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Crossrail NOT making connections
"Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 09:40:48 on Wed, 3 Dec 2008, Andrew Heenan remarked: Crossrail WILL reach Reading, offering myriad onward opportunities (look at a rail map - where else should it go?); Crossrail WILL reach Ebbsfleet (it would be crazy not to, until HS1 is extended to Heathrow!); Crossrail will not stop at Shenfield, looking slightly confused, perhaps a little embarassed. But don't expect such obvious common sense until just after it opens - the 'current package' is all about getting the bloody thing built without too many people whining "We Can't Afford it - Cancel It". Once it's built, people with brains will start to say Shenfield? Abbey Wood? Other Stations Halfway To A Logical Junction? Get Real! And where is the obvious place "past Shenfield"? Colchester is the nearest that makes sense. Southend Victoria? It is as close to Central London as Reading is. Peter Smyth |
Crossrail NOT making connections
On Wed, 3 Dec 2008 20:56:27 -0000, "John Rowland"
wrote: Paul Corfield wrote: On Wed, 3 Dec 2008 18:15:53 +0000, Tom Anderson wrote: Outside Manhattan, the subway is substantially, perhaps even mostly, elevated. It includes sections running on top of roads, and the marvellous and entirely aerial Broadway Junction: http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?q=40.677957%2C-73.902283 http://www.hopetunnel.org/subway/nyct/010219/117.jpg http://flickr.com/photos/hielkeoud/2613825920/ http://www.flickr.com/photos/coverwi...on/3014806927/ http://flickr.com/photos/jpchan/2368185126/ The Street View mode on the google map is a pretty good way to take a look round the structure. Curse you Mr Anderson - that Google Street View is just too good. That looks the most amazing structure and I'm sure there are other amazing subway junctions to sit and peruse. I fear I may go square eyed while undertaking more research. Now if only the Americans would stop treating visitors like potential terrorists I'd be persuaded to go back to NYC to take a closer look. They seem to have a lot of "bridges" which are practically a couple of rails in the air. The only time I've ever seen the underside of a train in England was in the subway (i.e. pedestrian underpass) under the Volks Railway. Have you seen the Bridge near the end of Dirty Harry, on the road up to San Quentin? That carries very heavy Rail. |
Crossrail NOT making connections
On 3 Dec, 20:22, MIG wrote:
Shenfield is a junction* and also a place where people from Harold Wood etc can change to longer-distance services. * Reading will have four local trains an hour arriving from the east (two semi-fast ex-Paddington, two starting at Slough), so from a passenger's point of view, those kinds of journeys are well covered. The only thing missing is being able to change at Reading onto a direct train to east of Paddington. Given the time differential and the fact most services at Reading are going to Paddington anyway, I don't think that's a huge loss. Maybe that's what will happen. *Or maybe the stations between Maidenhead and Reading will lose their service. Station, singular. There's no population to speak of in between. U |
Crossrail NOT making connections
In message
MIG wrote: On Dec 3, 5:53*pm, Graeme Wall wrote: In message * * * * * 1506 wrote: [snip] IIRC, earlier in the thread I conceded that converting the Hammersmith Branch to a Crossrail extension is perhaps not a good idea. On the positive side this means that the branch will remain something of a preserved example of early urban transit. *Between Westbourne park and Goldhawk Road, the route is in essence an "Elevated". *There are not too many examples of "Els" left anywhere in the world. *Only Chicago has signifficant sections remaining. You've not looked at south London lately then... Isn't there a sort of circular elevated route in Paris? It's been a long time ... Line 2 has an elevated section which crosses the throat of Gare du Nord. And, of course, there's the District/Piccadilly line between Ealing and Hammersmith -- Graeme Wall This address is not read, substitute trains for rail. Transport Miscellany at http://www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail/index.html |
Crossrail NOT making connections
On Wed, 3 Dec 2008 12:29:15 -0800 (PST), MIG
wrote: Isn't there a sort of circular elevated route in Paris? It's been a long time ... Lines 2 and 6 form a circle although you have to change between lines at Nation and Charles de Gaulle Etoile in order to do the full circle. There's also Line 5 that shoots through the roof of Gare d'Austerlitz and then across the Seine. -- Paul C |
Crossrail NOT making connections
"Graeme Wall" wrote And, of course, there's the District/Piccadilly line between Ealing and Hammersmith One that hasn't been mentioned is the DLR between Tower Gateway and Crossharbour - partly on the 1840 brick viaduct of the Blackwall Railway and partly on concrete viaducts 150 years newer. In its time it has seen rope, steam, and electric traction, and part of it is, at least more or less, on the alignment of a section of the Millwall Railway which was once horse-worked. Peter |
Crossrail NOT making connections
MIG wrote:
The problem to my disordered mind is that Crossrail will have to be duplicated by local diesel trains all the way to Maidenhead in order to cover the bit from Maidenhead to Reading (which is a huge hub). It would probably be more useful, and even out capacity usage, to run Waterloo to Reading via LHR and Slough, then all stations Maidenhead to Reading. Then all trains starting at Paddington could be non-stop to Slough. The reason is presumably to save on some miles of electrification, but it's not a logical place to terminate the services while making a sensible use of paths. Might be more sensible to electrify to at least Oxford, otherwise there will still need to be an awful lot of diesel trains. Colin McKenzie -- No-one has ever proved that cycle helmets make cycling any safer at the population level, and anyway cycling is about as safe per mile as walking. Make an informed choice - visit www.cyclehelmets.org. |
Crossrail NOT making connections
Christopher A. Lee wrote:
If you want another modern example, how about BART? Outside the city centres it is elevated apart from sections in the central median of freeways. And Manila has one, on concrete viaduct right through the centre, ISTR. Colin McKenzie -- No-one has ever proved that cycle helmets make cycling any safer at the population level, and anyway cycling is about as safe per mile as walking. Make an informed choice - visit www.cyclehelmets.org. |
Crossrail NOT making connections
On Tue, 2 Dec 2008, Peter Masson wrote:
"Tom Anderson" wrote No, Crossrail should stop at Slough, and concentrate on being an affordable and effective suburban railway, and not a pie-in-the-sky all things to all people scheme. Crossrail will go to Maidenhead, Heathrow, Shenfield, and Abbey Wood. Any strong pressure to change any of these destinations is more likely to mean that Crossrail doesn't happen at all than that changes will be made. Yes. I'm not quite mad enough to argue for changes at this stage - rather, i point out that the scheme is not optimal. It shouldn't really be going to the GWML at all - the Waterloo lines would be a much better destination, but for obscure reasons, they were dropped from consideration a very long time ago. Subsequent add-ons are possible - Reading is the obvious one, so that diesel trains out of Paddington can be eliminated from the Relief Lines, while the Main Lines can become a totally 125 mph railway. By which everyone at Reading travels to London. Nobody at Reading is going to get on a Crossrail stopper to London when they could get a fast train. The only market is for local commuting into Reading, and that market isn't big enough to justify the expense. Gravesend is a long shot, but may be needed for (and financed by) development in the Thames Gateway. Ditto. Another destination west of Paddington would be nice, but no-one has come up with any convincing case. Hampton Court! The SWML is crying out for Crossrail - a single-seat ride along it into the City would relieve Waterloo, the W&C, and the southern Circle. The trouble is that you'd need to bore quite a bit more tunnel in central London - probably on a route something like the 1938 Northern line plan: http://www.flickr.com/photos/twic/1591807010/sizes/o/ Perhaps diving into tunnel at Battersea, and running Victoria, perhaps Green Park and then Oxford Street. Not at all cheap. Richmond - Kingston did not attract universal support. Amersham - Aylesbury would be nice, so that the Met line can concentrate on Uxbridge and Watford, while the fast lines beyond Harrow-on-the-Hill would become single use by Crossrail, and electrified at 25 kV OHLE. But traffic density is insufficient to generate a business case. More trains can't be pushed down the GWML - there's not teh demand, and capacity is needed for freight west of Acton Yard. So I think we're stuck with the Westbourne Park reversing sidings. Realistically, yes. tom -- We don't contact anybody or seek anybody's permission for what we do. Even if it's impersonating postal employees. -- Birdstuff |
Crossrail NOT making connections
On Wed, 3 Dec 2008, 1506 wrote:
On Dec 3, 10:02*am, Mr Thant wrote: On 3 Dec, 17:46, 1506 wrote: I didn't think there were too many left in NYC. *I can only recall one short section in Manhattan. *Do the other Boroughs have many Els left? Brooklyn is chockablock with them, and I think most of the Subway network in Queen's is elevated. (also, I'd question whether you can build a true El with brick viaducts, given the lack of space underneath them) Point taken, although I wonder what options were available in the 1860s? Piles of compacted commoners. tom -- There's spaceships, snappy dialogue, death cultists, likeable characters, underwater combat, assassinations of public figures for their own good, zombies, Batman references, robots, memes, talking cats, and stars used as flamethrowers. -- Alx, on 'Implied Spaces' |
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