View Single Post
  #7   Report Post  
Old February 22nd 05, 02:18 AM posted to uk.transport.london
peter peter is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Oct 2003
Posts: 37
Default Commuting time map


"Michael R N Dolbear" wrote in message
news:01c51865$f9eab800$LocalHost@default...


Richard Dixon wrote
[...]
I was commenting with a colleague recently how she (living in

Sevenoaks)
takes a similar amount of time as me (in Raynes Park) to get into

work
(we're based in Monument).

It made me wonder if anyone has re-designed a London travel map in

terms of
time frame of reference - i.e. shortest time taken to get to a major

London
station (e.g. Waterloo, Victoria, London Bridge, Liverpool Street

etc.)
from around the south-east?

Just interested from a commuting viewpoint.


I think it can't be done on a flat map without rearranging the order of
stations on each line.

Thus your Raynes Park (23' am peak) will have to be shown as further
out than Surbiton (18') as will Wimbledon (19').

Commuters from West Byfleet were complaining that with the new
timetable they had only stopping trains in the morning peak (40') but
they do have a fast return service (26'). So West Byfleet must be shown
as further out than Wokng (26' & 23') and possibly as far out as
Farnborough (36' & 39').

Best of luck to anyone trying to generate such a map.

--
Mike D


You do it like a weather chart or OS map with contours. The contours
represent the points of equal time and yes some places further out will
have less travel minutes.
peter