lengths ?- remember the insertion of extra coaches could only be done on a block closure basis. |
#4
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On 10 Oct, 07:56, James Farrar wrote:
The new issue of Private Eye, out today, has the following interesting section on the much-delayed Shepherd's Bush WLL station: --- At the heart of the new £1.6bn mega-development in London, just north of Shepherd's Bush, there is to be a new railway station on the West London line. It is a key part of the plan to ensure good public access to the 300 shops, 14-screen cinema and all the rest of this huge scheme. All very Green. The station is virtually complete but surprisingly there is no announcement about when it will open. Although it should have been handed over to operators Silverlink at the end of August, the handover has now been postponed indefinitely. That's because one of the platforms is 18 inches shorter than the minimum specified by the Railway Inspectorate. This might not sound like much, but with the numbers expected to use the station, it is enough to pose a genuine safety risk. It might sound simple to resolve, too, with a bit of extra concrete, but unfortunately there is a huge wall in the way and the estimated cost is a staggering £7n. The issue is now the subject of a major dispute between all the players - developer Westfield, Transport for London and the safety inspectors. There seems no easy resolution, but someone is going to have to cough up £7m for what will be the most expensive 18 inches of railway platform in the world. Wow! If this is the case it would explain a lot. Though if this is the case a lot of explaining needs to be done as well. |
#5
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On 10 Oct, 07:56, James Farrar wrote:
.... It might sound simple to resolve, too, with a bit of extra concrete, but unfortunately there is a huge wall in the way and the estimated cost is a staggering £7n. The issue is now the subject of a major dispute between all the players - developer Westfield, Transport for London and the safety inspectors. There seems no easy resolution, but someone is going to have to cough up £7m for what will be the most expensive 18 inches of railway platform in the world. Sounds like utter ********, which wouldn't be surprising given the general ****poor quality of the Eye's railway reporting. A fiver says it opens with LO branding and the current platform length on November 11. -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
#6
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![]() "John B" wrote in message ps.com... On 10 Oct, 07:56, James Farrar wrote: .... It might sound simple to resolve, too, with a bit of extra concrete, but unfortunately there is a huge wall in the way and the estimated cost is a staggering £7n. The issue is now the subject of a major dispute between all the players - developer Westfield, Transport for London and the safety inspectors. There seems no easy resolution, but someone is going to have to cough up £7m for what will be the most expensive 18 inches of railway platform in the world. Sounds like utter ********, which wouldn't be surprising given the general ****poor quality of the Eye's railway reporting. A fiver says it opens with LO branding and the current platform length on November 11. Its been mentioned somewhere a few weeks ago which I can't find at the mo, and it isn't the length, its the width, the yellow line is in the middle of the platform... Paul |
#7
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On Oct 10, 11:42 am, "Paul Scott"
wrote: "John B" wrote in message ps.com... On 10 Oct, 07:56, James Farrar wrote: ... It might sound simple to resolve, too, with a bit of extra concrete, but unfortunately there is a huge wall in the way and the estimated cost is a staggering £7n. The issue is now the subject of a major dispute between all the players - developer Westfield, Transport for London and the safety inspectors. There seems no easy resolution, but someone is going to have to cough up £7m for what will be the most expensive 18 inches of railway platform in the world. Sounds like utter ********, which wouldn't be surprising given the general ****poor quality of the Eye's railway reporting. A fiver says it opens with LO branding and the current platform length on November 11. Its been mentioned somewhere a few weeks ago which I can't find at the mo, and it isn't the length, its the width, the yellow line is in the middle of the platform... Paul Does Clapham Common meet those standards? I've always thought that must be terrifying during the rush hour. Jonn |
#8
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On 10 Oct, 11:55, wrote:
Sounds like utter ********, which wouldn't be surprising given the general ****poor quality of the Eye's railway reporting. A fiver says it opens with LO branding and the current platform length on November 11. Its been mentioned somewhere a few weeks ago which I can't find at the mo, and it isn't the length, its the width, the yellow line is in the middle of the platform... That's slightly saner - the '18 inches of length' point as reported in the Eye made no sense whatsoever, but I can see that adding 45cm of width to a full-length platform could be an expensive undertaking, and that a narrow platform might actually be dangerous (whereas a short platform can be dealt with by SDO). In which case, somebody involved with the design needs shot. Does Clapham Common meet those standards? I've always thought that must be terrifying during the rush hour. Most definitely not, and most definitely yes - but there's a concept called "grandfather rights" which effectively means that the railways are allowed to do dangerous things they've always done, but not to start doing new dangerous things. -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
#9
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![]() "John B" wrote in message oups.com... On 10 Oct, 11:55, wrote: Sounds like utter ********, which wouldn't be surprising given the general ****poor quality of the Eye's railway reporting. A fiver says it opens with LO branding and the current platform length on November 11. Its been mentioned somewhere a few weeks ago which I can't find at the mo, and it isn't the length, its the width, the yellow line is in the middle of the platform... That's slightly saner - the '18 inches of length' point as reported in the Eye made no sense whatsoever, but I can see that adding 45cm of width to a full-length platform could be an expensive undertaking, and that a narrow platform might actually be dangerous (whereas a short platform can be dealt with by SDO). In which case, somebody involved with the design needs shot. I'm not sure which is 'up' or 'down', but I'm sure its the western side platform that is the problem. The bit where the stairs and lifts come down is quite deep, possibly for about a coach length, but to the north of that it is quite narrow, and the back wall is quite substantial, I wonder if it is supporting the higher ground of the bus station? Dave Arquati's site links to some photos, which seem to predate the retaining wall going in: http://www.flickr.com/photos/davearq...7594243368848/ Paul |
#10
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On 10 Oct, 15:00, John B wrote:
Its been mentioned somewhere a few weeks ago which I can't find at the mo, and it isn't the length, its the width, the yellow line is in the middle of the platform... That's slightly saner - the '18 inches of length' point as reported in the Eye made no sense whatsoever, but I can see that adding 45cm of width to a full-length platform could be an expensive undertaking, and that a narrow platform might actually be dangerous (whereas a short platform can be dealt with by SDO). In which case, somebody involved with the design needs shot. Yes, the Eye's railway reporting is sometimes a little confused, but I can't quite see how they've totally fabricated this story - it seems likely there's something in this story, and Paul Scott's comments appear to suggest it is a platform width issue. Is this a salutary lesson in how one should not let developers (in this case Westfield) build stations by themselves. I've got a horrible feeling that the thrust of the Eye piece is true, and this is an almighty screw up of the first order. It'd also explain the ghostly silence that has surrounded the (non) opening of the station. |
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