London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old November 6th 07, 08:57 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: May 2005
Posts: 6,077
Default "Queen to open St Pancras station" today

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7080278.stm

The opening will happen this evening (not least because Bettie is a
bit tied up giving a speech at some riverside club house during the
day).

I managed to have a quick look inside and around St P yesterday
lunchtime (whilst waiting at KX for someone who, courtesy of an inept
communications breakdown, wasn't on the train they should've been on -
grrr!).

I see now that the Midland mainline platform-level concourse and
platforms offer a pretty good view across the whole Barlow trainshed
now that the hoardings have largely come down and been replaced with
glass walls. The roof is splendid, lots of light coming through so
quite a change from the dingy St P of old.

From this position one also gets a good view across the Eurostar

platforms - yesterday occupied by a just-arrived Eurostar train and
also a CTRL-DS (aka Javelin) train, coupled to an EWS Class 60 (I
think). The CTRL-DS train was quite far up the long platforms (towards
the country end) so I couldn't see if it was top and tailed, but I did
wonder if there was the necessary trackwork in the Eurostar platforms
for a loco to run around a train and escape.

There was also quite a bit of lighting kit being set up for the grand
opening 'show' this evening - there were several lighting rigs
attached to the roof, and several more ground-level spotlights on the
platforms, plus a couple of massive screens hanging from the roof too.
Coming up the escalators to the Midland mainline concourse there were
a couple of large black drapes hanging from the ceiling. After a bit
of consideration I decided these were perhaps in place principally to
stop the light show from distracting the arriving MML drivers as hey
came into the platforms - as there was no indication that the Midland
mainline part of the station was going to close for this event.

Whether one will be able to go and attempt to hang around the Midland
mainline concourse and watch this event unfold I cannot say - I guess
that the area might be closed to those who don't hold tickets for
travel, but that part of the station would certainly appear to be open
for business as normal this evening.

Whilst the trainshed part of the station appears nearly finished, the
undercroft areas would still appear to be requiring a fair bit more
work - it is however hard to tell, given that there's no public access
to these areas. There were lots of workmen wearing hi-vis jackets
stating "Retail fit-out", so perhaps things are nearing completion.
Still plenty of other workmen around the place beavering away at this
and that though.

A couple of other points of potential interest.

One is that the Midland mainline platforms are OHLE wired. I guess
this is very old news but I hadn't realised that would be the case. Is
this provision for Thameslink trains, just in case they need to
terminate here rather than travel on through the low-level platforms
and then through central London?

The other is that the surrounding roads are now open as of Saturday
3rd November (so the sign said). As far as I could see (but I may have
got it wrong) Pancras Road is fully open for two-way traffic all the
way from Euston Road up to the Goods Way / Camley Street junction, and
Midland Road is open for one-way southbound traffic into Euston Road.
The taxi rank is now on Midland Road, and that's now the taxi drop-off
point as well (as opposed to the old location on Pancras Road).

Oh, and last thing - unless I've got this one wrong St Pancras station
appears to have it's own logo - which is neither the Eurostar logo nor
the HS1 logo - it's black and white and I couldn't really work out
what it was supposed to depict but I could only find it on street
signs around the station rather than on the station itself.


  #2   Report Post  
Old November 6th 07, 09:29 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Aug 2003
Posts: 141
Default "Queen to open St Pancras station" today

On 6 Nov, 08:57, Mizter T wrote:
One is that the Midland mainline platforms are OHLE wired. I guess
this is very old news but I hadn't realised that would be the case. Is
this provision for Thameslink trains, just in case they need to
terminate here rather than travel on through the low-level platforms
and then through central London?



Yes, FCC (as it is now) has access rights to St Pancras station,
normally only used when the tunnels are shut.

PhilD

--


  #3   Report Post  
Old November 6th 07, 10:26 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Sep 2005
Posts: 94
Default "Queen to open St Pancras station" today

Mizter T wrote:

Oh, and last thing - unless I've got this one wrong St Pancras station
appears to have it's own logo - which is neither the Eurostar logo nor
the HS1 logo - it's black and white and I couldn't really work out
what it was supposed to depict but I could only find it on street
signs around the station rather than on the station itself.


My memory (faulty?) is that all the Network Rail run London stations
have a logo associated with them. Is this the logo you have seen?

Robin
  #4   Report Post  
Old November 6th 07, 10:33 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Nov 2007
Posts: 2
Default "Queen to open St Pancras station" today


Yes, FCC (as it is now) has access rights to St Pancras station,
normally only used when the tunnels are shut.


FCC may have station rights but, i'm told, FCC drivers will not be
maintaining route knowledge into St.P so in a very short time all FCC
drivers will not be able to go in there. You do have to wonder where all the
trains will go when Moorgate is closed in 2008 and where they will go in the
meantime if anything closes central london. I know its not ideal but Kentish
Town is more than likely the answer as you can use Platforms 3 and 4 to
terminate in when there is through-london running and in the event of a
total london block you can use all four platforms to terminate in. This
would be more capacity than St. P as there is only 4 platforms to share with
MML who have amazingly long turn-around times.


  #5   Report Post  
Old November 6th 07, 10:38 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Nov 2004
Posts: 2,029
Default "Queen to open St Pancras station" today


"Mizter T" wrote in message
oups.com...
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7080278.stm


The other is that the surrounding roads are now open as of Saturday
3rd November (so the sign said). As far as I could see (but I may have
got it wrong) Pancras Road is fully open for two-way traffic all the
way from Euston Road up to the Goods Way / Camley Street junction, and
Midland Road is open for one-way southbound traffic into Euston Road.
The taxi rank is now on Midland Road, and that's now the taxi drop-off
point as well (as opposed to the old location on Pancras Road).


The southbound route from Goods Way is a taxi (and goods vehicle) only route
for the Kings Cross rank which is now on the west of that station (the
internal rank alongside KX platform 1 has been closed for a while. I took a
walk up there last Saturday, and its remarkable how many car drivers didn't
understand the signage, and found themselves in a queue of taxis , with a
double white line on their offside! It looked to me as though taxis for St
Pancras drop off in Pancras Rd, then could loop round under the station
extension, to pick up in Midland Rd, at the west end of the domestic
concourse, and there seems to be another pick up further down for Eurostar.

Paul





  #6   Report Post  
Old November 6th 07, 10:47 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Nov 2004
Posts: 2,029
Default "Queen to open St Pancras station" today


"Nathan" wrote in message
om...

Yes, FCC (as it is now) has access rights to St Pancras station,
normally only used when the tunnels are shut.


FCC may have station rights but, i'm told, FCC drivers will not be
maintaining route knowledge into St.P so in a very short time all FCC
drivers will not be able to go in there. You do have to wonder where all
the trains will go when Moorgate is closed in 2008...


There are very regular closures of the Thameslink route from the new year
onwards, IIRC from FCC publicity, some trains will be reversing at St
Pancras International (formerly Midland Rd).

The plan is that by the time Moorgate closes, there will be capacity
available for trains to run through to destinations in the Southeastern
area, with their trains running through to at least Kentish Town in return,
as the bay platforms at Blackfriars close at the same time. Of course
capacity is not the same as frequency, and could be achieved with fewer
longer trains, using the units no longer going to Moorgate.

Paul



  #7   Report Post  
Old November 6th 07, 10:54 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Nov 2004
Posts: 2,029
Default "Queen to open St Pancras station" today


"R.C. Payne" wrote in message
...
Mizter T wrote:

Oh, and last thing - unless I've got this one wrong St Pancras station
appears to have it's own logo - which is neither the Eurostar logo nor
the HS1 logo - it's black and white and I couldn't really work out
what it was supposed to depict but I could only find it on street
signs around the station rather than on the station itself.


My memory (faulty?) is that all the Network Rail run London stations have
a logo associated with them. Is this the logo you have seen?


That was my thought initially, someone's posted a link to those logos in the
past, but at the moment St Pancras isn't run by NR. Was it before the
rebuild, or did MML run it like the other 'minor' stations such as
Marylebone (Chiltern) and Fenchurch St (c2c)?

Paul


  #8   Report Post  
Old November 6th 07, 11:15 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Aug 2003
Posts: 141
Default "Queen to open St Pancras station" today

On 6 Nov, 10:54, "Paul Scott" wrote:
That was my thought initially, someone's posted a link to those logos in the
past, but at the moment St Pancras isn't run by NR. Was it before the
rebuild, or did MML run it like the other 'minor' stations such as
Marylebone (Chiltern) and Fenchurch St (c2c)?



St Pancras (the entire current complex) has, for a very long time,
been run by London & Continental (I don't know for certain who will
run the low level platforms). Midland MainLine's station licence for
St Pancras expired on 6th June 2000.

PhilD

--


  #9   Report Post  
Old November 6th 07, 11:21 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Aug 2003
Posts: 141
Default "Queen to open St Pancras station" today

On 6 Nov, 11:15, PhilD wrote:

St Pancras (the entire current complex) has, for a very long time,
been run by London & Continental (I don't know for certain who will
run the low level platforms). Midland MainLine's station licence for
St Pancras expired on 6th June 2000.


(Sorry, I forgot to add...)

The ORR website has MML and Thameslink as access beneficiaries of
L&C's St Pancras station, but L&C does not appear to be a station
licence holder.

PhilD

--


  #10   Report Post  
Old November 6th 07, 11:46 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Sep 2005
Posts: 94
Default "Queen to open St Pancras station" today

Nathan wrote:
Yes, FCC (as it is now) has access rights to St Pancras station,
normally only used when the tunnels are shut.


FCC may have station rights but, i'm told, FCC drivers will not be
maintaining route knowledge into St.P so in a very short time all FCC
drivers will not be able to go in there. You do have to wonder where all the
trains will go when Moorgate is closed in 2008 and where they will go in the
meantime if anything closes central london. I know its not ideal but Kentish
Town is more than likely the answer as you can use Platforms 3 and 4 to
terminate in when there is through-london running and in the event of a
total london block you can use all four platforms to terminate in. This
would be more capacity than St. P as there is only 4 platforms to share with
MML who have amazingly long turn-around times.


Will the new St.P Thameslink station have the capacity to turn trains
round to/from the north? If this is so, presumably FCC believe this
will obviate the need to use St.P Midland.

Robin


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Things Named After The Current Queen Offramp London Transport 41 May 9th 17 03:23 PM
I've been dealt the Queen of Diamonds eastender[_4_] London Transport 18 May 23rd 12 06:52 AM
St Pancras Renaissance Hotel to open in March 2011 Bruce[_2_] London Transport 5 December 31st 10 06:35 PM
Bakerloo Line gets telegram from Queen John Rowland London Transport 9 March 13th 06 06:38 AM
A13 Beckton (w/bound) flyover open today Dr. Sunil London Transport 1 October 11th 03 02:09 PM


All times are GMT. The time now is 11:50 AM.

Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 London Banter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about London Transport"

 

Copyright © 2017