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Old November 17th 09, 04:29 PM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
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Default Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speedrail hub

On Nov 12, 11:17*am, allanbonnetracy
wrote:
Presumably this would be the existing Euston station not a new one.

Building a new station when a perfectly good one exists already
strikes me as an outrageous, though not entirely untypical, big state
Labour idea.

A preference for bull**** over engineering elegance always has been a
notoriety of the big state socialist way of thinking.

As for integration, surely Euston, St Pancras and Kings Cross are
already close enough together to be considered as one station.

All it would take would be a few travelators, perhaps underground; to
sell the idea of one integrated station.

It would certainly be no worse than most airports.


IMHO it is a bit of a stretch from Euston to Kings Cross/St P.
However, Euston would be improved by having better integration with
Euston Square station. Perhaps a now subsurface ticket hall in front
of the mainline station with links to the Northern, Victoria and H&C/
Circle Lines.

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Old November 17th 09, 08:01 PM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
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Default Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speed rail hub

On Tue, 17 Nov 2009 09:29:02 -0800 (PST), E27002
wrote:

However, Euston would be improved by having better integration with
Euston Square station. Perhaps a now subsurface ticket hall in front
of the mainline station with links to the Northern, Victoria and H&C/
Circle Lines.


Yes, and a large arch at the entrance.

[Coat already on]
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Old November 18th 09, 08:19 AM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
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Default Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speedrail hub

Mr.G wrote:
On Tue, 17 Nov 2009 09:29:02 -0800 (PST), E27002
wrote:

However, Euston would be improved by having better integration with
Euston Square station. Perhaps a now subsurface ticket hall in front
of the mainline station with links to the Northern, Victoria and H&C/
Circle Lines.


Yes, and a large arch at the entrance.

[Coat already on]


Agreed. An arch would be much better than that fugly propylaeum they
used to have there that the crusties and nostalgia freaks won't shut up
about.

[flame-proof overalls standing by]

Tom
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Old November 18th 09, 12:09 PM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
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Default Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speed rail hub

Tom Barry wrote:
Mr.G wrote:
On Tue, 17 Nov 2009 09:29:02 -0800 (PST), E27002
wrote:

However, Euston would be improved by having better integration with
Euston Square station. Perhaps a now subsurface ticket hall in
front of the mainline station with links to the Northern, Victoria
and H&C/ Circle Lines.


Yes, and a large arch at the entrance.

[Coat already on]


Agreed. An arch would be much better than that fugly propylaeum they
used to have there that the crusties and nostalgia freaks won't shut
up about.

[flame-proof overalls standing by]


Since Euston/St Pancras is to be the gateway to The North and the gateway to
The Continent, how about a Wembley-style arch stretching from Euston to St
Pancras, with gondolas hanging from it? That would show them uppity
Wuppertalers, and I think it might be cheaper than a subterranean
travelator.

--
We are the Strasbourg. Referendum is futile.


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Old November 18th 09, 12:21 PM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
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Default Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speed rail hub

On Wed, 18 Nov 2009 13:09:54 -0000, "Basil Jet"
wrote:

Tom Barry wrote:
Mr.G wrote:
On Tue, 17 Nov 2009 09:29:02 -0800 (PST), E27002
wrote:

However, Euston would be improved by having better integration with
Euston Square station. Perhaps a now subsurface ticket hall in
front of the mainline station with links to the Northern, Victoria
and H&C/ Circle Lines.

Yes, and a large arch at the entrance.

[Coat already on]


Agreed. An arch would be much better than that fugly propylaeum they
used to have there that the crusties and nostalgia freaks won't shut
up about.

[flame-proof overalls standing by]


Since Euston/St Pancras is to be the gateway to The North and the gateway to
The Continent, how about a Wembley-style arch stretching from Euston to St
Pancras, with gondolas hanging from it? That would show them uppity
Wuppertalers, and I think it might be cheaper than a subterranean
travelator.



Until I read your post, I doubted that it would have been possible for
anyone to come up with an even more tacky idea for Euston Road than a
21st century restaurant-and-nightclub-housing semi-replica of a
grotesque and entirely pointless 19th century propylaeum.

It now appears that I was wrong. ;-)




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Old November 18th 09, 05:17 PM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
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Default Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speedrail hub

On Wed, 18 Nov 2009, Bruce wrote:

On Wed, 18 Nov 2009 13:09:54 -0000, "Basil Jet"
wrote:

Tom Barry wrote:
Mr.G wrote:
On Tue, 17 Nov 2009 09:29:02 -0800 (PST), E27002
wrote:

However, Euston would be improved by having better integration with
Euston Square station. Perhaps a now subsurface ticket hall in
front of the mainline station with links to the Northern, Victoria
and H&C/ Circle Lines.

Yes, and a large arch at the entrance.

[Coat already on]

Agreed. An arch would be much better than that fugly propylaeum they
used to have there that the crusties and nostalgia freaks won't shut
up about.

[flame-proof overalls standing by]


Since Euston/St Pancras is to be the gateway to The North and the gateway to
The Continent, how about a Wembley-style arch stretching from Euston to St
Pancras, with gondolas hanging from it? That would show them uppity
Wuppertalers, and I think it might be cheaper than a subterranean
travelator.


Until I read your post, I doubted that it would have been possible for
anyone to come up with an even more tacky idea for Euston Road than a
21st century restaurant-and-nightclub-housing semi-replica of a
grotesque and entirely pointless 19th century propylaeum.

It now appears that I was wrong. ;-)


But it could be held up by fibreglass replica caryatids! Perhaps modelled
after the celebrated Ms Katie Price?

tom

--
A hypothesis or theory is clear, decisive, and positive, but it is
believed by no one but the man who created it. Experimental findings,
on the other hand, are messy, inexact things, which are believed by
everyone except the man who did that work. -- Harlow Shapley
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Old November 18th 09, 06:49 PM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
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Default Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speed rail hub

On Wed, 18 Nov 2009 18:17:57 +0000, Tom Anderson
wrote:
On Wed, 18 Nov 2009, Bruce wrote:
On Wed, 18 Nov 2009 13:09:54 -0000, "Basil Jet"
wrote:
Since Euston/St Pancras is to be the gateway to The North and the gateway to
The Continent, how about a Wembley-style arch stretching from Euston to St
Pancras, with gondolas hanging from it? That would show them uppity
Wuppertalers, and I think it might be cheaper than a subterranean
travelator.


Until I read your post, I doubted that it would have been possible for
anyone to come up with an even more tacky idea for Euston Road than a
21st century restaurant-and-nightclub-housing semi-replica of a
grotesque and entirely pointless 19th century propylaeum.

It now appears that I was wrong. ;-)


But it could be held up by fibreglass replica caryatids! Perhaps modelled
after the celebrated Ms Katie Price?



Oh, joy. Not. :-(

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Old November 19th 09, 02:42 AM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
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Default Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speed rail hub

Bruce writes:
grotesque and entirely pointless 19th century propylaeum.


What's wrong with propylaea (no idea how one is supposed to form the
plural...) anyway? They look kinda cool...

Always liked nice chunky gates.

-Miles

--
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Old November 19th 09, 08:10 AM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
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Default Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speed rail hub

On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 12:42:45 +0900, Miles Bader wrote:
Bruce writes:
grotesque and entirely pointless 19th century propylaeum.


What's wrong with propylaea (no idea how one is supposed to form the
plural...) anyway?



What is wrong with anything that is completely pointless?

The original served no useful purpose. It was purely a marketing
tool. It made a statement about the railway company that commissioned
it. And that's it.

Admittedly, it was a massive statement. The "Arch" became a familiar,
but ultimately pointless landmark. Then, in the 1960s, it got in the
way of turning a horrible mess of a railway station into something
that was truly fit for purpose.

It is notable that the proposal to rebuild the "Arch" includes a
nightclub and a restaurant, so the new one (if it is ever built) would
at least have some purpose. However, its heritage value will be very
limited, as to fulfil its purpose, it will almost certainly need to
have a slender structural frame clad with thin, light panels of
reconstituted stone.

The massive stone structure of the original would be ruled out on
practical and cost grounds, and only very few of the salvaged pieces
could be included. So the new one would hardly be a replica, more
like pastiche.

I doubt that it will ever happen.

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Old November 19th 09, 08:16 AM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
MIG MIG is offline
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Default Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speedrail hub

On 19 Nov, 09:10, Bruce wrote:
On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 12:42:45 +0900, Miles Bader wrote:
Bruce writes:
grotesque and entirely pointless 19th century propylaeum.


What's wrong with propylaea (no idea how one is supposed to form the
plural...) anyway? *


What is wrong with anything that is completely pointless?

The original served no useful purpose. *It was purely a marketing
tool. *It made a statement about the railway company that commissioned
it. *And that's it.

Admittedly, it was a massive statement. *The "Arch" became a familiar,
but ultimately pointless landmark. *


I've always felt the same about Canary Wharf Jubilee station, which
everyone but me seems to rave over, but which I would consider to be
an ostentatious sculpture rather than architecture.

It's a rectangular concrete hole, probably created by pumping water
out of a dock, and fails to protect its occupants from the cold in
winter. Putting a sculpture on top of it doesn't make it more fit for
purpose.


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