Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Colin McKenzie wrote the following in:
Tom Anderson wrote: Agreed - this would be a repeat of the exercise in futility that is the ELL extension, only far worse. Lines really need to give people access to central London; once they have that, you can think about orbital routes. Actually, a considerable amount of central London tube congestion - and much suburban road congestion - is caused by the fact that the quickest public transport route for many suburb to suburb journeys is via the centre. This includes suburbs essentially on the same side of London - e.g. Greenford to Richmond. Indeed. I think the idea that access to central London is a line's most important feature is extremely flawed. A large number of journeys currently involve central London not because the person wants to go there but because they have to in order to get from one outer London area to another. Buses are one way of making an orbital journey at the moment but they aren't really very good for the longish journeys that would be made easily possible by an orbital rail link. An example of that sort of thing, the North London line, seems fairly heavily used with the trains often being uncomfortably packed at busy times. I know I go on about this all the time, but I think it would be even more heavily used if a more frequent and reliable service was provided and the stations were done up a bit. The ELL as it currently is gets quite a few passengers and I expect it would get quite a few more if it had more interchanges and served more destinations, as it will when (if?) the extension is finished. This brings me to another point, which is that a line doesn't have to go to central London for it to be useful to people wanting to get there. People can use an orbital line to get from their local station to an interchange with a line going into central London, for example Highbury and Islington on the NLL or Canada Water on the ELL. -- message by Robin May, enforcer of sod's law. "Dust Hill guy likes the Gordon clock" "You MUST NOT drive dangerously" - the Highway Code Spelling lesson: then and than are different words. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Boris: Crossrail not yet "signed, sealed and delivered" [was:Transport Secretary vows to finish Crossrail] | London Transport | |||
Optimum configuration of Crossrail (Was: Diesel Electric Trains on CrossRail) | London Transport | |||
Optimum configuration of Crossrail (Was: Diesel Electric Trains on CrossRail) | London Transport |