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Old September 29th 03, 10:27 PM posted to uk.transport.london
Martin Rich Martin Rich is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Aug 2003
Posts: 141
Default Public Transport Expansion

On 29 Sep 2003 19:43:57 GMT, Robin May
wrote:

Paul Weaver wrote the following in:
news
Looking at the history of the tube, the vast majority of it was
built between 1890 and the first world war. Obviously this was all
entrepreneurs, capitalists that produced the finest public
transport system of its day.

Whats happened since the end of the second world war? Nothing.
Thanks to centralisation, lack of competition and general
socialist policy.


********. There's been the Victoria line, the Jubilee line, the DLR,
new stations and interchanges (e.g. c2c stop at West Ham) and I'm sure
there are other things I haven't heard of.


The original poster also conveniently ignores anything between the
first and second world wars. In fact great chunks of the network
outside the centre - particularly stretches of the Northern,
Piccadilly, and Central lines - were built in the 1930s when the
system was already in public ownership, and its management was very
centralised. Those magnificent Holden stations weren't funded by
venture capitalists :-)

Of course that was in a very different economic and political climate
from today, so I wouldn't draw any conclusions about the relative
merits of public and private funding from any of this

Martin