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Old December 12th 07, 11:37 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport,uk.transport.london
Tom Anderson Tom Anderson is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Oct 2003
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Default New DLR station opened today

On Tue, 11 Dec 2007, R.C. Payne wrote:

Tom Anderson wrote:
On Tue, 11 Dec 2007, wrote:

On Dec 11, 8:31 am, PhilD wrote:
On Dec 10, 11:48 pm, "John Rowland"

wrote:
Is there a good reason for them to be different? Won't various signs and
conduit friezes have to be replaced as a result of the colour change
which
could otherwise have been left alone?

My guess is that they wanted something sufficiently different to indicate
different services, but sufficiently similar to merge them at a later
date.

I think there's a case for keeping them seperate. The use of shades of
orange suggests they're part of the same network, but it would ensure that
noone would believe they can get a direct train from, say, New Cross to
Hampstead Heath.


I take your point. ISTR a map (drawn by J. Rowland?) which put the
Wimbleware service in a different shade of green to the rest of the
District to make it clear that there were no Richmond - Edgware Road
trains. You could do something similar with the Metropolitan. Moreover, the
current map suggests you can get a train from Clapham Junction to Stratford
via Willesden Junction; you cannot.

However, i think all of these limitations can be shown by layout, without
using colour - as recent maps have done for the Wimbleware, and do for the
Overground at Gospel Oak.


The current map [1] makes the Wimbleware service fairly clear,


Yes, that was my point.

though I can see a case for marking it out as a separate line, H&C
style. One of the problems with the Underground map is that it is well
suited to tube lines, where services are really very distinct from one
another, but it is less good for subsurface and overground services
where there is not a one line to one track type of segregation.


See my strenuous remarks in the threads we've had about colouring the
London Connections map - i think the situation isn't quite as bad as you
might think. Worse than the tube, but not a dead loss.

I also don't like the wheelchair symbol. I don't object to the idea of
showing stair free stations, and I can't think of a better idea for how
to do it, but that doesn't stop me from not liking it.


I agree. The problem is that it's a circle, which implies interchange.
Could they not just have plonked a little wheelchair icon next to the
station tick? Or put it in the middle of the circle for actual
interchanges.

tom

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