Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#21
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#22
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#23
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 9 Oct 2006 09:25:49 -0700, Earl Purple wrote:
Second memo to Northern Line controller: why on earth do you choose to run six trains via Charing Cross in ten minutes, with none via Bank? I was at Kentish Town at 2210 on Friday night, thinking I'd left ample time to get to London Bridge by 2249. choice of 2 lines then. Thameslink changing if necessary. However I know that Thameslink (now run by First Capital Connect) only care about the passengers past St Albans- they get fast trains every 4 minutes at peak hours while local passengers have to wait 16 minutes between trains (at one point 20 minutes). There's not much of a choice to make. Thameslink trains to London Bridge don't stop at Kentish Town, so a change is required from CityMetro to CityFlier, with neither service being particularly frequent (in fact you'd be waiting on the platform at Kentish Town until 2231). The trains are also very slow through the central area. It is, as they say, a no-brainer. |
#24
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Earl Purple wrote: wrote: Second memo to Northern Line controller: why on earth do you choose to run six trains via Charing Cross in ten minutes, with none via Bank? I was at Kentish Town at 2210 on Friday night, thinking I'd left ample time to get to London Bridge by 2249. choice of 2 lines then. Thameslink changing if necessary. However I know that Thameslink (now run by First Capital Connect) only care about the passengers past St Albans- they get fast trains every 4 minutes at peak hours while local passengers have to wait 16 minutes between trains (at one point 20 minutes). They also it seems don't seem to care too much about people south of the river. I had to get to blackfriars this morning so decided to get Thameslink from KX instead of spending hours on the circle line. Instead of a brighton or streatham service we got 3 moorgate trains in a row despite 2 of them supposedly being brighton trains. In the end I got on the 3rd one to farringdon and walked the rest of the way since I had no idea when or if a train south would show up. No announcements apart from a completely wrong automated one, no nothing. Farcical. B2003 |
#25
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Boltar wrote: They also it seems don't seem to care too much about people south of the river. I had to get to blackfriars this morning so decided to get Thameslink from KX instead of spending hours on the circle line. Instead of a brighton or streatham service we got 3 moorgate trains in a row despite 2 of them supposedly being brighton trains. In the end I think they're planning to close the line to Moorgate eventually. Of course, it shows that the capacity for more trains is there. Blackfriars station actually right on top of the river, not South of it. And the station entrance is on the North side. I got on the 3rd one to farringdon and walked the rest of the way since I had no idea when or if a train south would show up. No announcements apart from a completely wrong automated one, no nothing. Farcical. I guess there were problems. I do know that the Blackfriars to London Bridge link is always very slow because it crosses with other lines. I would have the slower trains on the North side go on the Brighton branch because those coming from the North right across are far more likely to be going to Gatwick than to anywhere on the Sutton branch. Of course it would inconvenience the passenger who takes a plane to Luton Airport then needs to make a connection to Gatwick, as if there are likely to be many of those. |
#26
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
John B wrote:
wrote: Unfortunately, assorted local NIMBYs are being troublesome about the Camden Town redevelopment IIRC the main problem they had was that the proposed development was out of scale (and it certainly looks it in the first picture on the alwaystouchout link, less so in the second). I'd disagree - I think the LUL plans would have taken a pretty scabby part of London and provided a nice new focal point, taking some of the focus away from the hordes of weed dealers, goths and Japanese teenagers... Camden Town really needs a Mile End style flat, open platform interchange, with the two northbound branches sharing one platform, and the other platform having trains going southwards from both sides. Yes, this would be the ideal final layout - although a Highbury-style interchange (ie the same cross-platform layout but in tubes) would be functionally equivalent if a total rebuild and realignment to match Mile End were unfeasible. I'm 95% certain that the plans involve the latter. I'm not sure that's the case. because of the way the junction is laid out. It's currently essentially cross-platform between the northbound platforms, which is fine, but putting the southbound platforms next to each other would cause a considerable headache because of the way the branches intersect and dive off again. They would need to be in a completely different location, *much* further south than at present. As far as I'm aware, the Camden Town works were primarily for congestion relief to the existing platforms, passageways, escalators and ticket hall - not to rebuild the layout of the junction. The rebuild of Camden Town would present not only the opportunity to split the line into two - with significant reliability gains - but also to extend the Charing Cross side from Kennington towards the south east (Camberwell and beyond) - something which has been talked about in the past but is a bit speculative and would totally depend on the rebuild of Camden Town. It would also be competing with the similarly-speculative Bakerloo line extension. I suppose the reason above ground demolition would be "needed" is access and, maybe, to pay for the whole redevelopment in the form of property sale & rental. Also to provide an interim station on the Buck Street market site - but you're right, the reason they want to build a big thing above the station is so they can make back some of the cost of the redevelopment, which seems fair enough. -- Dave Arquati www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#27
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Dave Arquati wrote: The rebuild of Camden Town would present not only the opportunity to split the line into two - with significant reliability gains - but also to extend the Charing Cross side from Kennington towards the south east (Camberwell and beyond) - something which has been talked about in the past but is a bit speculative and would totally depend on the rebuild of Camden Town. It would also be competing with the similarly-speculative Bakerloo line extension. Why wouldn't they be able to extend from Kennington towards the south east without a Camden Town rebuild? Patrick |
#28
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Dave Arquati wrote: I'm not sure that's the case. because of the way the junction is laid out. It's currently essentially cross-platform between the northbound platforms, which is fine, but putting the southbound platforms next to each other would cause a considerable headache because of the way the branches intersect and dive off again. They would need to be in a completely different location, *much* further south than at present. The northbound interchange isn't such a problem because at least you know which platform you are supposed to be on for your destination. The problem is the Southbound direction because the trains enter the station from their source and then branch after. If the branching could happen first that would resolve the problem. The other option would be to have one wide platform between them, and yes that would be further South where they are closer together. South would not be under the market but would be somewhere between Camden High Street and Bayham Street maybe near Greenland Road. As far as I'm aware, the Camden Town works were primarily for congestion relief to the existing platforms, passageways, escalators and ticket hall - not to rebuild the layout of the junction. The rebuild of Camden Town would present not only the opportunity to split the line into two - with significant reliability gains - but also to extend the Charing Cross side from Kennington towards the south east (Camberwell and beyond) - something which has been talked about in the past but is a bit speculative and would totally depend on the rebuild of Camden Town. It would also be competing with the similarly-speculative Bakerloo line extension. Bakerloo Line makes more sense as a branch towards Camberwell may as well start at Elephant & Castle. Splitting into two would hopefully mean no stop/start around Camden Town. It's true that you would sometimes have a journey with no direct train but the interchange would be "cross-platform" and at least you don't get the "bunching" problem, at least I would not expect it to. Don't know what happens when there's a signal failure though - how will they divert all the trains via the other branch? Maybe there should be 3 central branches. I think a direct route between Euston and Waterloo via Russell Square, Holborn, Aldwych (hey let's reopen it), Temple, Waterloo. Thus following the A4200. |
#29
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , John Salmon
writes I'm amused by your "96%". Most people would have typed 90 or 99 without thinking about the accuracy. How did you arrive at 96? I knew I wasn't 99% sure, but I was a bit more than 95% sure. Quail suggests you can't get to 1 from the south siding. Correct. I cut-and-pasted too fast. -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
#30
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article .com, Earl
Purple writes The problem is the Southbound direction because the trains enter the station from their source and then branch after. If the branching could happen first that would resolve the problem. The other option would be to have one wide platform between them, and yes that would be further South where they are closer together. The junctions start immediately south of the present platforms, and are quite long. It's basically not possible without adding brand new tunnels somewhere (probably from Chalk Farm / South Kentish Town to the opposite southbound platform). -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Getting from Finchley to Bank with no Northern Line | London Transport | |||
Normal Northern Line service not resuming this week + pictures | London Transport | |||
Northern Line | London Transport | |||
Northern Line - again! | London Transport | |||
Northern line emergency engineering | London Transport |