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Old April 15th 08, 07:51 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2008, Clive D. W. Feather wrote:

In article , Tom
Anderson writes
Very. For example, it would be useful to have platforms on either the
Met. or the Chiltern lines at West Hampstead to allow a connection to
Thameslink and the NLL, but there isn't even the room to do that.


There may not be space to add bank platforms [1] outside the Met
tracks, but isn't there space to rebuild the station as a pair of
islands between the Met and Jubilee pairs?


No.


Presumably, because platforms half the width of the existing platform,
which is what there'd be space for, wouldn't be allowed?

Probably the best you could manage is something like this:

---------------------------------

---------------------------------
---------------------------------
--\ ######## /-------------------

\--------/ /--------\
---------------/ ######## \------
---------------------------------


Ooh, i like that. You could add another island further to the left for the
Chiltern lines!

Any reason you've drawn it upside-down?

tom

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Old April 15th 08, 09:42 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 20:51:00 +0100, Tom Anderson
wrote:

On Tue, 15 Apr 2008, Clive D. W. Feather wrote:

In article , Tom
Anderson writes
Very. For example, it would be useful to have platforms on either the
Met. or the Chiltern lines at West Hampstead to allow a connection to
Thameslink and the NLL, but there isn't even the room to do that.

There may not be space to add bank platforms [1] outside the Met
tracks, but isn't there space to rebuild the station as a pair of
islands between the Met and Jubilee pairs?


No.


Presumably, because platforms half the width of the existing platform,
which is what there'd be space for, wouldn't be allowed?

Probably the best you could manage is something like this:

---------------------------------

---------------------------------
---------------------------------
--\ ######## /-------------------

\--------/ /--------\
---------------/ ######## \------
---------------------------------


Ooh, i like that. You could add another island further to the left for the
Chiltern lines!

Any reason you've drawn it upside-down?

There is possibly more room available at West Hampstead than is
apparent at first sight. The GC lines used to have platforms, the
odd-looking doorway at the back of one of the shops is the access from
what was the station building so that side might not need a lot
alteration of premises in Broadhurst Gardens to put in a new platform
(but not necessarily so for the gap between the Up GC and the Down
Met). On the other side, if nothing new has been built in the last few
years then there is room for expansion to the north without knocking
down too much. As for the station building it is IIRC one of a number
built to a similar design so not desperately in need of preservation
but past modernisation elsewhere seems to have been achieved without
too much alteration to the outward appearance anyway. If the road
bridge is still as inadequate WRT to weight-carrying as it was a few
years ago then this would also be an opportunity/excuse to replace it
and increase the available width of the railway formation below.
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Old April 15th 08, 10:38 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit
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On Apr 15, 2:42*pm, Charles Ellson wrote:
On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 20:51:00 +0100, Tom Anderson


wrote:
On Tue, 15 Apr 2008, Clive D. W. Feather wrote:


In article , Tom
Anderson writes
Very. For example, it would be useful to have platforms on either the
Met. or the Chiltern lines at West Hampstead to allow a connection to
Thameslink and the NLL, but there isn't even the room to do that.


There may not be space to add bank platforms [1] outside the Met
tracks, but isn't there space to rebuild the station as a pair of
islands between the Met and Jubilee pairs?


No.


Presumably, because platforms half the width of the existing platform,
which is what there'd be space for, wouldn't be allowed?


Probably the best you could manage is something like this:


* *---------------------------------
* *---------------------------------
* *---------------------------------
* *--\ ######## /-------------------
* * * *\--------/ * /--------\
* *---------------/ ######## \------
* *---------------------------------


Ooh, i like that. You could add another island further to the left for the
Chiltern lines!



There is possibly more room available at West Hampstead than is
apparent at first sight.


That is good to know!

The GC lines used to have platforms, the
odd-looking doorway at the back of one of the shops is the access from
what was the station building so that side might not need a lot
alteration of premises in Broadhurst Gardens to put in a new platform
(but not necessarily so for the gap between the Up GC and the Down
Met).


Do you know the opening and closure dates for the GC platforms at West
Hampstead? I ask, because IIRC part of the GC's agreement with the
Met. was to have no stations south of Harrow.

On the other side, if nothing new has been built in the last few
years then there is room for expansion to the north without knocking
down too much. As for the station building it is IIRC one of a number
built to a similar design so not desperately in need of preservation
but past modernisation elsewhere seems to have been achieved without
too much alteration to the outward appearance anyway. If the road
bridge is still as inadequate WRT to weight-carrying as it was a few
years ago then this would also be an opportunity/excuse to replace it
and increase the available width of the railway formation below.


Question: If Met. trains were to commence stopping at new West
Hampstead platforms, should they cease to call at Finchley Road?

S.
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Old April 16th 08, 12:08 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 15:38:23 -0700 (PDT), 1506
wrote:

On Apr 15, 2:42*pm, Charles Ellson wrote:
On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 20:51:00 +0100, Tom Anderson


wrote:
On Tue, 15 Apr 2008, Clive D. W. Feather wrote:


In article , Tom
Anderson writes
Very. For example, it would be useful to have platforms on either the
Met. or the Chiltern lines at West Hampstead to allow a connection to
Thameslink and the NLL, but there isn't even the room to do that.


There may not be space to add bank platforms [1] outside the Met
tracks, but isn't there space to rebuild the station as a pair of
islands between the Met and Jubilee pairs?


No.


Presumably, because platforms half the width of the existing platform,
which is what there'd be space for, wouldn't be allowed?


Probably the best you could manage is something like this:


* *---------------------------------
* *---------------------------------
* *---------------------------------
* *--\ ######## /-------------------
* * * *\--------/ * /--------\
* *---------------/ ######## \------
* *---------------------------------


Ooh, i like that. You could add another island further to the left for the
Chiltern lines!



There is possibly more room available at West Hampstead than is
apparent at first sight.


That is good to know!

The GC lines used to have platforms, the
odd-looking doorway at the back of one of the shops is the access from
what was the station building so that side might not need a lot
alteration of premises in Broadhurst Gardens to put in a new platform
(but not necessarily so for the gap between the Up GC and the Down
Met).


Do you know the opening and closure dates for the GC platforms at West
Hampstead? I ask, because IIRC part of the GC's agreement with the
Met. was to have no stations south of Harrow.

Actually I'm now getting a nagging doubt that the platforms were GC
rather than being the original Met platforms before the GC line was
built. IIRC it was mentioned in a copy of the LURS "Underground"
journal in the last couple of years. AFAIR the building concerned is
the one in Broadhurst Gardens that used to be Radio Shack (the one
that stopped Tandy trading under that name in the UK).

On the other side, if nothing new has been built in the last few
years then there is room for expansion to the north without knocking
down too much. As for the station building it is IIRC one of a number
built to a similar design so not desperately in need of preservation
but past modernisation elsewhere seems to have been achieved without
too much alteration to the outward appearance anyway. If the road
bridge is still as inadequate WRT to weight-carrying as it was a few
years ago then this would also be an opportunity/excuse to replace it
and increase the available width of the railway formation below.


Question: If Met. trains were to commence stopping at new West
Hampstead platforms, should they cease to call at Finchley Road?

If the numbers of people entering/departing the Met. at Finchley Road
are comparatively small (rather than changing trains) then that would
seem to be a possibility. Other passenger flows to be considered would
be e.g. those changing to/from bus services.

One thing against West Hampstead becoming an interchange is the local
congestion in West End Lane (partly due to the bridges but also due to
a lack of bus bays on the road) that affects bus services which could
be expected to carry more passengers even if Finchley Road did not
cease to be the local interchange. This then leads on to a possible
need not just to deal with the bridge at the LU station but also the
bridge at the NLL station and at the same time widen them and
everything in between them.
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Old April 16th 08, 01:24 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit
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On Wed, 16 Apr 2008, Charles Ellson wrote:

On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 15:38:23 -0700 (PDT), 1506
wrote:

Question: If Met. trains were to commence stopping at new West
Hampstead platforms, should they cease to call at Finchley Road?


If the numbers of people entering/departing the Met. at Finchley Road
are comparatively small (rather than changing trains) then that would
seem to be a possibility. Other passenger flows to be considered would
be e.g. those changing to/from bus services.


I think this not insubstantial - there are six bus routes serving Finchley
Road, i believe. There are three at West Hampstead, and the overlap with
Finchley Road's routes is minimal, so unless many routes were rearranged,
the journeys possible via Finchley Road would be lost. Finchley Road also
has the hugemongous O2 leisure/shopping centre (and a big Homebase), and
is generally rather more of a high street than West Hampstead.

Anyway, those entry/exit numbers in full (in MPax/yr):

Finchley Road 8.836
West Hampstead 6.892

I don't think that includes Met/Jub interchange at FR; it certainly does
include both Met and Jub passengers coming in and out there, and it's
impossible to know how many there are of each. Still, i'm surprised FR is
only two million higher than WH.

tom

--
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evenly distributed. he was talking specifically about finsbury park. --
andy


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Old April 16th 08, 03:32 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit
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On 16 Apr, 14:24, Tom Anderson wrote:

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008, Charles Ellson wrote:

On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 15:38:23 -0700 (PDT), 1506
wrote:


Question: If Met. trains were to commence stopping at new West
Hampstead platforms, should they cease to call at Finchley Road?


If the numbers of people entering/departing the Met. at Finchley Road
are comparatively small (rather than changing trains) then that would
seem to be a possibility. Other passenger flows to be considered would
be e.g. those changing to/from bus services.


I think this not insubstantial - there are six bus routes serving Finchley
Road, i believe. There are three at West Hampstead, and the overlap with
Finchley Road's routes is minimal, so unless many routes were rearranged,
the journeys possible via Finchley Road would be lost. Finchley Road also
has the hugemongous O2 leisure/shopping centre (and a big Homebase), and
is generally rather more of a high street than West Hampstead.


I agree with all of that - in fact I'd say that Finchley Road is a
'proper' high street in the conventional understanding (albeit one
that also unfortunately serves as the main artery for traffic to/from
the M1) whilst West End Lane (outside West Hampstead station) is not.


Anyway, those entry/exit numbers in full (in MPax/yr):

Finchley Road 8.836
West Hampstead 6.892

I don't think that includes Met/Jub interchange at FR; it certainly does
include both Met and Jub passengers coming in and out there, and it's
impossible to know how many there are of each. Still, i'm surprised FR is
only two million higher than WH.


I'm a bit surprised by that - but bear in mind that whilst the numbers
at Finchley Road do not take into account Met/Jubbly interchange, at
West Hampstead the entry/exit figure include all of those who are
transferring from the Jubilee line to Thameslink and to the North
London Line (and vice versa), given that both of these are out-of-
station interchanges. And there's a good number of people who indeed
do just that (though I've no idea of an actual number or estimate).
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Old April 16th 08, 09:47 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit
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On Wed, 16 Apr 2008, Mizter T wrote:

On 16 Apr, 14:24, Tom Anderson wrote:

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008, Charles Ellson wrote:

On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 15:38:23 -0700 (PDT), 1506
wrote:


Question: If Met. trains were to commence stopping at new West
Hampstead platforms, should they cease to call at Finchley Road?


If the numbers of people entering/departing the Met. at Finchley Road
are comparatively small (rather than changing trains) then that would
seem to be a possibility. Other passenger flows to be considered would
be e.g. those changing to/from bus services.


Anyway, those entry/exit numbers in full (in MPax/yr):

Finchley Road 8.836
West Hampstead 6.892

I don't think that includes Met/Jub interchange at FR; it certainly
does include both Met and Jub passengers coming in and out there, and
it's impossible to know how many there are of each. Still, i'm
surprised FR is only two million higher than WH.


I'm a bit surprised by that - but bear in mind that whilst the numbers
at Finchley Road do not take into account Met/Jubbly interchange, at
West Hampstead the entry/exit figure include all of those who are
transferring from the Jubilee line to Thameslink and to the North London
Line (and vice versa), given that both of these are out-of- station
interchanges. And there's a good number of people who indeed do just
that (though I've no idea of an actual number or estimate).


Further numbers:

West Hampstead NLL 0.680
West Hampstead Thameslink 0.594

If every single passenger getting on or coming off the NR trains went via
the tube station, which i very strongly doubt, that's 1.274 MPax/yr of
interchange traffic, or 5.618 of non-interchange.

tom

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Old April 17th 08, 01:07 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit
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Tom Anderson wrote:

I think this not insubstantial - there are six bus routes serving
Finchley Road, i believe.


They also serve Swiss Cottage, which has disused Met platforms, and
entrances at northbound and southbound bus stops.

There are three at West Hampstead, and the
overlap with Finchley Road's routes is minimal, so unless many routes
were rearranged, the journeys possible via Finchley Road would be
lost. Finchley Road also has the hugemongous O2 leisure/shopping
centre (and a big Homebase),


The Homebase is nearer to West Hampstead than to Finchley Rd.

and is generally rather more of a high
street than West Hampstead.


I don't agree. Finchley Road is all poundstretchers and a strip club,
whereas West Hampstead is bars and restaurants. West Hampstead certainly has
more pedestrians than Finchley Rd at night, and possibly in the day too.


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On 17 Apr, 14:07, "John Rowland"
wrote:

Tom Anderson wrote:

I think this not insubstantial - there are six bus routes serving
Finchley Road, i believe.


They also serve Swiss Cottage, which has disused Met platforms, and
entrances at northbound and southbound bus stops.


So?


There are three at West Hampstead, and the
overlap with Finchley Road's routes is minimal, so unless many routes
were rearranged, the journeys possible via Finchley Road would be
lost. Finchley Road also has the hugemongous O2 leisure/shopping
centre (and a big Homebase),


The Homebase is nearer to West Hampstead than to Finchley Rd.


Only just. If you're arriving from points south then it would make
sense to alight at Finchley Road, from points east/north then West
Hampstead and the back entrance to Homebase is a good choice.


and is generally rather more of a high
street than West Hampstead.


I don't agree. Finchley Road is all poundstretchers and a strip club,
whereas West Hampstead is bars and restaurants. West Hampstead certainly has
more pedestrians than Finchley Rd at night, and possibly in the day too.


I disagree with you, I'm with Tom on this one. Finchley Road is more
of a shopping high street (it's got a Woolworths) and it does have
lots of pedestrians during the day - just because it's somewhat down
at heel doesn't disqualify it. And the o2 centre, with a large
Sainsbury's, is always pretty busy.

Yes, West End Road has more people who're out and about on it at
night, but that doesn't mean it's more of a high street.
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Old April 29th 08, 07:56 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit
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On Apr 17, 6:07*am, "John Rowland"
wrote:
Tom Anderson wrote:

I think this not insubstantial - there are six bus routes serving
Finchley Road, i believe.


They also serve Swiss Cottage, which has disused Met platforms, and
entrances at northbound and southbound bus stops.

*There are three at West Hampstead, and the

overlap with Finchley Road's routes is minimal, so unless many routes
were rearranged, the journeys possible via Finchley Road would be
lost. Finchley Road also has the hugemongous O2 leisure/shopping
centre (and a big Homebase),


The Homebase is nearer to West Hampstead than to Finchley Rd.

and is generally rather more of a high
street than West Hampstead.


I don't agree. Finchley Road is all poundstretchers and a strip club,
whereas West Hampstead is bars and restaurants. West Hampstead certainly has
more pedestrians than Finchley Rd at night, and possibly in the day too.


How surprising. I thought most clubs of that type had gone.
Moreover, when they existed they were confined to Soho. One lives and
learns.

Met. Jub. interchanges at West Hampstead and Swiss Cottage would be
interesting. Althought I doubt they would hep Met. timekeeping.
OTOH I always thought a link to South Hampstead would be useful.
Unfortunately it would be an expensive construction project.


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