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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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![]() Ian Snowdon wrote: Some weeks ago someone asked about the purpose of the concrete structure near the CTRL bridge across the ECML leading into St Pancras. As I was visiting the station I asked and was told that it is called the "Forward Incident Control Point". My next question was "what does that mean?" and nobody could tell me. So, can someone tell me what a FICP is used for (and don't say "incidents"). Googling those four words suggests it's emergency services jargon for, well a place where you control incidents. A place near the incident, so 'forward'. A typical document using these words is http://www.suffolkcc.gov.uk/fire_service/emergency_plans/calor.html which looks to be about how to handle the Calor gas terminal at Felixstowe blowing up, or similar. I daresay the CTRL FICP will be used for any, um, incident, around the new station complex and maybe along the CTRL as a whole. It's hard to talk about such things without using the word "incident", btw ![]() -- Larry Lard Replies to group please |
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