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#51
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On Fri, 7 Dec 2007 05:34:48 -0800 (PST), Mr Thant
wrote: I thought people here might be interested in the diagram I've made of King's Cross and St Pancras, showing the passageways and routes around the whole complex in the style of the tube map (I know a proper floorplan would have been much more useful, but that turned out to be way too hard). Links and a bit more explanation are on my blog: http://londonconnections.blogspot.co...s-novelty.html U Very nice, thankyou. But should there be a link from Pancras Road to the south end of StP concourse, the actual route being up steps, through the archway and past THAT statue? -- Peter Lawrence |
#52
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On Fri, 7 Dec 2007 22:47:28 -0000, "Peter Masson"
wrote: "Paul Corfield" wrote in message .. . On Fri, 7 Dec 2007 14:25:06 -0800 (PST), Mr Thant wrote: My understanding is that it's staying basically the same, but all the tunnels are being enlarged and the stairs are being replaced by escalators. The Picc escalators appear to head north from the currently blocked off part of the Thameslink tunnel (which will be the main tunnel) and come out in the same cross passage as the temporary stairs. It's the escalators that I hadn't picked up on. That certainly makes a load of sense in the context of the closed off bit of the Thameslink - Picc Line tunnel. Where was the entrance to what is now Kings Cross Thameslink, before the BedPan electrification? I am pretty sure it wasn't where the Kings Cross Thameslink entrance is, but I can't recall quite where it was. IIRC either St Chads Place or the even shorter road between Grays Inn Road and Caledonian Road. When the Metropolitan and Circle platforms were alongside what is now Kings Cross Thameslink there was said to be a subway to that station from the Kings Cross concourse. Can any remains of it be seen anywhere, and in particular, was any of it incorporated into the Piccadilly to Kings Cross Thameslink subway? Peter |
#53
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On 7 Dec, 13:43, wrote:
In the main its very good - I note your sense of humour extends to including platform 9 3/4 but doesn't go as far as listing Grand Central as an operator out of KX!! :-) Yeah, if you can show "York Road closed 1932" then surely you can also mention "Grand Central - starting 2032". Jonathan |
#54
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On Sun, 9 Dec 2007 15:52:37 -0800 (PST), jonmorris
wrote: On 7 Dec, 13:43, wrote: In the main its very good - I note your sense of humour extends to including platform 9 3/4 but doesn't go as far as listing Grand Central as an operator out of KX!! :-) Yeah, if you can show "York Road closed 1932" then surely you can also mention "Grand Central - starting 2032". York Road actually existed, something in the future never has. |
#55
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Charles Ellson wrote:
On Fri, 7 Dec 2007 22:47:28 -0000, "Peter Masson" wrote: Where was the entrance to what is now Kings Cross Thameslink, before the BedPan electrification? I am pretty sure it wasn't where the Kings Cross Thameslink entrance is, but I can't recall quite where it was. IIRC either St Chads Place or the even shorter road between Grays Inn Road and Caledonian Road. ....since that road is called "Kings Cross Bridge", it sounds possible. |
#56
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On 10 Dec, 00:30, Charles Ellson wrote:
York Road actually existed, something in the future never has. Sense of humour failure alert!!! |
#57
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On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 15:36:21 -0800 (PST), Jonathan Morris
wrote: On 10 Dec, 00:30, Charles Ellson wrote: York Road actually existed, something in the future never has. Sense of humour failure alert!!! Nah. Post-midnight posting syndrome. ;-) |
#58
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In message , at 22:03:33 on Fri, 7 Dec
2007, Roland Perry writes the main concourse is at ground level, and the main entry/exit from the platforms will still be directly from the existing front of the station, towards the new square, and also via the western side concourse, which will clearly provide much improved access to the underground. There will also be a mezzanine level for cafes & shops etc. Unfortunately there isn't a small size report I can link to, but its all on the Camden site if you slog through it... I'm sure that last time I looked the platform ends were going to be *only* exits [1]. I printed it out when this last came up, but that's at home 300 miles away. Later this weekend, maybe... Found it at last. An Arup report for Network Rail "Station Design and Passenger Movements, dated July 2006, Job Number 118944/03. I can find no trace of this online at the moment. I agree that the text does say that departing passengers will go via both the gateline and the bridge from the [western] Mezzanine, but all the several passenger-flow diagrams in the report only show departures for Platforms 1-7 via the bridge. Part of the problem is that it seems you won't be able to access the circulating area at the platform ends until *after* going through a gateline (at which point you are cut off from the Mezzanine facilities). So it's more likely that people with day-tickets will wait within the Mezzanine area until their train is given a platform number and they start to board. -- Roland Perry |
#59
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... the main concourse is at ground level, and the main entry/exit from the platforms will still be directly from the existing front of the station, towards the new square, and also via the western side concourse, which will clearly provide much improved access to the underground. There will also be a mezzanine level for cafes & shops etc. Unfortunately there isn't a small size report I can link to, but its all on the Camden site if you slog through it... I'm sure that last time I looked the platform ends were going to be *only* exits [1]. I printed it out when this last came up, but that's at home 300 miles away. Later this weekend, maybe... Found it at last. An Arup report for Network Rail "Station Design and Passenger Movements, dated July 2006, Job Number 118944/03. I can find no trace of this online at the moment. That's the one, buried in the Camden sight as I suggested. I agree that the text does say that departing passengers will go via both the gateline and the bridge from the [western] Mezzanine, but all the several passenger-flow diagrams in the report only show departures for Platforms 1-7 via the bridge. I think you are possibly misinterpreting this. If you look at the diagram on page 5 (repeated as fig 1 on page 10) for instance, I'm taking the red arrows to be pax arriving at the station [to catch a train] and blue as departing [having arrived on a train]. If so the thick red arrows from the 'southern circulation area' are what we would describe as 'departures', and are drawn proportionately, although it might have been clearer if they had carried on to the individual platforms? Part of the problem is that it seems you won't be able to access the circulating area at the platform ends until *after* going through a gateline (at which point you are cut off from the Mezzanine facilities). So it's more likely that people with day-tickets will wait within the Mezzanine area until their train is given a platform number and they start to board. Thats how I understand it for those type of pax, but its much the same as eg Euston, Liverpool St, and shortly Waterloo, and IIRC at KX pax are held queuing in the existing concourse for peak/busy long distance trains anyway. Of course as you mention in another post, daily commuters will expect to speed straight past all this, clutching their seasons. All the major stations seem to be becoming more like airports, and the use of gatelines, and not announcing platform details until shortly before departure, retains pax in the concourse. Even little Marylebone has gone very much this way... Paul |
#60
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In message , at 11:28:36 on
Wed, 12 Dec 2007, Paul Scott remarked: I agree that the text does say that departing passengers will go via both the gateline and the bridge from the [western] Mezzanine, but all the several passenger-flow diagrams in the report only show departures for Platforms 1-7 via the bridge. I think you are possibly misinterpreting this. If you look at the diagram on page 5 (repeated as fig 1 on page 10) for instance, I'm taking the red arrows to be pax arriving at the station [to catch a train] and blue as departing [having arrived on a train]. If so the thick red arrows from the 'southern circulation area' are what we would describe as 'departures', and are drawn proportionately, although it might have been clearer if they had carried on to the individual platforms? Yes, I agree. What I was mainly saying was the lack of continuing the red arrows beyond Platform 8 was the reason why I didn't think departures would be happening via the platform ends. I'm wondering how this will all work in practice, the report goes into a lot of detail about what happens if it rains. Will we really see crowds of people huddling outside (under a canopy or otherwise) waiting to see if their train is going from platform 1 or 5, before they cross the gateline? Or will they head for the area near the platform 8 buffers. I have particularly in mind those few Cambridge train that depart from the main shed just to confuse everyone. Later, they may go via SPILL, of course. -- Roland Perry |
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