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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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Marland wrote:
Recliner wrote: From https://www.cityam.com/mayor-of-london-election-sadiq-khan-pledges-to-name-london-overground-lines/ Sadiq Khan has pledged to give individual names to London Overground train lines if re-elected as mayor of London next month. Khan’s manifesto, released today, said the “London Overground network has grown considerably over recent years” and that “to reflect this I’ll launch a programme to name individual routes, giving each its own identity”. The London Overground now has 112 stations over six different lines, however none of the lines are named like on the London Underground. The policy announcement will see a programme launched by Khan to choose names for the six lines, if he wins re-election on 6 May, however no details were given on what the criteria will be. Does the East London line even though services now go further still retain that name or has it been dropped, if it has been renewing it would seem logical. The Met only had exclusive use of it from the mid 1960’s till the Overground took over ,a comparatively short period in its long history when services like now went further. None of the LO services currently have official names, though of course locals might continue to use the historical names (DC Line, etc). The problem with some of the old geographic names is that multiple modern routes share some lines. For example, the physical East London line is used by routes to New Cross, West Croydon and Clapham Junction. Should these three routes warrent their own, different names? Or should they simply be regarded as three branches of the East London Line, just as the District Line has four western branches? But shouldn't the Clapham Junction route be called the South London Line? So you might have an East London Line with branches to New Cross and West Croydon, and the South London Line which shares part of the route, but then heads west to Clapham Junction. The old names also have oddities: the North London Line goes further west than the West London Line, and further east than the East London Line, while the East London Line to West Croydon goes further south than the South London Line. Net result: - the northern-most most LO branch isn't the North London Line - the eastern and western-most LO branches are on the North London Line - the southern-most branch is the East London line. A further complication is the possible confusion between the Northern LU line (which is the southern-most LU line) and the entirely separate North London LO line. Despite crossing each other, the Northern LU line has no single station interchanges with any LO line. Or you could invent Bakerloo-style composite names, but would the two entirely separate routes from H&I to Clapham Junction cause confusion? Other countries would just use route numbers, but that seems not to be our style. |
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