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#11
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In message , Neil Williams
writes On Sun, 1 Feb 2009 20:35:25 +0000, Ian Jelf wrote: I agree with you (although unstaffed stations are unpopular with the public at large, I can tell you, from a safety/security point of view). *That* point was being made on Tyneside in 1980! Yet in Germany it is very common - even underground stations are usually completely unstaffed. I realise that you are a big fan of the German way of doing things and as a former resident of the BRD.......so am I. However, there is a difference between most German systems and London. Far, *far* more outsiders, unfamilliar with the system use London's transport than that in most German cities. You might know that for years I used to manage tour on the continent and was quite used to letting people loose for a free day in a town. It was *very* rare for people to want to make any use of public transport, even when I'd explained, in simple terms, how to use it. The very concept of Entwerter, Grosszone, Merhfahrkarten or even the simplest Day Ticket and so on was so confusing to people that they just avoided it. Most headed for a taxi, or complained to me that the coach wasn't taking them somewhere. A few just boarded trams without tickets and then ridiculed me in the evening "as they didn't need to buy tickets anyway they were never checked"! ;-) Only once, as far as I can recall, did anyone get caught and fined. That, actually was in Prague. Anyway, I'm just making the point that where a lot of people unfamilliar are travelling, you need to be able to find assistance. I appreciate that this is different from having someone stationed in a "Ticket Office" as such, though. -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
#12
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On 2 Feb, 08:20, Ian Jelf wrote:
[1] * It amazed me, though it shouldn't, at how many people were buying tickets which they could easily have bought from machines. That's why one person roving the station explaining how to use the machines would be a lot more useful than one person serving a massive queue of people who could use the machine in the ticket office. Neil |
#13
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On 2 Feb, 08:26, Ian Jelf wrote:
Anyway, I'm just making the point that where a lot of people unfamilliar are travelling, you need to be able to find assistance. * I appreciate that this is different from having someone stationed in a "Ticket Office" as such, though. Agreed, certainly in the UK. Neil |
#14
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In message
, Neil Williams writes On 2 Feb, 08:20, Ian Jelf wrote: [1] * It amazed me, though it shouldn't, at how many people were buying tickets which they could easily have bought from machines. That's why one person roving the station explaining how to use the machines would be a lot more useful than one person serving a massive queue of people who could use the machine in the ticket office. And it is - from my unscientific observation - a very productive thing to do. My comments about a location such as Baker Street, general enquiry offices and the ability to *find* staff that are around still stand, though. -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
#15
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#16
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In article dd519a9e-d07c-4fbf-8af4-
, says... On 2 Feb, 08:20, Ian Jelf wrote: [1] * It amazed me, though it shouldn't, at how many people were buying tickets which they could easily have bought from machines. That's why one person roving the station explaining how to use the machines would be a lot more useful than one person serving a massive queue of people who could use the machine in the ticket office. Neil Thanks to a 'rover' at Marylebone I found out that their machines could sell tickets at Senior Railcard rate which has proved very useful for my Birmingham visits. Don't know whether other London terminal machines do this. |
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