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Jubilee line deteriorating service
On 20 Feb, 11:51, Tom Anderson wrote:
I used to go out with a girl who lived near Clapham South tube; she went to work (by car!) pretty early by my standards, and so turfed me out in the mornings in the height of rush hour to catch a Northern line train to work. Thus, i've experienced this quite a bit, and it's exactly as you say - quite unbelievable. Splitting up with her was quite a relief! Could she not give you a lift to somewhere more sensible? ;-) [seriously though, "is an interchange station" is actually a criterion on my "choosing a place to live in London"-meter. Getting on the first train at Finsbury Park or Whitechapel or Mile End or Stratford or Hammersmith is seldom a problem - Arsenal and Stepney/Bethnal Greens are a lot more challenging. And I think Angel's the only place I've ever had to let a train go past...] -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
Jubilee line deteriorating service
Hi Paul,
Yes. I'm referring to that. The escalator has been down for a long time and causing congestion at Bank station. Bank DLR station had to be shut down for from time to time for this reason. The other question is, why it takes so long to refurbish an escalator? I've hardly seen anyone working on those enclosed escalators. On Feb 19, 10:56*pm, Paul Corfield wrote: On Tue, 19 Feb 2008 14:41:35 -0800 (PST), Mizter T wrote: wrote: There was a signal failure at Stradford. *My purpose of bring the Jubilee line topic up is to basically see if there are others who are thinking the same thing as I do. *The performance of the Jubilee line is deteriorating to a point which is not very bearable considering the DLR at Bank station is a mess as well. What's up with the DLR at Bank at the mo? I suspect he may be referring to the escalator problems that are causing delays and congestion within the station complex. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
Jubilee line deteriorating service
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Jubilee line deteriorating service
On 20 Feb, 12:46, "Richard J." wrote:
wrote: Hi Paul, Yes. *I'm referring to that. *The escalator has been down for a long time and causing congestion at Bank station. *Bank DLR station had to be shut down for from time to time for this reason. The other question is, why it takes so long to refurbish an escalator? *I've hardly seen anyone working on those enclosed escalators. Which escalator is out of action? *Specifically I want to know if it affects Monument - DLR interchanges in either direction. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) Certainly the one heading from the Central down to the DLR. When I was last there it was walk down and escalator up. I don't know about the Monument end. |
Jubilee line deteriorating service
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Jubilee line deteriorating service
On 20 Feb, 12:23, " wrote:
Yes. I'm referring to that. The escalator has been down for a long time and causing congestion at Bank station. Bank DLR station had to be shut down for from time to time for this reason. I thought the problem was that the escalator *hadn't* been down...? /coat -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
Jubilee line deteriorating service
On Wed, 20 Feb 2008, John B wrote:
On 20 Feb, 11:51, Tom Anderson wrote: I used to go out with a girl who lived near Clapham South tube; she went to work (by car!) pretty early by my standards, and so turfed me out in the mornings in the height of rush hour to catch a Northern line train to work. Thus, i've experienced this quite a bit, and it's exactly as you say - quite unbelievable. Splitting up with her was quite a relief! Could she not give you a lift to somewhere more sensible? ;-) She worked near Fulham (hence the car - there's no good public transport route between south Clapham and Fulham, although if the station at Imperial Wharf ever happens, there will be), i work near Euston, so she didn't go anywhere near any stations that would have been more useful. [seriously though, "is an interchange station" is actually a criterion on my "choosing a place to live in London"-meter. Getting on the first train at Finsbury Park or Whitechapel or Mile End or Stratford or Hammersmith is seldom a problem - Arsenal and Stepney/Bethnal Greens are a lot more challenging. And I think Angel's the only place I've ever had to let a train go past...] Good point. Being an interchange station also implies having more than one line, which gives you flexibility when things go tits-up. I live near Finsbury Park, and have two tube lines and two railway lines heading south. If only they'd reroute all the buses that go up Holloway Road via Finsbury Park as well ... tom -- At Forkmeeter in 12478, the Wracket Dispersal had reached the first limit of its bounding eastward rush. |
Jubilee line deteriorating service
On Wed, 20 Feb 2008, Mizter T wrote:
Tom Anderson wrote: On Mon, 18 Feb 2008, brixtonite wrote: [...] I used to think 'I'm sure I'd've pushed my way on' when people told me about waiting for a few trains go past, but having experienced it (on the Northern line at Clapham/Stockwell/Kennington,) there's a degree of crowding where you can push quite impolitely into the people already on board and travel with your head in someone's armpit, and then a degree of crowding where it is simply *not possible* to get on. I used to go out with a girl who lived near Clapham South tube; she went to work (by car!) pretty early by my standards, and so turfed me out in the mornings in the height of rush hour to catch a Northern line train to work. Thus, i've experienced this quite a bit, and it's exactly as you say - quite unbelievable. Splitting up with her was quite a relief! It's like Dante's Inferno at the peak of the rush hour. Worse - no Virgil! Obviously the Northern line is a major factor in making Clapham a popular district to live in, problem being that it's a victim of its own success. For journeys from Clapham to the City the Northern line really is the glaringly obvious route by public transport. One alternative is the South London Line from Clapham High Street to London Bridge, but that's a half-hourly two car train that also gets pretty busy. On the southern side, ther are also trains from Balham, and i think they're better than two cars twice an hour, but they go to Victoria, so they don't compete with either branch of the Northern line. You can change onto the Victoria line there, of course, which in principle could tempt away some of the millions of people who take the Northern line to Stockwell and then change, but the change at Victoria is much more of a pain. Otherwise it's the bus, and one has to change at Elephant & Castle as well - perhaps there's a need for a through bus to the City (like there used to be?), to take some of the strain off the Northern line. Possibly. How long would it take, in rush hour? All of which explains why there's an awful lot of people cycling up to town from those parts these days. The Northern line is also pretty busy during the 'shoulder peak' periods, when many of those who can sensibly opt to travel in a more civilised manner (albeit quite possibly at a less civilised hour!). Depends which shoulder. I often manage to travel in an entirely civilised manner on the tube, and arrive at work just in time for an appropriately civilised luncheon! tom -- At Forkmeeter in 12478, the Wracket Dispersal had reached the first limit of its bounding eastward rush. |
Jubilee line deteriorating service
On 20 Feb, 16:40, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Wed, 20 Feb 2008, Mizter T wrote: Tom Anderson wrote: On Mon, 18 Feb 2008, brixtonite wrote: [...] I used to think 'I'm sure I'd've pushed my way on' when people told me about waiting for a few trains go past, but having experienced it (on the Northern line at Clapham/Stockwell/Kennington,) there's a degree of crowding where you can push quite impolitely into the people already on board and travel with your head in someone's armpit, and then a degree of crowding where it is simply *not possible* to get on. I used to go out with a girl who lived near Clapham South tube; she went to work (by car!) pretty early by my standards, and so turfed me out in the mornings in the height of rush hour to catch a Northern line train to work. Thus, i've experienced this quite a bit, and it's exactly as you say - quite unbelievable. Splitting up with her was quite a relief! It's like Dante's Inferno at the peak of the rush hour. Worse - no Virgil! Obviously the Northern line is a major factor in making Clapham a popular district to live in, problem being that it's a victim of its own success. For journeys from Clapham to the City the Northern line really is the glaringly obvious route by public transport. One alternative is the South London Line from Clapham High Street to London Bridge, but that's a half-hourly two car train that also gets pretty busy. On the southern side, ther are also trains from Balham, and i think they're better than two cars twice an hour, but they go to Victoria, so they don't compete with either branch of the Northern line. You can change onto the Victoria line there, of course, which in principle could tempt away some of the millions of people who take the Northern line to Stockwell and then change, but the change at Victoria is much more of a pain. It's also frequently closed, although you can sneak round via the District Line gates. |
Jubilee line deteriorating service
Tom Anderson wrote: On Wed, 20 Feb 2008, Mizter T wrote: Tom Anderson wrote: On Mon, 18 Feb 2008, brixtonite wrote: [...] I used to think 'I'm sure I'd've pushed my way on' when people told me about waiting for a few trains go past, but having experienced it (on the Northern line at Clapham/Stockwell/Kennington,) there's a degree of crowding where you can push quite impolitely into the people already on board and travel with your head in someone's armpit, and then a degree of crowding where it is simply *not possible* to get on. I used to go out with a girl who lived near Clapham South tube; she went to work (by car!) pretty early by my standards, and so turfed me out in the mornings in the height of rush hour to catch a Northern line train to work. Thus, i've experienced this quite a bit, and it's exactly as you say - quite unbelievable. Splitting up with her was quite a relief! It's like Dante's Inferno at the peak of the rush hour. Worse - no Virgil! Obviously the Northern line is a major factor in making Clapham a popular district to live in, problem being that it's a victim of its own success. For journeys from Clapham to the City the Northern line really is the glaringly obvious route by public transport. One alternative is the South London Line from Clapham High Street to London Bridge, but that's a half-hourly two car train that also gets pretty busy. On the southern side, there are also trains from Balham, and i think they're better than two cars twice an hour, but they go to Victoria, so they don't compete with either branch of the Northern line. You can change onto the Victoria line there, of course, which in principle could tempt away some of the millions of people who take the Northern line to Stockwell and then change, but the change at Victoria is much more of a pain. Oh, plenty of trains from Balham to Victoria, every five minutes or so in the morning peak at least. Though they're pretty busy I understand. I'm not quite sure how many people jump off at Balham for the Northern line though. There are only a few through trains from Selhurst up to Streatham Common through to London Bridge, in fact from a quick glance less during the peak than the off-peak (when it's half-hourly), so there might be a number of people transferring to the Northern line for the City off of these Victoria-bound trains leaving a little bit more space for those getting on them. Problem with this is that they go to Victoria, not the City. A trudge along the southern chunk of the Circle line towards the square mile doesn't make this seem that attractive. If Claphamites do want the Victoria line yet wish to avoid the Northern line, then they could just take the bus up to Stockwell - indeed, depending upon where they are it could even be a better option to get onto Wandsworth Road and take a bus up to Vauxhall from there - though this wouldn't be suited to those starting from south of the Common. Otherwise it's the bus, and one has to change at Elephant & Castle as well - perhaps there's a need for a through bus to the City (like there used to be?), to take some of the strain off the Northern line. Possibly. How long would it take, in rush hour? Significantly longer, of course (and is particularly pronounced as the Northern line runs directly under the road the bus would take all the way up to London Bridge). The off-peak estimate for Clapham South to E&C by 155 bus alone is 23 minutes (three minutes less from Clapham Common). Though perhaps for those who work in the Borough near London Bridge this could be a goer, dare I suggest they could even walk up from E&C! A direct bus service might attract those who couldn't handle the crammed Northern line, plus those who are more price sensitive. I don't really embrace the idea of a 'two class' transport system, with the less well off taking the bus, but of course buses can (and do) relieve overburdened rail routes and the price of the fares can contribute towards attracting people onto the bus. All of which explains why there's an awful lot of people cycling up to town from those parts these days. The Northern line is also pretty busy during the 'shoulder peak' periods, when many of those who can sensibly opt to travel in a more civilised manner (albeit quite possibly at a less civilised hour!). Depends which shoulder. I often manage to travel in an entirely civilised manner on the tube, and arrive at work just in time for an appropriately civilised luncheon! tom Nice, very nice! We need to assert our innate British ways, turn away from notions of American power breakfasts and get back to those golden days... |
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