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#31
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On 26 Jan, 09:54, Allan wrote:
John Salmon wrote: Surprisingly, I don't think this has been posted here yet... Posters displayed at King's Cross indicate that the entrance to the Underground from within the main line station concourse - the one more or less opposite platform 7 - which seems to have been there for ever, at least within my recollection, is to close permanently from next Sunday, 1st February. I may be missing something, but this is a great pity. *It was so easy to get off an arriving train, and straight down the stairs into the underground. ... though you haven't been able to do that in the morning peak (7am to 10am Mon-Fri) for many months now, since the entrance/exit in question is closed during those hours. Fom 1 Feb, you have through the often crowded station concourse, out of the front of the station, merge in with everyone else coming into the station, and then down the stairs. Yes, I have had to do that every mornng for ages. Worse, the entrance in front of the station is always "throttled" during the morning peak (by partially closing the sliding gates) to allow only one person in at a time, leading to a big melee of people outside trying to get in. I often find it easier to cross St Pancras Road and use the entrance inder St Pancras, which is normally unrestricted. PaulO |
#32
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#33
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On 26 Jan, 13:31, Roland Perry wrote:
And is there an exit-only gateline somewhere? Very close to the edge of the building, perhaps (so that the corridor along the buffers is "airside")? The entire front wall of the station. The whole main shed is airside. The whole design does seem to be based on the majority of passengers being sent outdoors as soon as they arrive, which is bonkers. There's just one set on the diagram I have, and it's not clear if inside or outside the building. If it's just outside, is it perhaps inside the greenhouse structure visible here just left of the 'clocktower': Yes. You can see in that picture there's a brick veranda in front of the main front wall, which will be outside the gateline but inside glass doors, so there might be a narrow indoor route to the stairs to the tube station. U |
#34
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![]() On 26 Jan, 12:53, Mr Thant wrote: On 26 Jan, 12:42, Mizter T wrote: There seems to be some dispute over whether passenger will be able to exit the mainline platforms over the footbridge into the western ticket hall or not. They'll have a single down-only escalator and a lift to each platform. The other possibility is that there will be a way to walk around the southern (buffer-end) exits from platforms 1-8 within the station (i.e. under cover) to get round to the western concourse and hence the entrance to the Tube station. There'll be a bi-directional gateline roughly where M&S currently is giving you access to the concourse. A little further south (just outside the building but under the canopy) there'll be a new set of stairs down to the tube station. This is probably the same set Roland mentioned earlier. I've just been having a quick dig around the LB Camden online planning portal. The main planning application number for these works seems to be 2006/3387/P - the summary page can be seen he http://tinyurl.com/dk7lyq. The supporting documents page holds a number of drawings: http://tinyurl.com/cth9rq Within the "Amended drawings" document, on page 1 is a drawing that shows two gatelines leading from the main trainshed - one leads into the western concourse, the other leads south out onto the street - the stairs down into the main (circular) Tube ticket hall that I think are the ones we're all speaking about are also shown underneath an external canopy (or at least I think that's what the drawing shows). Page 6 also shows this in more detail. I haven't entirely figured it out yet, like what route will passengers exiting the Tube take into the Western concourse... ok, so now I'm looking at page 4 of the "Proposed 3" drawings which appears to show a direct exit from the Tube station into the western concourse, right on the westernmost side. And this appears again on pages 8 and 10 - but it looks solely like a link to the deep-level tubes, so I think this is in fact the new northern Tube ticket hall. I'd need to spend a bit of time with these drawings to properly figure it all out. Page 1 of the "Proposed 2 - Part 2" drawings shows the 'green oval' in the Southern Square that Mr Perry speaks of elsewhere is in fact an "LUL vent". And in one of the drawings I noticed that the location of the disused Hotel Curve was marked, but I can't find which one it is now. Anyway should anyone want to look in depth at the plans there's plenty to go from there. As I said, I've only taken a cursory look at them - the whole project is not one that I've looked at in any real detail beforehand. |
#35
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![]() On 26 Jan, 13:54, Mr Thant wrote: On 26 Jan, 13:31, Roland Perry wrote: And is there an exit-only gateline somewhere? Very close to the edge of the building, perhaps (so that the corridor along the buffers is "airside")? The entire front wall of the station. The whole main shed is airside. The whole design does seem to be based on the majority of passengers being sent outdoors as soon as they arrive, which is bonkers. I'm trying to think of other stations that employ a similar arrangement but can't. Is this whole western concourse scheme a bit wonky then? There's just one set on the diagram I have, and it's not clear if inside or outside the building. If it's just outside, is it perhaps inside the greenhouse structure visible here just left of the 'clocktower': Yes. You can see in that picture there's a brick veranda in front of the main front wall, which will be outside the gateline but inside glass doors, so there might be a narrow indoor route to the stairs to the tube station. |
#36
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![]() On 26 Jan, 13:39, Paul Oter wrote: On 26 Jan, 09:54, Allan wrote: John Salmon wrote: Surprisingly, I don't think this has been posted here yet... Posters displayed at King's Cross indicate that the entrance to the Underground from within the main line station concourse - the one more or less opposite platform 7 - which seems to have been there for ever, at least within my recollection, is to close permanently from next Sunday, 1st February. I may be missing something, but this is a great pity. *It was so easy to get off an arriving train, and straight down the stairs into the underground. .. though you haven't been able to do that in the morning peak (7am to 10am Mon-Fri) for many months now, since the entrance/exit in question is closed during those hours. I wonder why this is the case - because it's easier to handle the crowds outside at the new entrance perhaps? Fom 1 Feb, you have through the often crowded station concourse, out of the front of the station, merge in with everyone else coming into the station, and then down the stairs. Yes, I have had to do that every mornng for ages. Worse, the entrance in front of the station is always "throttled" during the morning peak (by partially closing the sliding gates) to allow only one person in at a time, leading to a big melee of people outside trying to get in. I dare say this happens with good reason, that being the crowdedness of the ticket hall. The new northern ticket hall should abate this somewhat. I often find it easier to cross St Pancras Road and use the entrance under St Pancras, which is normally unrestricted. Where there's a will there's a way! |
#37
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![]() On 26 Jan, 13:18, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 04:42:06 on Mon, 26 Jan 2009, Mizter T remarked: The other possibility is that there will be a way to walk around the southern (buffer-end) exits from platforms 1-8 within the station (i.e. under cover) to get round to the western concourse and hence the entrance to the Tube station. This is surely highly likely, as I rather doubt that the buffer-end exits would literally deposit people straight off the train and through the doors into the street. They are currently widening the circulating area inside the "old building" by moving all the buffers about half a carriage-length north, and eventually covering the resulting footprint with a pedestrianised area. This will give a "corridor" from the platform ends westwards to the new National Rail ticket concourse. OK, I see. I'll pop in to have a look at what's going on soon. But when they did a study of the passenger flows at the revamped station, one of the major issues was congestion at the platform-end exits, when it was raining. This seems to assume that most passengers would be heading across the new open air plaza, maybe to the bus stops, or the current "outdoor" entrance to the tube - especially if heading for the Circle Line I think. Interesting. Did anything come of these findings, i.e. modifications to the design? |
#38
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![]() On 26 Jan, 12:29, Mizter T wrote: wrote: In article , (Mizter T) wrote: (snip) In time the whole focus of King's Cross station is shifting from the present concourse over to the new western concourse, which will open in 2011/ 2012 - in this context the closure of this staircase makes rather more sense. I'm not really all that clued up on the redevelopment of the station, but it seems as though the new northern Tube ticket hall will become the primary entrance to the Underground from the mainline station. This Network Rail webpage provides a rough outline as to the plans, but there's not really enough detail in it: http://www.networkrail.co.uk/aspx/4059.aspx The focus shifting nonsense is a right PITA for real users because it means considerably longer walking routes and the complete lack of a covered route to the Underground in the meantime. Why they don't at least put up a temporary awning on the King's Cross forecourt is beyond me but even that route is a long way round from all the King's Cross platforms to the Victoria Line. Just encourages me always to use my bike. "This focus shifting nonsense" is basically the bedrock of the redevelopment plans for King's Cross mainline station, which will entail the concourse being relocated to the western side of the station. (snip) Regarding the current arrangement - once the entrance to the Tube station in the middle of the current concourse shuts, there won't as you say be a completely covered route - but it's almost completely covered. Look at this bird's eye view - the building with the 'King's Cross' label imposed on it is actually the (fairly) new wide stairway entrance down into the Tube station. The actual distance between that and the existing canopy is pretty miniscule (the temporary structure that appears in between them is no longer there). (snip) "This bird's eye view" being the following link that I forgot to include, sorry: http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?cp...scene=12453916 |
#39
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Mr Thant wrote:
(see also the ELL, which opens "June 2010" but I would bet money will be carrying passengers by the end of this year) Incidentally, Network Rail are currently advertising for signallers at New Cross Gate, presumably for the ELL. Cheers, Barry |
#40
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In message
, at 06:11:37 on Mon, 26 Jan 2009, Mizter T remarked: The entire front wall of the station. In between the hoops of the arches? Or slightly inside (north) of that. The whole main shed is airside. The whole design does seem to be based on the majority of passengers being sent outdoors as soon as they arrive, which is bonkers. I'm trying to think of other stations that employ a similar arrangement but can't. Is this whole western concourse scheme a bit wonky then? We are looking for stations with not much between the barrier line and the outside world. Luton Airport Parkway's a bit like that. Or slightly more extreme: Loughborough, where the exit from the barriers is straight into the open carpark. -- Roland Perry |
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