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#12
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On Mon, 13 Oct 2003 01:17 +0100 (BST), (Colin
Rosenstiel) wrote: As someone brought up in Putney I wonder why on earth anyone would want to interchange between Putney and East Putney I've done it loads of times - the train from my local station calls at Putney and I want to change to the district line. Why would that be so unusual? |
#13
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In article , (K)
wrote: On Mon, 13 Oct 2003 01:17 +0100 (BST), (Colin Rosenstiel) wrote: As someone brought up in Putney I wonder why on earth anyone would want to interchange between Putney and East Putney I've done it loads of times - the train from my local station calls at Putney and I want to change to the district line. Why would that be so unusual? To go between which major transport nodes, though? Two stations from Putney is Clapham Junction, a short ride from Wimbledon, the end of the District Line. Similarly, Richmond is also on the District line. Sounds to me like a link between the Putney stations would serve a very limited number of links. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#14
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On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 23:03 +0100 (BST), (Colin
Rosenstiel) wrote: I've done it loads of times - the train from my local station calls at Putney and I want to change to the district line. Why would that be so unusual? To go between which major transport nodes, though? To go from my house to somewhere on the District line. |
#15
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In article , (K)
wrote: On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 23:03 +0100 (BST), (Colin Rosenstiel) wrote: I've done it loads of times - the train from my local station calls at Putney and I want to change to the district line. Why would that be so unusual? To go between which major transport nodes, though? To go from my house to somewhere on the District line. Obviously a major traffic route then. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#16
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#17
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K wrote:
On Thu, 23 Oct 2003 01:33 +0100 (BST), (Colin Rosenstiel) wrote: To go from my house to somewhere on the District line. Obviously a major traffic route then. Of course :-) There are other people who use my station (and others on the line, of course. I'm with K on this one. I think interchanges are needed at almost all the places in London where lines cross each other. The sort of journeys they'd help are the ones that are short, but slow by public transport. The most logical solution is to cycle, but in practice most people drive. Rightly or wrongly, many people would consider rail for these journeys but wouldn't consider bus. And it's far cheaper to build interchanges than lines. Colin McKenzie |
#18
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On Sat, 25 Oct 2003 10:27:32 +0100, Colin McKenzie wrote:
I'm with K on this one. I think interchanges are needed at almost all the places in London where lines cross each other. The sort of journeys Indeed. H&C/Central/the line from Kensington should all have an interchange just north of shepherds bush H&C |
#19
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Paul Weaver wrote:
On Sat, 25 Oct 2003 10:27:32 +0100, Colin McKenzie wrote: I'm with K on this one. I think interchanges are needed at almost all the places in London where lines cross each other. The sort of journeys Indeed. H&C/Central/the line from Kensington should all have an interchange just north of shepherds bush H&C Taking that particular point of view one stage further, most of the infrastructure is already in place for the District Line to start at the already segregated platforms at Clapham Junction and go over the river, past Olympia and through a somehow resurrected link back to the old Outer Circle line and direct quite a lot of passenger traffic on towards Paddington, as I would imagine that quite a lot of passengers go into the centre only to go back out on a different route. There must also be a fairly high number of travellers who have to change anyway at Clapham Junction, so interchanging onto LU there would probably reduce the volume heading for Victoria or Waterloo. (Basic theory is to disperse as many as possible away fom the centre rather than bringing them in only for them to go out again.) Still requires a bit of fine-tuning but it could be made to work. On the original theme of cable-cars, a light-hearted approach with a bit more chance of success (Travelator - yes / swinging vomit-inducers - no), why not buy up a supply of human cannons (ex circus/ Government - you choose) and place the person in, point in the right(-ish) direction and wait for the big bang. Payment in advance only and it's my patent! As long as it's not the wrong kind of gunpowder it would be probably the fastest public transport that the capital has ever seen! Have a nice day, Paul |
#20
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Paul wrote:
Paul Weaver wrote: On Sat, 25 Oct 2003 10:27:32 +0100, Colin McKenzie wrote: I'm with K on this one. I think interchanges are needed at almost all the places in London where lines cross each other. The sort of journeys Indeed. H&C/Central/the line from Kensington Presumably you mean the West London Line (WLL) from Kensington Olympia should all have an interchange just north of shepherds bush H&C Meaning White City? There is a plan for a new White City H&C station to serve the new retail centre, but that's a long way from the WLL, which will have a station near to Shepherd's Bush Central Line. Taking that particular point of view one stage further, most of the infrastructure is already in place for the District Line to start at the already segregated platforms at Clapham Junction and go over the river, past Olympia and through a somehow resurrected link back to the old Outer Circle line That would require reinstating the link from the WLL to Latimer Road on the H&C, which was abandoned after being bombed in WW2. The West Cross Route (ex-M41) and its junction to serve the White City retail centre is now in the way. and direct quite a lot of passenger traffic on towards Paddington, as I would imagine that quite a lot of passengers go into the centre only to go back out on a different route. There must also be a fairly high number of travellers who have to change anyway at Clapham Junction, so interchanging onto LU there would probably reduce the volume heading for Victoria or Waterloo. (Basic theory is to disperse as many as possible away fom the centre rather than bringing them in only for them to go out again.) Still requires a bit of fine-tuning but it could be made to work. The other problem is that the WLL is an important freight route across London, and cannot sustain a very frequent passenger service without loss of freight paths. Also, where do your trains terminate? Paddington would be possible eventually (post-HEx), I suppose. I doubt that there is the terminal or line capacity further east. I'm afraid this is an attractive and apparently simple scheme ("most of the infrastructure is already in place") which is actually fraught with difficulties. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
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