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"DW downunder" reply@newsgroup wrote in message
"Recliner" wrote in message ... "Willms" wrote in message Am Wed, 16 Sep 2009 22:00:32 UTC, schrieb 1506 auf uk.railway : This is something I have wondered for some time. The Overground name is contrived. The East London Line is a former Underground line anyway. It is marketing, and probably a good move. This could create a brand for urban and suburban railways similar to "S-Bahn" in Germany and German speaking countries, distinct from "U-Bahn" resp. "Underground". Yes, I think the London 'Overground' needs a new brand that doesn't get confused with other overground trains. The obvious one would be 'Metro' but that risks confusion with the Metropolitan line. Wasn't that the purpose of "London Rail"? But it's certainly not branded that way, and it would be pretty confusing if that name was used. What struck me was that the loop will soon be complete, so you could have names like "London Ringrail". |
Overground
"Recliner" wrote in message ... "DW downunder" reply@newsgroup wrote in message "Recliner" wrote in message ... Yes, I think the London 'Overground' needs a new brand that doesn't get confused with other overground trains. The obvious one would be 'Metro' but that risks confusion with the Metropolitan line. Wasn't that the purpose of "London Rail"? But it's certainly not branded that way, and it would be pretty confusing if that name was used. What struck me was that the loop will soon be complete, so you could have names like "London Ringrail". The problem as I see it, is that 'London Rail' is primarily an 'overview organisation', which has a remit to take a strategic view on all heavy rail in London, but it is only a subset, the TfL managed Overground, that it has real control over. IMHO 'Overground' was flawed as a choice of name from the off, due to both the earlier 'Overground Network' in south London, that just seemed to wither away, when another (better) idea came along; but mainly because of the colloquial use of 'overground' to mean anything that isn't underground. IMX many Londoners use the term for ANY heavy rail, not just suburban services, e.g. some (by no means all) would consider the WCML an 'overground service'... Paul S |
Overground
"Paul Scott" wrote in message
"Recliner" wrote in message ... "DW downunder" reply@newsgroup wrote in message "Recliner" wrote in message ... Yes, I think the London 'Overground' needs a new brand that doesn't get confused with other overground trains. The obvious one would be 'Metro' but that risks confusion with the Metropolitan line. Wasn't that the purpose of "London Rail"? But it's certainly not branded that way, and it would be pretty confusing if that name was used. What struck me was that the loop will soon be complete, so you could have names like "London Ringrail". The problem as I see it, is that 'London Rail' is primarily an 'overview organisation', which has a remit to take a strategic view on all heavy rail in London, but it is only a subset, the TfL managed Overground, that it has real control over. IMHO 'Overground' was flawed as a choice of name from the off, due to both the earlier 'Overground Network' in south London, that just seemed to wither away, when another (better) idea came along; but mainly because of the colloquial use of 'overground' to mean anything that isn't underground. IMX many Londoners use the term for ANY heavy rail, not just suburban services, e.g. some (by no means all) would consider the WCML an 'overground service'... Yes, that's why I think the LOROL routes should have a distinct branding that doesn't get confused with other kinds of trains operating in London. |
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On 18 Sep, 13:48, wrote:
In article , (Mizter T) wrote: Both London Overground and Merseyrail (the electric lines) are "concessions" as opposed to franchises, and the DfT has delegated responsibility away in both cases - for LO, to TfL, and for Merseyrail, to Merseytravel (the PTA - well actually it's an ITA now - Intergrated Transport Authority). Merseyrail is however a somewhat different type of arrangement - for example, the operator (a Serco- NedRailways joint venture) takes the revenue risk. Don't Merseyrail also maintain the tack, unlike London Overground where Notwork Rail still do it? It's Integrated, not Intergrated, BTW. If there isn't such a word, there should be. Then LU lines could be integrated with each other and intergrated with Overground. |
Overground
"Willms" wrote in message
Am Fri, 18 Sep 2009 10:30:54 UTC, schrieb "Recliner" auf uk.railway : I think the London 'Overground' needs a new brand that doesn't get confused with other overground trains. The obvious one would be 'Metro' No, I think that "London Overground" is perfect companion to "London Underground", using more or less the same sign just in a different color (orange instead of red). Yes, it sounds logical, but as others have pointed out, it gets confused with all the other non-underground railways in London Calling it "Metro" would confuse overseas visitors who would take that for what they know as "Metro" in their countries, and which in London is called "Underground". Yes, that's why I proposed some other, less confusing, name. In any case, London already has the Metropolitan line, often called the Met. |
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wrote in message ... In article Don't Merseyrail also maintain the tack, There have been a number of proposals for Merseyrail to maintain their own track, because it can be segregated from the wider network (unlike the 'Overground') but so far nothing has changed, as NR fundamentally disagree. Paul |
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"Recliner" wrote in message ... Yes, that's why I think the LOROL routes should have a distinct branding that doesn't get confused with other kinds of trains operating in London. But then what you do about the opposite case, of a station on the ELL 'southern extension', managed by LO, which will have two platforms on a route where LO trains will never be seen, but will presumably be fully signed up in the LO colour scheme? I'm thinking about Crystal Palace. But using the precedent of Clapham Junction, there's little reason AFAICS why the two platforms shouldn't retain Southern branding? Paul |
Overground
Willms wrote:
Am Fri, 18 Sep 2009 10:30:54 UTC, schrieb "Recliner" auf uk.railway : I think the London 'Overground' needs a new brand that doesn't get confused with other overground trains. The obvious one would be 'Metro' No, I think that "London Overground" is perfect companion to "London Underground", using more or less the same sign just in a different color (orange instead of red). But it confuses the public, who for a long time have called all non-Underground/DLR services "overground", even the services which the authorities have not now officially called "Overground". Calling it "Metro" would confuse overseas visitors who would take that for what they know as "Metro" in their countries, and which in London is called "Underground". Whereas Overground confuses locals. Maybe they should have tried S-something, if that could be got past the "my grandad didn't fight the boche for the trains to be called..." brigade. Tell them it's Danish, or something. -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
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