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Heathrow (rail) Hub
On Jan 15, 6:30*am, wrote:
A Heathrow Hub station on the GWML near Hayes and Harlington was a core part of proposals published by Arup last year. They have just (last week) formed a company to develop the idea. IMHO: The best location for a Heathrow Hub would be next to the M25 north of Staines. Trains would run from Waterloo International, and from the South Coast, thru Heathrow and onwards to the English Midlands, North and Scotland. This of course precludes its use as a line only carrying high speed trains. |
Heathrow (rail) Hub
1506 gurgled happily, sounding much like
they were saying: IMHO: The best location for a Heathrow Hub would be next to the M25 north of Staines. It'd get a bit wet. |
Heathrow (rail) Hub
On Jan 15, 9:31*am, Adrian wrote:
1506 gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying: IMHO: The best location for a Heathrow Hub would be next to the M25 north of Staines. It'd get a bit wet. West of Heathrow? There was a GW branch to Staines. I believe it is now part of M25. We need to bring it back for a worthwhile north-south thru hub. The solutions a 1. take two lanes back from M25, or 2. rebuild it as an elevated route, o3 3. build it next to M25. |
Heathrow (rail) Hub
1506 gurgled happily, sounding much like
they were saying: IMHO: The best location for a Heathrow Hub would be next to the M25 north of Staines. It'd get a bit wet. West of Heathrow? Yes, in the middle of the reservoirs. It's about the only space to the west of Heathrow that's currently available, until you start to get south of Slough - and I rather suspect one of the better-known local residents might start to complain if you're planning on putting the rail terminal in the middle of her back garden. The solutions a 1. take two lanes back from M25, or That'll be some of the lanes they've just finished building, will it? 2. rebuild it as an elevated route, o3 3. build it next to M25. Can I take a guess that you've not been round that stretch of M25 in the last few years...? I'll give you a hint - if you're looking at the aerial photography on either maps.google.com or local.live.com, you might like to count the terminals at Heathrow, and wonder why the ground there looks like it might be in the early stages of a building project... |
Heathrow (rail) Hub
1506 wrote:
On Jan 15, 9:31 am, Adrian wrote: 1506 gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying: IMHO: The best location for a Heathrow Hub would be next to the M25 north of Staines. It'd get a bit wet. West of Heathrow? There was a GW branch to Staines. I believe it is now part of M25. We need to bring it back for a worthwhile north-south thru hub. The solutions a 1. take two lanes back from M25, or 2. rebuild it as an elevated route, o3 3. build it next to M25. It is ublikely that the London government will see anything that does not connect to the central London termini as important. -- Corporate society looks after everything. All it asks of anyone, all it has ever asked of anyone, is that they do not interfere with management decisions. -From “Rollerball” |
Heathrow (rail) Hub
In message
Martin Edwards wrote: 1506 wrote: On Jan 15, 9:31 am, Adrian wrote: 1506 gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying: IMHO: The best location for a Heathrow Hub would be next to the M25 north of Staines. It'd get a bit wet. West of Heathrow? There was a GW branch to Staines. I believe it is now part of M25. We need to bring it back for a worthwhile north-south thru hub. The solutions a 1. take two lanes back from M25, or 2. rebuild it as an elevated route, o3 3. build it next to M25. It is ublikely that the London government will see anything that does not connect to the central London termini as important. The London government has no say in the matter, it's up to the British government. -- Graeme Wall This address is not read, substitute trains for rail. Transport Miscellany at http://www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail/index.html |
Heathrow (rail) Hub
On 15 Jan, 17:18, 1506 wrote:
A Heathrow Hub station on the GWML near Hayes and Harlington was a core part of proposals published by Arup last year. They have just (last week) formed a company to develop the idea. IMHO: The best location for a Heathrow Hub would be next to the M25 north of Staines. *Trains would run from Waterloo International, and from the South Coast, thru Heathrow and onwards to the English Midlands, North and Scotland. Waterloo is a dead horse. With airtrack even the precious Surrey brigade will be able to have a one-stop international option. Assuming no new stations in London, and a requirement on a Heathrow GWML station, it would make sense to have a High speed line from Euston (Domestic), to Heathrow (about 2 miles of tunnelling. You then reach the GWML, where you can take over the fast lines (severely curtailing fast trains to Paddington from Reading, with some terminating at heathrow, or using the slow lines), or fit some new lines in. Or you could tunnel as far as Heathrow, but that'd be expensive. You'd extend some services from the CTRL to this line, bypassing StP and have a stopping pattern of StP-Ebbsfleet-Paris/Brussels Heathrow-Ashford-Lille-Paris/Brussels (And direct to amsterdam?) After the Heathrow hub (15 miles/10 minutes from Euston), you head directly to Birmingham, fitting through the chilterns with approppiate tunneling, or following the M40. A New parkway at Bicester, on the A34/M40 junction, would be built, enabling interchange with the Oxford-Bicester line (which could be upgraded to a 4tph park and ride), and optionally re-open the line to Bletchley and Bedford. This would be about 55 miles from Euston and take about 20 minutes to Heathrow, and another 10 to Euston You then head directly to Birmingham Airport, about 100 miles from Euston, well under one hour. Trains could then join the existing track into Birmingham, or you'd have to tunnel the main route through the city. Without the Birmingham tunnel, you have a bypass line, following the route of the M6 Toll, and go as far as Stoke. A New parkway near M6 Junction 15 perhaps, at about 135 miles. Up through Cheshire to Manchester Airport, at 170 miles, or 75 minutes from Euston, and then *somehow* get into Manchester. Unlike Birmingham it's doesn't seem as easy to bypass the center of Manchester. Manchester at 180 miles (1 hour to do 155 miles to Heathrow could be possible?), then to Leeds at 220 miles. This should still be under the two hour mark, even with a fair number of stops. From Leeds you then have a stop about Newcastle (300 miles), Edinburgh (400 miles), Glasgow (440 miles), before finishing at Glasgow Airport. Something like http://www.gmap-pedometer.com/?r=2495083 Possible end-end time points for a non stop train Glasgow Airport 0:00 Glasgow 0:10 Edinburgh 0:25 Newcastle 1:00 Leeds 1:30 Manchester 1:45 Manchester Airport 1:50 Stoke: 2:05 Birmingham Airport: 2:20 Oxford: 2:35 Heathrow: 2:50 Euston: 3:00 You could also have trains from Birmingham, Liverpool, and Middlesbrough feeding in, they aren't far from the line. You could run direct trains to 3 different London stations (Paddington, Euston, Stratford), so no platform issues. A non-stop train Birmingham-Heathrow at 30 minutes would be almost fast enough to make Birmingham a 7th terminal. At some point in the future, direct trains from Manchester and Birmingham could run through the tunnel. |
Heathrow (rail) Hub
Graeme Wall wrote:
In message Martin Edwards wrote: 1506 wrote: On Jan 15, 9:31 am, Adrian wrote: 1506 gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying: IMHO: The best location for a Heathrow Hub would be next to the M25 north of Staines. It'd get a bit wet. West of Heathrow? There was a GW branch to Staines. I believe it is now part of M25. We need to bring it back for a worthwhile north-south thru hub. The solutions a 1. take two lanes back from M25, or 2. rebuild it as an elevated route, o3 3. build it next to M25. It is ublikely that the London government will see anything that does not connect to the central London termini as important. The London government has no say in the matter, it's up to the British government. I was being deliberately tendentious. The alleged British government governs the country for the metropolis. -- Corporate society looks after everything. All it asks of anyone, all it has ever asked of anyone, is that they do not interfere with management decisions. -From “Rollerball” |
Heathrow (rail) Hub
In message
Martin Edwards wrote: Graeme Wall wrote: In message Martin Edwards wrote: 1506 wrote: On Jan 15, 9:31 am, Adrian wrote: 1506 gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying: IMHO: The best location for a Heathrow Hub would be next to the M25 north of Staines. It'd get a bit wet. West of Heathrow? There was a GW branch to Staines. I believe it is now part of M25. We need to bring it back for a worthwhile north-south thru hub. The solutions a 1. take two lanes back from M25, or 2. rebuild it as an elevated route, o3 3. build it next to M25. It is ublikely that the London government will see anything that does not connect to the central London termini as important. The London government has no say in the matter, it's up to the British government. I was being deliberately tendentious. The alleged British government governs the country for the metropolis. ITYM 'from' -- Graeme Wall This address is not read, substitute trains for rail. Transport Miscellany at http://www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail/index.html |
Heathrow (rail) Hub
Graeme Wall wrote:
In message Martin Edwards wrote: Graeme Wall wrote: In message Martin Edwards wrote: 1506 wrote: On Jan 15, 9:31 am, Adrian wrote: 1506 gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying: IMHO: The best location for a Heathrow Hub would be next to the M25 north of Staines. It'd get a bit wet. West of Heathrow? There was a GW branch to Staines. I believe it is now part of M25. We need to bring it back for a worthwhile north-south thru hub. The solutions a 1. take two lanes back from M25, or 2. rebuild it as an elevated route, o3 3. build it next to M25. It is ublikely that the London government will see anything that does not connect to the central London termini as important. The London government has no say in the matter, it's up to the British government. I was being deliberately tendentious. The alleged British government governs the country for the metropolis. ITYM 'from' Both from and for (the bebefit of). Don't argue with a Fullerian unless you've got plenty of time. -- Corporate society looks after everything. All it asks of anyone, all it has ever asked of anyone, is that they do not interfere with management decisions. -From “Rollerball” |
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