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#11
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![]() Sir Benjamin Nunn wrote: "Tom Anderson" wrote in message rth.li... On Sat, 5 Sep 2009, Paul Corfield wrote: On Sat, 5 Sep 2009 17:48:38 +0100, "Sir Benjamin Nunn" wrote: Anybody with half a brain could come up with new line ideas just by looking at a map. Example: Albert Line: Arnos Grove Alexandra Palace Hornsey Central Archway Gospel Oak Belsize Park St. Johns Wood Edgware Road Lancaster Gate Royal Albert Hall South Kensington Albert Bridge Battersea Clapham Junction Wandsworth Common Tooting Broadway Tooting Junction Mitcham Ooh, we haven't had a Scheme on UTL in yonks. Duly mapped: http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UT...820a7d99caba8f Let me know if it doesn't match your vision. Heh. I'd actually already done one on google maps: http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?hl=en...d8fb6aa53&z=11 Your version is slightly more direct. An interesting alignment - not one I would have dreamed up. No. It mostly seems to be an exercise in getting people from the suburbs to places they don't want to go. The only stations you could describe as being central are Edgware Road, Lancaster Gate and Royal Albert Hall - none of which are significant commuter destinations. The Edgware Road stop could serve Paddington Basin, of course. The RAH and South Ken stops would be great for Albertopolis, including all the museums, plus Imperial College, the RCA and various other educational institutions, and the RAH itself, but i'm highly skeptical that there are enough jobs round there to fill a tube line. The Battersea stop is too far west to serve the developments round there. The line could serve as a feeder from the suburbs to other tube lines that it crosses, but all the suburban stations area already on lines which do that, or are useful lines in their own right. So, it serves Paddington Basin, a major cultural complex, and gives access to other lines. That's not useless, but it can't justify a tube line. However it's lovely to stick new tube lines in to the network but all that happens if you push overall ridership up and up and up thereby exacerbating your existing pinch points. Ah, but this wouldn't be a problem with Sir Benjamin's line, seeing as how no bugger would use it. I'd use it! Getting from Tooting/Mitcham to Central London takes ages. Getting to North London (or indeed West or East London) is something you don't even want to think about. Clapham Junction doesn't have an LU service. Tramlink only has one LU interchange, at the far end. The walk from South Ken to the Albert Hall through the foot tunnel is unpleasant. All the radial limbs of the underground in North London lack lateral routes providing interchanges. The spacing of the stations would make this line a quick, direct Victoria-style experience, as opposed to the sluggishness of the Northern Line. Interesting points. But what colour should this line be? Here's another one I came up with that takes over bits and pieces of existing infrastructure. (see if you can spot which bits!) Mill Hill East Finchley Central Muswell Hill Hornsey Central Crouch Hill Finsbury Park Drayton Park Highbury & Islington Essex Road Old Street Moorgate Bank Blackfriars Waterloo Vauxhall Battersea Park Clapham Junction Wandsworth Town East Putney Roehampton And again, what colour? (After all, TfL must be running out of clearly distinct colours for the map. That's got to limit the number of possible new lines.) |
#12
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In uk.transport.london message f4e51a1c-3d0c-4c3d-8c66-a96f232af378@w10
g2000yqf.googlegroups.com, Sun, 6 Sep 2009 02:02:18, solar penguin posted: ... Crouch Hill Finsbury Park Drayton Park Highbury & Islington Essex Road Old Street Moorgate Bank ... And again, what colour? (After all, TfL must be running out of clearly distinct colours for the map. That's got to limit the number of possible new lines.) Route it through Caledonian Road, and colour it tartan. -- (c) John Stockton, nr London, UK. Turnpike v6.05 MIME. Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQqish topics, acronyms & links; Astro stuff via astron-1.htm, gravity0.htm ; quotings.htm, pascal.htm, etc. No Encoding. Quotes before replies. Snip well. Write clearly. Don't Mail News. |
#13
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In message , Paul Corfield
writes I think we need some lessons from Spaniards who seem to be able to build new tram, Metro, rail and High Speed lines in about 3 years from start to finish - even where they had to be driven through existing city centres and link to existing lines. Progress in Madrid and Barcelona seems very impressive - one day I'll get to see for myself. Hmmmm Having just spent 4 days in Madrid, the place is like a building site - and a very unpleasant one at that. Arrival at Barcelona this afternoon just reinforces my assertion that they are currently rebuilding Spain. -- Steve Fitzgerald has now left the building. You will find him in London's Docklands, E16, UK (please use the reply to address for email) |
#14
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On Wed, 9 Sep 2009 19:28:26 +0100, Steve Fitzgerald ]
wrote: In message , Paul Corfield writes I think we need some lessons from Spaniards who seem to be able to build new tram, Metro, rail and High Speed lines in about 3 years from start to finish - even where they had to be driven through existing city centres and link to existing lines. Progress in Madrid and Barcelona seems very impressive - one day I'll get to see for myself. Hmmmm Having just spent 4 days in Madrid, the place is like a building site - and a very unpleasant one at that. Arrival at Barcelona this afternoon just reinforces my assertion that they are currently rebuilding Spain. It's all to do with the recession. The bottom has dropped out of the domestic housing market (especially that catering mainly for foreigners) and so the building industry has a surfeit of workers of all skill levels desperate for jobs at any salary; hence the civic projects can be carried out more cheaply, and are being pushed ahead whilst the situation lasts. There are some Spanish practices the rest of Europe could learn from (but then I'm biased, as Spain is my adopted country). -- Bill Hayles http://billnot.com |
#15
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On Sep 10, 7:40*pm, Paul Corfield wrote:
On Thu, 10 Sep 2009 13:53:05 +0200, Bill Hayles wrote: On Wed, 9 Sep 2009 19:28:26 +0100, Steve Fitzgerald ] wrote: Arrival at Barcelona this afternoon just reinforces my assertion that they are currently rebuilding Spain. It's all to do with the recession. The bottom has dropped out of the domestic housing market (especially that catering mainly for foreigners) and so the building industry has a surfeit of workers of all skill levels desperate for jobs at any salary; hence the civic projects can be carried out more cheaply, and are being pushed ahead whilst the situation lasts. There are some Spanish practices the rest of Europe could learn from (but then I'm biased, as Spain is my adopted country). Care to elaborate as their ability to construct metro, tram and train lines in next to no time (relatively speaking) is something I would dearly love to understand? *There must be something in the planning, regulatory or construction methodologies that allows them to make such quick progress. Not an expert, but: empty country, cheap land, cheap labour? -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
#16
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I've now added much material to the web site. Please have a look:
On 4-Sep-2009, wrote: www.bromptonroad.org.uk |
#18
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Richard J. wrote:
wrote on 31 October 2009 16:41:34 ... I've now added much material to the web site. Please have a look: On 4-Sep-2009, wrote: www.bromptonroad.org.uk Some interesting historical stuff, but I can't see anything yet about the costs/benefits of reopening. Without that, I'm afraid the answer is "no". What's the deal with plans to re-open York Road? |
#19
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On Nov 1, 5:29*pm, "
wrote: What's the deal with plans to re-open York Road? The consensus that I've seen in threads on u.t.l. and elsewhere is that despite the opportunities for interchange with the NLL, the York Road area is still too industrial and too lightly occupied to justify the reconstruction of the station. One pet project of mine is to expand the station to allow for terminating services, with two new station tunnels on the outside for through trains and the existing station tunnels used for terminating services, with the existing crossover tunnel expanded to house a scissors crossover and the old running lines converted into sidings. It would be fantastically expensive, but it would solve once and for all the chronic reliability and reversing problems experienced on the Piccadilly Line west of King's Cross and also allow a more realistic off-peak service to operate on the Picc north of King's Cross. Failing that, reopening the station as-is would still be expensive, but less so because the lift shafts descend all the way to platform level, allowing for step-free access using the existing shafts. |
#20
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On 2 Nov, 03:10, TheOneKEA wrote:
The consensus that I've seen in threads on u.t.l. and elsewhere is that despite the opportunities for interchange with the NLL, the York Road area is still too industrial and too lightly occupied to justify the reconstruction of the station. There was a very thorough feasibility study and business case produced in 2005: http://www.kingscrossenvironment.com...road-tube.html It came to the conclusion that it would be cheap-ish (£40m all in) and produce a large benefit for users of York Road but an almost equally large disbenefit for passengers passing through, for a negligibly small benefit overall. They also did some passenger behaviour modelling and came to the conclusion that congestion at KXSP for actually increase slightly, due to half the York Road passengers interchanging there (which apparently produces more congestion than them walking/busing to the Northern Ticket Hall), which wipes out even the tiny benefit, for a spectacularly small BCR of 0.03. (If it weren't for those two negatives, it'd have a BCR of about 14 by my calculations) U |
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