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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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Terry Harper wrote:
On Fri, 08 Apr 2005 01:06:41 +0100, Dave Arquati wrote: Terry Harper wrote: It may not solve M25 congestion, but it would allow individuals to avoid it by encouraging park and ride. Park and ride to where? If to central London, then those individuals won't use the M25 for the greater part of their journey. The M25 has encouraged a whole host of local and medium distance orbital journeys which are extremely difficult to address with public transport. A large part of then M25 traffic is transferring from one motorway to another. It draws traffic out from the inner area, and in from the outer sector, simply because there are no better alternatives. I went to a family funeral in Sunbury on Tuesday, and my route took me via the M23, then M25 and then M3. Before the M25 I would probably have gone A272, A24, A244 then A3 to the Scilly lsles, then via Hampton Court bridge, or else over Walton bridge from Esher. Both shorter routes, but much more congested and taking considerably longer. People heading in towards London are frequently looking for somewhere to leave their cars and continue by public transport, as many threads on this board will testify. Depending on their ultimate destination, they may well use the M25 to get to another motorway, which is a better approach to that place than is ploughing through the centre. In other cases, they would like a railway line which gets them to their destination. Only Thameslink offers a cross-London route for this purpose, ignoring the West London Line as being orbital. There is such a huge variety of origins and destinations for these trips that Thameslink itself will make little difference to M25 traffic. AFAIR about half of traffic on the M25 is long-distance, with origins and destinations nowhere near the M25, and the other half is short or medium distance trips around the south east. Thameslink 2000 may provide a direct route from Croydon to St Albans, Dartford to Enfield etc. but despite providing an alternative for those trips, it does nothing for a huge variety of other trips. An illustrative exercise might be to take a single origin like Croydon and list all destinations (or more realistically, all towns above a particular size) within 15 miles of the M25, and then count how many of those destinations can be reached using Thameslink - or indeed any rail service with one or no changes. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
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