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Recliner[_3_] August 29th 16 10:52 PM

Quicker to walk?
 
I don't know how long this has been around, but I'd not seen it befo

"Walking can be a quick and easy way to get around, particularly when
travelling during the busiest times, which are 08:00-09:00 and 17:30-18:30
Monday to Friday. The table below shows some popular journeys within zones
1 and 2 that are quicker to walk."

http://content.tfl.gov.uk/walking-tu...rney-times.pdf





tim... August 30th 16 07:15 AM

Quicker to walk?
 

"Recliner" wrote in message
...
I don't know how long this has been around, but I'd not seen it befo

"Walking can be a quick and easy way to get around, particularly when
travelling during the busiest times, which are 08:00-09:00 and 17:30-18:30
Monday to Friday. The table below shows some popular journeys within zones
1 and 2 that are quicker to walk."

http://content.tfl.gov.uk/walking-tu...rney-times.pdf





I don't believe that there's a single person in the whole world who gets the
tube from Bayswater to Queensway, or Gt Portland St to Regents Park.

It's bleeding obvious to anyone who has a map, that when you are standing at
one of these stations that then other one of the pair is 2 minutes walk up
the road.

What does happen though is that people making a longer journey make a change
to get to one of the stations when they could have stayed on the line that
they are on to get to its pair.

tim




Recliner[_3_] August 30th 16 07:27 AM

Quicker to walk?
 
tim... wrote:

"Recliner" wrote in message
...
I don't know how long this has been around, but I'd not seen it befo

"Walking can be a quick and easy way to get around, particularly when
travelling during the busiest times, which are 08:00-09:00 and 17:30-18:30
Monday to Friday. The table below shows some popular journeys within zones
1 and 2 that are quicker to walk."

http://content.tfl.gov.uk/walking-tu...rney-times.pdf





I don't believe that there's a single person in the whole world who gets the
tube from Bayswater to Queensway, or Gt Portland St to Regents Park.

It's bleeding obvious to anyone who has a map, that when you are standing at
one of these stations that then other one of the pair is 2 minutes walk up
the road.

What does happen though is that people making a longer journey make a change
to get to one of the stations when they could have stayed on the line that
they are on to get to its pair.


You're probably right, but I've seen lots of tourists apparently using the
Tube map as their map of London, with no sign of a street map.


Theo[_2_] August 30th 16 01:03 PM

Quicker to walk?
 
Recliner wrote:
You're probably right, but I've seen lots of tourists apparently using the
Tube map as their map of London, with no sign of a street map.


Yes - as an infrequent London visitor it's taken a long time to get beyond
the tube map as my mental model of London. At first it was because it was
much clearer and more convenient than the A to Z. These days with Google
Maps et al it's easier to have a real map to hand, but the tube map is still
my primary model when I don't have one. And I usually end up being the
'local' whenever I go to London with other people who know less than I do.

(But the problem with the walking times PDF is it's in alphabetical order,
so no use to people for whom the tube map is their primary model)

Theo

Offramp August 30th 16 01:49 PM

Quicker to walk?
 
That's not very well presented, is it?

Graham Harrison[_3_] August 30th 16 10:28 PM

Quicker to walk?
 
On Tue, 30 Aug 2016 08:15:44 +0100, "tim..."
wrote:


"Recliner" wrote in message
...
I don't know how long this has been around, but I'd not seen it befo

"Walking can be a quick and easy way to get around, particularly when
travelling during the busiest times, which are 08:00-09:00 and 17:30-18:30
Monday to Friday. The table below shows some popular journeys within zones
1 and 2 that are quicker to walk."

http://content.tfl.gov.uk/walking-tu...rney-times.pdf





I don't believe that there's a single person in the whole world who gets the
tube from Bayswater to Queensway, or Gt Portland St to Regents Park.

It's bleeding obvious to anyone who has a map, that when you are standing at
one of these stations that then other one of the pair is 2 minutes walk up
the road.

What does happen though is that people making a longer journey make a change
to get to one of the stations when they could have stayed on the line that
they are on to get to its pair.

tim



I once stopped a colleague trying to take the tube from Lancaster Gate
to Paddington. A bit further than Bayswater to Queensway but still
much, much faster than the tube.

Even longer distances can be competitive. I met several colleagues
on a train into Paddington. We were all going to Victoria Coach
Station. They took the Circle (as it was then) and I walked across
the park and arrived 3 minutes after they did.

I often think that one of the problems is that we all call the
Underground map a map. It's a diagram and if people understood that
some (but not all) would find out about the alternatives.

Basil Jet[_4_] August 30th 16 10:50 PM

Quicker to walk?
 
On 2016\08\30 23:28, Graham Harrison wrote:

Even longer distances can be competitive. I met several colleagues
on a train into Paddington. We were all going to Victoria Coach
Station. They took the Circle (as it was then) and I walked across
the park and arrived 3 minutes after they did.


Bloody hell, did they go via Aldgate?


Michael R N Dolbear August 31st 16 01:29 AM

Quicker to walk?
 

"Graham Harrison" wrote

I often think that one of the problems is that we all call the

Underground map a map. It's a diagram and if people understood that
some (but not all) would find out about the alternatives.

It *is* a map, just as the World map on the Mercator projection that we all
know that shows Greenland bigger than Australia. is nonetheless a *map*.

Some more
http://www.theguardian.com/commentis...le-in-pictures

https://www.buzzfeed.com/tomchivers/...a5B#.foj701Egr

Google [weird maps] for lots more

--
Mike D


James Heaton[_4_] September 2nd 16 11:10 AM

Quicker to walk?
 
"Graham Harrison" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 30 Aug 2016 08:15:44 +0100, "tim..."
wrote:


"Recliner" wrote in message
...
I don't know how long this has been around, but I'd not seen it befo

"Walking can be a quick and easy way to get around, particularly when
travelling during the busiest times, which are 08:00-09:00 and
17:30-18:30
Monday to Friday. The table below shows some popular journeys within
zones
1 and 2 that are quicker to walk."

http://content.tfl.gov.uk/walking-tu...rney-times.pdf





I don't believe that there's a single person in the whole world who gets
the
tube from Bayswater to Queensway, or Gt Portland St to Regents Park.

It's bleeding obvious to anyone who has a map, that when you are standing
at
one of these stations that then other one of the pair is 2 minutes walk up
the road.

What does happen though is that people making a longer journey make a
change
to get to one of the stations when they could have stayed on the line that
they are on to get to its pair.


I once stopped a colleague trying to take the tube from Lancaster Gate
to Paddington. A bit further than Bayswater to Queensway but still
much, much faster than the tube.


Yes that was my father's great timesaver in the days when, a couple of times
a month, he took an early train from Cardiff for meetings adjacent to St
Paul's.

He reckoned that it made the difference between getting the 6am and the 6:30
from Cardiff for a 9:30 meeting, back in the days when Cardiff trains only
took about 1:50!

James


Offramp September 2nd 16 02:07 PM

Quicker to walk?
 
On Tuesday, 30 August 2016 23:50:55 UTC+1, Basil Jet wrote:
On 2016\08\30 23:28, Graham Harrison wrote:

Even longer distances can be competitive. I met several colleagues
on a train into Paddington. We were all going to Victoria Coach
Station. They took the Circle (as it was then) and I walked across
the park and arrived 3 minutes after they did.


Bloody hell, did they go via Aldgate?


....And which park is meant? Is it Hyde and Green sellotaped together?


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