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West London Line - what recession?
On Sun, 25 Oct 2009 14:52:03 -0000, "Basil Jet"
wrote: The road network of the area is a solid jam when Westfield closes. IMO the jam should be kept inside the car parks so it doesn't bother anyone else. Since the capacity of the road network is known, allowing cars out of Westfield too quickly seems pointless and avoidable. I understand where you are coming from, but the carbon monoxide levels in the Westfield car park would not be at all pleasant. ;-) |
West London Line - what recession?
On 25 Oct, 19:40, TheOneKEA wrote:
Keep in mind that Kensington Olympia's former up loop can easily be restored to add additional passing/recess capabilities on the up side of the WLL. If trains to and from Shepherd's Bush begin to non-stop Kenny O in favour of West Brompton, this may be very useful when pathing the service. Possible maybe, but it doesn't look easy to me. You'd have to demolish the new platform and re-build the old one. What would you do with the Southbound service while you were doing that? The present service couldn't be handled in both directions on just one platform as it used to be. I'm not certain, but I don't think the full width of the old platform is still available at the North end (can anybody confirm this, or otherwise?), so the length of the platform might be limited. Given that regular inter-city services, and empty stock Eurostars, are no more I doubt that you'd want to non-stop Kensington Olympia; there are still a fair number of events held there, and during some of them the station gets quite busy. |
West London Line - what recession?
On Oct 25, 7:06*pm, Stephen Furley wrote:
Possible maybe, but it doesn't look easy to me. *You'd have to demolish the new platform and re-build the old one. *What would you do with the Southbound service while you were doing that? *The present service couldn't be handled in both directions on just one platform as it used to be. *I'm not certain, but I don't think the full width of the old platform is still available at the North end (can anybody confirm this, or otherwise?), so the length of the platform might be limited. The full platform length is still available, and all three lines through Kenny O are bidirectional, with crossovers to match. IMHO it should be relatively simple to use the single down platform for services that call at Kenny O, with the remainder calling at West Brompton for onward travel via District Line or buses. Given that regular inter-city services, and empty stock Eurostars, are no more I doubt that you'd want to non-stop Kensington Olympia; there are still a fair number of events held there, and during some of them the station gets quite busy. True, but that traffic is cyclic and predictable - patronage at Westfield is less predictable, and the interchange with LU is much better at West Brompton than it is at Kenny O. |
West London Line - what recession?
Bruce writes:
The road network of the area is a solid jam when Westfield closes. IMO the jam should be kept inside the car parks so it doesn't bother anyone else. Since the capacity of the road network is known, allowing cars out of Westfield too quickly seems pointless and avoidable. I understand where you are coming from, but the carbon monoxide levels in the Westfield car park would not be at all pleasant. So the problem would be self-correcting! -Miles -- Acquaintance, n. A person whom we know well enough to borrow from, but not well enough to lend to. |
West London Line - what recession?
Paul Corfield wrote:
If you want to see the horror effect of IKEA on public transport try to get on the 192 bus from Tottenham Hale. It can only use little midibuses and must rank as one of the most overcrowded routes I know. If only Angel Road Station was to the south of the North Circular road and actually had trains stop at it - it would provide very easy access to IKEA and the huge Tescos at Edmonton. I suspect similar IKEA horrors are inflicted on Tramlink in south London. Many moons ago, the entrance to Angel Road *was* on the south side of the viaduct, and even had a Ticket Office, and it had a half hourly service between Liverpool Street and Hertford East. Then they widened the North Circular Road (which, to be fair, was needed), relocated the entrance to the arse end of nowhere (well beyond the country end of the platforms) and reduced the service to one train per hour. And now it's even worse, with the station being served by just a handful of trains a day to and from Stratford at peak times. And they call that progress...I expect the official excuse is that there isn't enough capacity for a half hourly stopping service plus the outer suburban services as it's a two track railway. Cheers, Barry |
West London Line - what recession?
Stephen Furley wrote:
On 25 Oct, 19:40, TheOneKEA wrote: Keep in mind that Kensington Olympia's former up loop can easily be restored to add additional passing/recess capabilities on the up side of the WLL. If trains to and from Shepherd's Bush begin to non-stop Kenny O in favour of West Brompton, this may be very useful when pathing the service. Possible maybe, but it doesn't look easy to me. You'd have to demolish the new platform and re-build the old one. What would you do with the Southbound service while you were doing that? Use the current platform while rebuilding the old platform to modern standards over the necessary length, say 8 coaches? A temporary, moveable flat bridge would be needed to access the currently in use platform. Demolish half the current platform (you'd to retain a four coach lengh for the current service) and provide the new running line in front of the renewed old platform, as a short platform loop off the through line. Then demolish the remaining current platform and extend the loop to whatever length you want to allow for increase line speeds on entry/exit. Alternatively, having completely rebuilt the old platform, demolish the current platform and provide the full length loop in a 'big bang' closure of a few weeks. I also suspect that if they were to do it now, the weekday timetable could be worked with one platform. Once the LO service frequency is doubled that will probably no longer be possible. Paul S |
West London Line - what recession?
"The Gardener" wrote in message
On Oct 25, 7:40 pm, E27002 wrote: It is a pity IMHO that the West London lines has to carry such a mix of local, transit, intercity, and freight traffic. From what I have read, there is little room for more traffic. In its present form, yes, although increasing linespeed, replacing the three-aspect signals with 4-aspect, reinstating the southbound loop at Olympia (as has already been mentioned), relaying the points at Olympia to allow higher-speed entry and exit to the loop (and ensuring any new loop is also so fitted) and extending the AC electrification to Shepherd's Bush (so that time need not be wasted stopped at North Pole to do the changeover) could all help to increase capacity. BTW, there are now no InterCity (or similar) trains on the line following the December 2008 timetable change when the Cross Country services to Brighton were withdrawn. And Eurostars no longer use the line to access their former (North Pole) depot. |
West London Line - what recession?
On Sun, Oct 25, 2009 at 02:08:47PM -0000, Chris Read wrote:
I imagine, as Christmas shopping ramps up, there will be people unable to board at Shepherds Bush. Does this happen already? Yes. -- David Cantrell | top google result for "topless karaoke murders" Planckton: n, the smallest possible living thing |
West London Line - what recession?
"Paul Scott" wrote Use the current platform while rebuilding the old platform to modern standards over the necessary length, say 8 coaches? A temporary, moveable flat bridge would be needed to access the currently in use platform. Demolish half the current platform (you'd to retain a four coach lengh for the current service) and provide the new running line in front of the renewed old platform, as a short platform loop off the through line. Then demolish the remaining current platform and extend the loop to whatever length you want to allow for increase line speeds on entry/exit. Alternatively, having completely rebuilt the old platform, demolish the current platform and provide the full length loop in a 'big bang' closure of a few weeks. I also suspect that if they were to do it now, the weekday timetable could be worked with one platform. Once the LO service frequency is doubled that will probably no longer be possible. It could be done, but sounds disruptive and/or expensive. But what's the point? There's no need for passenger trains to be able to overtake each other on the WLL. There is occasionally a need to recess a freight to match a path on the next stage of its journey. In many cases this can be done at Willesden/Wembley, or between Culvert Road and Latchmere Junctions (even when ELLX gets to Clapham Junction). The existing through line at Kensington Olympia can be used in both directions. If more flexibility is needed the pointwork at each end of Kensington Olympia could be relaid to reduce conflicts between up and down train (at present a southbound train using the through line conflicts with a northbound train at, IIRC, both ends of the station). Or a new goods loop could be provided south of the station. Peter |
West London Line - what recession?
On Oct 26, 8:07*am, "Peter Masson" wrote:
It could be done, but sounds disruptive and/or expensive. But what's the point? There's no need for passenger trains to be able to overtake each other on the WLL. There is occasionally a need to recess a freight to match a path on the next stage of its journey. In many cases this can be done at Willesden/Wembley, or between Culvert Road and Latchmere Junctions (even when ELLX gets to Clapham Junction). The existing through line at Kensington Olympia can be used in both directions. True, but keep in mind that the narrow platforms at Shepherd's Bush will eventually become a problem if the Westfield development eventually reaches full utilization. IMHO there will eventually be a need to substantially increase the local service on the WLL to better serve Shepherd's Bush, and the restoration of the up loop at Kenny O will make it substantially easier to path a frequent local passenger service. Also keep in mind the clientele at Imperial Wharf station - the people living near that station are likely to have an interest in the higher-end shops at Westfield, and that will add a lot of local traffic too. There is also the fact that the WLL is still a good cross-London link between the former Southern Region and the former Western and London Midland (:P) Regions. Just because there's no XC link right now doesn't mean that a new service, serving Shepherd's Bush, won't be eventually restored. If more flexibility is needed the pointwork at each end of Kensington Olympia could be relaid to reduce conflicts between up and down train (at present a southbound train using the through line conflicts with a northbound train at, IIRC, both ends of the station). Or a new goods loop could be provided south of the station. You would need to add two additional crossovers on the inside of the platform loop turnouts to accomplish that, and IMHO that would be almost as good as restoring the up loop. |
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