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#11
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On Thu, 9 Jul 2009 21:28:33 +0100, "Recliner"
wrote: "Jamie Thompson" wrote in message Shame they're missing the opportunity to add the sorely-missing flyover/under to link the DC lines with the St. Albans Abbey branch. Handing that line over to LO would do wonders for the service, which would then get more people actually using it. But it's well outside London. The hole/bridge involved would also be rather expensive, which ISTR takes us back to previous suggestions that a SA via WJ to somewhere on the Met would be better value for money as it would allow street-running to get from one side of WJ to the other. |
#12
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Arthur Figgis wrote:
Tony Polson wrote: "Recliner" wrote: "Jamie Thompson" wrote in message Shame they're missing the opportunity to add the sorely-missing flyover/under to link the DC lines with the St. Albans Abbey branch. Handing that line over to LO would do wonders for the service, which would then get more people actually using it. But it's well outside London. It's typical uk.railway: if a service is sparsely used, costing the taxpayer a lot of money per passenger-journey or passenger-km (take your pick!) the trainspotters' answer is always the same: Well, yes. Trainspotters want more trains. If they wanted buses or guided hovercraft, they wouldn't be trainspotters. Thank God the DfT isn't run by a trainspotter ... Er, hang on a minute, IT IS!!! ;-) |
#13
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"Peter Masson" wrote:
"Jamie Thompson" wrote in message ... Shame they're missing the opportunity to add the sorely-missing flyover/under to link the DC lines with the St. Albans Abbey branch. Handing that line over to LO would do wonders for the service, which would then get more people actually using it. It's single track with, AIUI, no crossing loop. So without double track, or at least a crossing loop, you can't increase the frequency (end-to-end journey time of 16 minutes, and a round trip generally every 45 minutes}. So let's spend endless £ millions on a new loop, and signalling, and why don't we double all the track at the same time, all to run even more expensive trains full of fresh air. |
#14
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On Fri, 10 Jul 2009 00:36:54 +0100, Charles Ellson
wrote: On Thu, 9 Jul 2009 21:28:33 +0100, "Recliner" wrote: "Jamie Thompson" wrote in message Shame they're missing the opportunity to add the sorely-missing flyover/under to link the DC lines with the St. Albans Abbey branch. Handing that line over to LO would do wonders for the service, which would then get more people actually using it. But it's well outside London. The hole/bridge involved would also be rather expensive, which ISTR takes us back to previous suggestions that a SA via WJ to somewhere on the Met would be better value for money as it would allow ^tramway damn! street-running to get from one side of WJ to the other. |
#15
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On 9 July, 22:27, Tony Polson wrote:
"Recliner" wrote: "Jamie Thompson" wrote in message Shame they're missing the opportunity to add the sorely-missing flyover/under to link the DC lines with the St. Albans Abbey branch. Handing that line over to LO would do wonders for the service, which would then get more people actually using it. But it's well outside London. It's typical uk.railway: *if a service is sparsely used, costing the taxpayer a lot of money per passenger-journey or passenger-km (take your pick!) the trainspotters' answer is always the same: "Let's throw good money after bad, build a hugely expensive flyover/flyunder, lease some more very expensive rolling stock and pay even more in track access charges and staff costs!" * I agree that linking the line to the DC is a complete waste of money. Linking into the WCML is more favourable, especially with the Watford Junction - Euston service planned (only one train morning peak at the moment) All this for a very small number of passengers. *The result? *A marginal increase in ridership (at best) and a further huge increase in the already very high subsidy. *As usual, a complete and utter waste of taxpayers' money. The line is certainly not empty during the peak, the 4 car trains are full upon arrival / departure at Watford Junction. If you need the resources to run the peak hour service, then the extra cost of running off-peak is minimal. The reason the line is very little used is that the vast majority of demand for rail services from St Albans is to/from London. *That demand is already being satisfied by Thameslink, and Thameslink capacity is getting a huge boost for the future because that is where people actually want to travel. There is actually a sizeable band of commuters into Watford on the line and you are falling into the classic trap of thinking of the line from only the end-to-end journeys. From the station usage stats at http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/xls/station_usage_0708.xls, St. Albans Abbey had 222,482 entries and exits with the other stations on the line between 32,000 and 98,000, not huge numbers, but certainly comparable is many stations with more frequent services in the commuter belt. The St Albans Abbey to Watford Junction branch could more usefully be replaced by a bus service which would better serve intermediate communities between St Albans and Watford Town Centre and also serve Watford town centre rather than Watford Junction, which is very poorly situated relative to the centre of Watford. *Yes, you can change trains to the DC lines at Watford Junction and go to Watford High Street instead, but that makes for a significant increase in average journey time. But there are already several bus routes serving areas on the line, and the timings are slow. For example the 321 bus takes about 30 mins Watford Junction - St. Alban's Abbey station and runs along a road between 5 and 10 minutes walk from the stations. How many buses are you going to run to take the peak load on the branch? Or are you comtemplating conversion to a busway which will not come cheap. I do agree that it is a waste of time changing to the DC lines , as it is only a ten minute walk / 2 min bus ride from Watford Junction to the main shopping areas. |
#16
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From eWatford Observer - 5:50pm Monday 13th July 2009
Road plans get County Hall backing By John Harrison » Councillors have approved plans that could see seven landowners forced to sell prime retail land in central Watford. Members on Hertfordshire County Council today voted in favour of a policy that could impose compulsory purchase orders on seven companies along St Albans Road. The proposal is part of plans to build a new link road between the M1 motorway and Watford Junction. The road will link Colonial Way with St Albans Road, as well as the busy station, and is intended to cross the main railway line to link east and west Watford. The land earmarked for construction is currently occupied by TK Maxx, Staples and Homebase superstores. At a meeting, held inside County Hall, in Hertford, this afternoon, councillors agree to first seek to acquire the land through negotiation. However, they voted to follow a police of compulsory purchase is necessary. The executive member for transport, County Councillor Stuart Pile, told fellow councillors the new road would ease congestion and a new station “hub” would provide additional parking. Hertfordshire County Council officers say the new road would offer a “more direct connection to the motorway system” and “alleviate existing traffic congestion”. One option under consideration would see the proposed road built as an extension to Colonial Way, passing over the railway track and through the Homebase car park. The second option, however, would see the new road built directly on top of a unit currently containing T K Maxx. ………………………………......... ………………………………......... John Burke WRUG |
#17
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In message
, at 11:56:03 on Mon, 13 Jul 2009, burkey remarked: Councillors have approved plans that could see seven landowners forced to sell prime retail land in central Watford. .... The second option, however, would see the new road built directly on top of a unit currently containing T K Maxx. In another thread we were discussing why new railways (and by analogy, new roads) cost so much here compared with other countries. The scheme elsewhere would likely be to offer T K Maxx a reasonable price for their unit, and if they refused, to build the road anyway. Once landowners get the message, they accept the first offer "gratefully". -- Roland Perry |
#18
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On 9 July, 21:28, "Recliner" wrote:
"Jamie Thompson" wrote in message Shame they're missing the opportunity to add the sorely-missing flyover/under to link the DC lines with the St. Albans Abbey branch. Handing that line over to LO would do wonders for the service, which would then get more people actually using it. But it's well outside London. Yup, but one of the main reasons the passing loop got deferred is because one of the franchise commitments that came in when LM took over was to harmonise their fleet or some such, meaning that the line can only be worked by a hugely excessive new 377, when a much smaller/ cheaper non-standard unit would suffice ( I believe a Silverlink Metro unit used to operate the line before the franchise change). Additionally, I'd imagine timings could be improved by using one or two of the new metro-class stock built for LO (rapid acceleration and lower top-speeds than the 377s - built to be able to handle the fast lines without stealing too much capacity from Lord Beardie's trains as well as run stopping services all the way from from Birmingham) - hence the reason I suggest LO as a suitable operator, as they have a suitable set of units already, so you wouldn't need specialist stock or additional stabling. Having a flyover/under would let the service act as an extension of the current Watford terminating one, giving the future option of not only LO services (switching to AC at WJ to utilise the existing infrastructure), but Chiltern services (or even Met/Bakerloo, if they decided to install DC rails). Not having to endure a decidedly dodgy connection at WJ might also attract more local usage from north Watford for places south. Anyone heading to central London would be using Thameslink or changing at WJ anyway. Going off piste a bit - The ideal situation for the line is to be able to run into St Albans station rather than the Abbey Station - that would build up contraflow usage, making the line more sustainable. Moving the Thameslink station south to London Road and building a proper interchange would make this easier and leave open the option of extending to Hatfield whilst maintaining a really good interchange. I suspect the golf club might object though ![]() Hatfield and get FCC to stop their semi-fast there, you'd eventually build up a significant chunk of interchanging commuter use as people would be able to get between the WCML, MML, and ECML a) without going near central London or b) out to Birmingham/Leicester or c) going out as far as the proposed EWR route, and especially d) very quickly as the distances aren't that great between them. I know a *large* number of people who have to drive because the train isn't viable as they'd need travel orbitally. Now I know I should probably ignore king troll, but could you please come up with something more original than 'trainspotter'? - It's really quite tiresome after all this time. I'm not btw, I couldn't care less about the trains themselves - I'm only interested in building up public transport infrastructure, and the train is far quicker over the distances in question than any bus would be. Decent local bus interchange at each end would also be very much on my agenda, but you need a worthwhile service for them to connect to first. Who in their right mind would get out of their car, suffering the inconvenience penalty of public transport on a bus caught in the same traffic that their car was? |
#19
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On Jul 13, 9:25*pm, Jamie Thompson wrote:
On 9 July, 21:28, "Recliner" wrote: "Jamie Thompson" wrote in message Shame they're missing the opportunity to add the sorely-missing flyover/under to link the DC lines with the St. Albans Abbey branch. Handing that line over to LO would do wonders for the service, which would then get more people actually using it. But it's well outside London. Yup, but one of the main reasons the passing loop got deferred is because one of the franchise commitments that came in when LM took over was to harmonise their fleet or some such, meaning that the line can only be worked by a hugely excessive new 377, when a much smaller/ cheaper non-standard unit would suffice ( I believe a Silverlink Metro unit used to operate the line before the franchise change). Additionally, I'd imagine timings could be improved by using one or two of the new metro-class stock built for LO (rapid acceleration and lower top-speeds than the 377s - built to be able to handle the fast lines without stealing too much capacity from Lord Beardie's trains as well as run stopping services all the way from from Birmingham) - hence the reason I suggest LO as a suitable operator, as they have a suitable set of units already, so you wouldn't need specialist stock or additional stabling. Provision of the passing loop at Bricket Wood would have had nothing to do with the costs of the units needed to run the service. The class 350s, used by LM, cost a similar amount to the new LO class 378 units, although it is hard to compare the costs to the train operating company, as the rental cost of units seems to be much harder to find. What would be cheaper is for LM to run the branch with the class 321s that they are retaining, rather than switching to any form of new unit. Having a flyover/under would let the service act as an extension of the current Watford terminating one, giving the future option of not only LO services (switching to AC at WJ to utilise the existing infrastructure), but Chiltern services (or even Met/Bakerloo, if they decided to install DC rails). Not having to endure a decidedly dodgy connection at WJ might also attract more local usage from north Watford for places south. Anyone heading to central London would be using Thameslink or changing at WJ anyway. But the cost of the flyover would probably pay for the passing loop at Bricket Wood and lease costs of an additional unit to run the service for 25 (or 50 or 100) years. Far better to make provision, when Watford Junction gets resignalled, to run services through to Euston from the branch, linking the planned peak Watford Junction, Bushey, Harrow, Euston 'bounce back' service to the branch shuttle. For several years in the 90s, the St. Albans trains connected with the Watford - Euston trains which left from platform 10 at the Junction, this was lost when the Southern service used the platform during the WCML rebuilt, but the Watford-Euston services are making a comeback, with one train already running at 08.03 from Watford (a bit of a tight connection from the 07.44 from St. Albans) and more planned by December. |
#20
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On Mon, 13 Jul 2009 13:25:23 -0700 (PDT), Jamie Thompson
wrote: Yup, but one of the main reasons the passing loop got deferred is because one of the franchise commitments that came in when LM took over was to harmonise their fleet or some such, meaning that the line can only be worked by a hugely excessive new 377, when a much smaller/ cheaper non-standard unit would suffice ( I believe a Silverlink Metro unit used to operate the line before the franchise change). It was a 313[1]. But IMO it makes no sense to add it to the incredibly slow DC lines. Better use of the loop, if built, would be to attach it to a self-contained AC Euston-Harrow-Bushey-Watford shuttle, with most stops south of Watford being removed from existing LM services. This would make better use of units, as there are quite a few LM trains that are quite quiet north of Watford but full and standing south of either there or Harrow. This kind of thing has already started with some peak services, and is likely to expand. Ideal stock for it is to use LM's retained 321s. If the branch platforms are too short for 8 cars (as I think they are), one set could be left at Watford while the other one does the branch - if it can work at Northampton it can work there. [1] These days it's a 321, which isn't exactly a super-high-tech unit, though is newer and more pleasant than a nasty unrefurbed graffitied Silverlink 313. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
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