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#11
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Graculus wrote:
"TheOneKEA" wrote in message ... Now that Eurostar has been running the full length of HS1 and has been serving St. Pancras for a little over five months, who was right? Did all of the people living in areas reachable from, via or in SW London who used to go via Waterloo give up and go to Gatwick? Did swarms of people that once stuffed themselves into the Underground and Thameslink to get to Waterloo from Euston, KxSTP and Liverpool St now just walk up to the St. Pancras turnstiles? All the bally-hoo about the half hour chopped off the London-Paris time is somewhat moot for those of us who'd travel into Waterloo. That half hour saved is spent making the unpleasant trip from Waterloo to St Pancras. I personally thought they should have kept a Eurostar Waterloo service, even if only a limited service. But for people going that way it would certainly save the trek across London. Plus the infrastructure was already there! |
#12
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In message , at 04:56:44 on Sun,
11 May 2008, Stephen O'Connell remarked: All the bally-hoo about the half hour chopped off the London-Paris time is somewhat moot for those of us who'd travel into Waterloo. That half hour saved is spent making the unpleasant trip from Waterloo to St Pancras. I personally thought they should have kept a Eurostar Waterloo service, even if only a limited service. But for people going that way it would certainly save the trek across London. Plus the infrastructure was already there! Apparently much of the [station] infrastructure was moved to Ebbsfleet. And the station was in a poor state requiring refurbishment. It's just not economic to keep all that stuff, and the staff to operate it, hanging around for a few trains a day. -- Roland Perry |
#13
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![]() "Stephen O'Connell" wrote in message ... Graculus wrote: "TheOneKEA" wrote in message ... Now that Eurostar has been running the full length of HS1 and has been serving St. Pancras for a little over five months, who was right? Did all of the people living in areas reachable from, via or in SW London who used to go via Waterloo give up and go to Gatwick? Did swarms of people that once stuffed themselves into the Underground and Thameslink to get to Waterloo from Euston, KxSTP and Liverpool St now just walk up to the St. Pancras turnstiles? All the bally-hoo about the half hour chopped off the London-Paris time is somewhat moot for those of us who'd travel into Waterloo. That half hour saved is spent making the unpleasant trip from Waterloo to St Pancras. I personally thought they should have kept a Eurostar Waterloo service, even if only a limited service. But for people going that way it would certainly save the trek across London. Plus the infrastructure was already there! I had asked about this earlier, and apparently they had considered maintaining some services to northern France or to Brussels. Alas, however, this did not work out. |
#14
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In article , Graculus
writes All the bally-hoo about the half hour chopped off the London-Paris time is somewhat moot for those of us who'd travel into Waterloo. That half hour saved is spent making the unpleasant trip from Waterloo to St Pancras. While for the rest of us, who travelled into King's Cross, we not only gain half an hour on the main journey, but another half hour not making the unpleasant trip to the unpleasant Waterloo. -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
#15
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 04:56:44 on Sun, 11 May 2008, Stephen O'Connell remarked: All the bally-hoo about the half hour chopped off the London-Paris time is somewhat moot for those of us who'd travel into Waterloo. That half hour saved is spent making the unpleasant trip from Waterloo to St Pancras. I personally thought they should have kept a Eurostar Waterloo service, even if only a limited service. But for people going that way it would certainly save the trek across London. Plus the infrastructure was already there! Apparently much of the [station] infrastructure was moved to Ebbsfleet. And the station was in a poor state requiring refurbishment. It's just not economic to keep all that stuff, and the staff to operate it, hanging around for a few trains a day. They do it at Ashford Int don't they?! |
#16
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In message , at 16:52:42 on Sun,
11 May 2008, Stephen O'Connell remarked: It's just not economic to keep all that stuff, and the staff to operate it, hanging around for a few trains a day. They do it at Ashford Int don't they?! On a much smaller scale. I don't recall them ever having more than a couple of ticket barriers and one x-ray machine in use, for example. -- Roland Perry |
#17
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On 10 May, 17:36, Roland Perry wrote:
It also shows that the improvements are not sufficient. For the last ten years the queues at the ticket offices have been unacceptably long, and after the rebuilding, they still are. Why didn't they simply build more ticket office positions? If the bottleneck is station capacity, which it is, then opening more ticket office positions would be an expensive way of making things worse. -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
#18
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On 10 May, 17:36, Roland Perry wrote:
It also shows that the improvements are not sufficient. For the last ten years the queues at the ticket offices have been unacceptably long, and after the rebuilding, they still are. Why didn't they simply build more ticket office positions? I seem to recall you saying in a previous post that the lines to the TVMs are very long. I would imgaine that this situation is exacerbated by people who are not sure how to use them. |
#19
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In message
, at 02:23:56 on Mon, 12 May 2008, John B remarked: It also shows that the improvements are not sufficient. For the last ten years the queues at the ticket offices have been unacceptably long, and after the rebuilding, they still are. Why didn't they simply build more ticket office positions? If the bottleneck is station capacity, which it is, then opening more ticket office positions would be an expensive way of making things worse. Only if the queues mean that people decide not to travel [by tube]. Otherwise the rate of people joining and leaving the queue are roughly the same, and has no effect on the instantaneous throughput. -- Roland Perry |
#20
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