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Post by Deleted on Aug 30, 2011 21:47:15 GMT
Is it really worth reinstating Bakerloo line services to Watford Jn, spart from Nostalgia? Patronage is clearly low North of Harrow and Wealdstone. My feeling is that the LO service is adequate, and maybe better to increase the frequency of those trains instead. Why go to the extra expense of relaying 4th rail etc? Especially as the overground and underground services are integrated from a fare point of view too!
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Post by Deleted on Aug 30, 2011 22:42:06 GMT
I think part of it is motivated by the desire from some quarters to evict LO from Euston, primarily because of the forthcoming HS2 works.
If that happened, passengers on the DC line north of Wealdstone would lose their direct train to London and would have to change at Queens Park (LO trains would probably go to Stratford via Primrose Hill instead). If the Bakerloo is extended to Watford, then services are direct to Central London from every station on the DC line.
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Ben
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Post by Ben on Aug 30, 2011 23:37:12 GMT
The idea was equally about north of Harrow getting a better service, and south of it being reduced to a more reasoned level.
Between the Bakerloo taking the DC service, and XR taking the WCML slows, Euston gains a lot of breathing room for HS2 works aswell, as noted above. However, it must be remembered that even before HS2 was announced, Euston had been earmarked for massive redevelopment.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2011 2:34:07 GMT
This one has been simmering for 40+ years since BR decided in the 60s they wanted to control the service level and revenue, and booted LT out, save for about 4 peak trains per day to and from Watford Jct. Even with (nominally) 57 Class 501 3 car sets, BR could not manage the peak service into Euston. Remember there were peak extras and WJ to Broad St services via both Primrose Hill and Hampstead Heath.
The present minimalist 20 minute all day service came in the late 80s when BR wanted to scrap 501s, and the NLL services were based on 2EPB units from 85 -86 onwards; the tiny fleet of 313s were borrowed from the GN. Ken and Dave's pro-rail GLC had restored 10 minute Bakerloo service to Harrow & W'stone.
The only thing that really prevents it now is the disconnected 4th rail. Just 3 7-car sets of 72 Mk1 stock recovered from the Victoria Line, and a basic 20 minute service back to WJ could be restored now. Supply a service, demand crawls out of the woodwork!
6 tph, it was never an even 10, in the 60s it was typically 7 - 13 minute intervals. With that basic service level, demand would grow and it makes better use of an asset.
9/9 spelling error corrected. I was also told at Watford RUG meeting on 5/9 that Vic Line 72mk1 vehicles have also gone for scrap? Any information on that?
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2011 3:06:13 GMT
This one has been simmering for 40+ years since BR decided in the 60s they wanted to control the service level and revenue, and booted LT out, save for about 4 peak trains per day to and from Watford Jct. Even with (nominally) 57 Class 501 3 car sets, BR could not manage the peak service into Euston. Remember there were peak extras and WJ to Broad St services via both Primrose Hill and Hampstead Heath. The present minimalist 20 minute all day service came in the late 80s when BR waned to scrap 501s, and the NLL services were based on 2EPB units from 85 -86 onwards; the tiny fleet of 313s were borrowed from the GN. Ken and Dave's pro-rail GLC had restored 10 minute Bakerloo service to Harrow & W'stone. The only thing that really prevents it now is the disconnected 4th rail. Just 3 7-car sets of 72 Mk1 stock recovered from the Victoria Line, and a basic 20 minute service back to WJ could be restored now. Supply a service, demand crawls out of the woodwork! 6 tph, it was never an even 10, in the 60s it was typically 7 - 13 minute intervals. With that basic service level, demand would grow and it makes better use of an asset. BR started withdrawing Class 501's in 1971 with the first 2 units going to the Southern for bogie trials in connection with the PEP project. Services on the DC lines started being reduced from the early 1960's and despite London Overgrounds resurgence the service is still a shadow of it's former self with the longest train on the LO being a 4 car unit albeit sub cattle truck class with minimalist seats! Xerces Fobe
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Ben
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Post by Ben on Aug 31, 2011 3:41:30 GMT
As things stand rail will be the public choice of all three parties to favour for some time, afterall theres no way to hide oil is running out now.
If thats the case, then sooner or later, the LNWRs heyday will be relived. Just hope its sooner :/
At least theres some will out there to keep developing it now. 6 cars are recommended in the RUS, 5 elsewhere, GOBLIN linkup. Theres more work planned around Camden Road too isn't there? Pity the whole lot isn't 4th rail as that would be a natural step to full integration of services with LUL, and pity the interchanges are mostly rubbish. There you go though.
Its worth remembering that the majority of what forms the Overground now was already closed before or proposed for closure under Beeching. So in 50 years of mostly underinvestment its done pretty damn well. Lets hope the current trend continues.
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Post by alfie on Aug 31, 2011 8:25:07 GMT
It is worth re-instating. LO trains up there were pretty full when I went there off-peak yesterday.
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Post by mrjrt on Aug 31, 2011 11:15:35 GMT
From what I've seen renewals around Watford High Street the disconnected 4th rail has gone now.
...my preference will still be for the LO service to be extended to 6 cars and increased to 4tph off peak and 6tph peak rather than a Bakerloo (re)extension. I'd settle for Watford-Stratford services, but ideally I'd like to see Watford Junction-New Cross services running on DC all the way.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2011 12:10:34 GMT
From what I've seen renewals around Watford High Street the disconnected 4th rail has gone now. If the Croxley Link gets the green light it will only require the 4th rail to be reinstated between Harrow & Wealdstone and the Watford High Street junction. Xerces Fobe
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Ben
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Post by Ben on Aug 31, 2011 17:32:56 GMT
6tph Overground plus whatever the Bakerloo is doing in peak times is a large provision between Queens Park and Harrow. Very large, especially if the DC is running 6 carriages.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2011 19:22:51 GMT
From what I've seen renewals around Watford High Street the disconnected 4th rail has gone now. ...my preference will still be for the LO service to be extended to 6 cars and increased to 4tph off peak and 6tph peak rather than a Bakerloo (re)extension. I'd settle for Watford-Stratford services, but ideally I'd like to see Watford Junction-New Cross services running on DC all the way. Are the DC rails still available to link the two lines?
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2011 19:50:06 GMT
The !960's AC electrifiction "did for" the DC - most of the business is really either very local or a transfer to and from other stations - note the numbers piling on at Harrow and Bushey onto the fast services.
4 Tph is probably the answer - but note the section Queens Park to Euston is much less used than say Harrow to Queens Park - capacity into Euston isnt really an issue - but capacity round the corner to Camden Road with cross London freights is.
Extending the B/loo to Watford would be a real costly waste of money - especially with a Crossrail option of extending to Watford / Tring and MK as recomended in the London and South East RUS recently.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2011 20:00:30 GMT
An alternative solution might be to reinstate the 'main-line' platforms at Hatch End (at least for the 'slow lines'), reconfigure the yard at Watford Junction, and then run a St. Albans Abbey - all stations to Watford Junction - Bushey - Hatch End - Harrow & Wealdstone - Wembley Central - Queen's Park - Euston service.
There's quite a bit of countryside ('green belt') north of Harrow & Wealdstone (well, certainly north of Headstone Lane) so, unless there are some major housing developments on a lot of the 'green belt' land, I can't see a greatly enhanced DC (or Bakerloo) line service north of Harrow generating much additional traffic at all.
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Ben
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Post by Ben on Aug 31, 2011 20:36:10 GMT
Reconstructing platforms at Willesden Junction on the slow and loop would be a useful addition too. However, this is off topic for the Bloo up north.
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Post by wildcard on Aug 31, 2011 20:43:56 GMT
I read somewhere that the B'Loo and LO have a H&S dispensation to run trains with a mismatched train to platform height - so I assume to extend the mismatch to Watford would be frowned upon ( or the extra expense of dual height platforms ) . I would go the other way and terminate the Bakerloo at Queens Park (or Stonebridge if thats easier operationally ). Increase the LO frequency to 4tph throughout the day . London Midland would then be required to add Queens Park as a stop to the Tring and MK trains (and drop Bushey in return - whats the point ! ). This would also work if LO stopped going to Euston and Watford-Stratford /Croydon etc ever came about .
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2011 21:46:35 GMT
An alternative solution might be to reinstate the 'main-line' platforms at Hatch End (at least for the 'slow lines'), reconfigure the yard at Watford Junction, and then run a St. Albans Abbey - all stations to Watford Junction - Bushey - Hatch End - Harrow & Wealdstone - Wembley Central - Queen's Park - Euston service. This would mean that the deranged councilors at Watford & St Albans would not be able to have their ridiculous, misconceived and isolated Light Rail System . Xerces Fobe
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Post by andypurk on Sept 1, 2011 0:12:31 GMT
6tph Overground plus whatever the Bakerloo is doing in peak times is a large provision between Queens Park and Harrow. Very large, especially if the DC is running 6 carriages. The Bakerloo / LO trains are busy between Harrow and London pretty much all day, although not so much at Harrow itself due to the fast alternatives. Current service is 3tph Overground, 6 tph Bakerloo to/from Harrow and 3 tph Bakerloo to/from Stonebridge Park. Swapping the 3 Stonebridge Park trains for LO trains (even if 6 car class 378s), won't actually make much different to total capacity until they get north of Harrow.
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Post by andypurk on Sept 1, 2011 0:15:43 GMT
From what I've seen renewals around Watford High Street the disconnected 4th rail has gone now. ...my preference will still be for the LO service to be extended to 6 cars and increased to 4tph off peak and 6tph peak rather than a Bakerloo (re)extension. I'd settle for Watford-Stratford services, but ideally I'd like to see Watford Junction-New Cross services running on DC all the way. Are the DC rails still available to link the two lines? No, there is a gap of a couple of miles from Highbury and Islington to around Primrose Hill.
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Post by andypurk on Sept 1, 2011 0:21:46 GMT
An alternative solution might be to reinstate the 'main-line' platforms at Hatch End (at least for the 'slow lines'), reconfigure the yard at Watford Junction, and then run a St. Albans Abbey - all stations to Watford Junction - Bushey - Hatch End - Harrow & Wealdstone - Wembley Central - Queen's Park - Euston service. There won't be any capacity on the slow lines to do this, at least until HS2 takes some trains away. There isn't really, there is housing either side of the line all the way to Hatch End (which has more housing nearby than Northwood Hills, for example). Carpenters Park does have a bit of unbuilt on the land away from the immediate station, but the final section Bushey to Watford has plenty of housing and shops for demand.
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Post by andypurk on Sept 1, 2011 0:26:20 GMT
I read somewhere that the B'Loo and LO have a H&S dispensation to run trains with a mismatched train to platform height - so I assume to extend the mismatch to Watford would be frowned upon ( or the extra expense of dual height platforms ) . I don't think that there is anything special about the platform heights or any special dispensation. There are lines around the country with a larger step than the compromise height seen here. There is still a step down from the LO services north of Harrow. Bushey's London Midland services are quite busy and you would need more than 4tph out to Harrow to keep up with the demand of current 9tph seen at the moment.
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slugabed
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Post by slugabed on Sept 1, 2011 7:11:22 GMT
I don't think that there is anything special about the platform heights or any special dispensation. There are lines around the country with a larger step than the compromise height seen here. Clapham Jct. Platforms 16 and 17 for instance...
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Post by norbitonflyer on Sept 1, 2011 9:46:49 GMT
I don't think that there is anything special about the platform heights or any special dispensation. There are lines around the country with a larger step than the compromise height seen here. Clapham Jct. Platforms 16 and 17 for instance... However, I recall that the Clapham Junction stop had to be removed from Virgin Cross Country services because Voyagers did not have "grandfather" rights to stop at stations with such a big gap. Whther this was a factor in their eventual disappearance from that route I wouldn't know. My only trip to date on a Voyager was on a Travelcard! (Olympia to East Croydon) There are plenty of other places with compromise height platforms, e.g. Acton Town, Ealing Common, the Uxbridge branch.
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Post by andypurk on Sept 1, 2011 10:42:13 GMT
Clapham Jct. Platforms 16 and 17 for instance... However, I recall that the Clapham Junction stop had to be removed from Virgin Cross Country services because Voyagers did not have "grandfather" rights to stop at stations with such a big gap. Whther this was a factor in their eventual disappearance from that route I wouldn't know. My only trip to date on a Voyager was on a Travelcard! (Olympia to East Croydon) I think it was more due to the Voyagers being too long to fit into Platform 17 (the rear of a Voyager would be off the platform due to the longer coaches). After all, the class 377/2 wouldn't have had "grandfather" rights either but they still stop despite the large gap and step down. Indeed.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 1, 2011 12:21:22 GMT
This would mean that the deranged councilors at Watford & St Albans would not be able to have their ridiculous, misconceived and isolated Light Rail System.
The LRT scheme is going ahead. It's not ridiculous or misconceived and will eventually extend beyond the Abbey Station and also beyond Watford Junction.
Also, on the suggestions by others of platform reopenings on the slow lines. The only extra stop that might be introduced in the near future is at Queens Park where platforms already exist. They require lengthening to 12-car.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 1, 2011 14:11:29 GMT
This would mean that the deranged councilors at Watford & St Albans would not be able to have their ridiculous, misconceived and isolated Light Rail System.The LRT scheme is going ahead. It's not ridiculous or misconceived and will eventually extend beyond the Abbey Station and also beyond Watford Junction. As I have stated before on this Forum I am a great advocate of Light Rail Systems and Tramways and really like the SF MUNI and Boston T Green Line. The St Albans scheme was founded because no money could be found to finance the installation of a loop at Bricket Wood station. The LRT will remove any chance of a through services to London via Watford Junction! Extensions at the St Albans end of the line will be restricted due to the narrow streets, steep hills and a lot of historic buildings. An extension to Hatfield would be a good idea but why not use heavy rail instead as there would be then many potential uses for the line. An extension beyond Watford Junction running to Watford High down the DC lines was one of the more loony ideas that were proposed. To get to the centre of Watford lot of investment would be required in order to build a bridge/subway to cross the WCML and then along the streets to Watford; all this when there was no enough finance for a loop at Bricket Wood. Assuming the Croxley Link gets the go ahead then extend it to cross the WCML and run to St Albans & Hatfield. This trains would be new S Stock not German trams rescued on the trip to the scrap yard; yet another one of the loony ideas! Xerces Fobe
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Post by Hassaan on Sept 1, 2011 19:00:34 GMT
I don't think that there is anything special about the platform heights or any special dispensation. There are lines around the country with a larger step than the compromise height seen here. Clapham Jct. Platforms 16 and 17 for instance... The gap on Platform 4 at Southall is enormous.
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Post by DrOne on Sept 1, 2011 22:46:56 GMT
Poor Bakerloo! I'm still reeling from Glom's damning verdict in the RIPaS section: the Bakerloo is the unwanted, retarded step child of the Tube. Perhaps the time has come for the powers that be to re-vamp the Bakerloo beyond faithful station restorations? Aside from the long-proposed-long-unrealised extension into southeast London, the desire to re-work Euston does present an opportunity to raise the line's profile. At the northern end, the line could and should be re-extended to Watford Jn to co-incide roughly with new signalling and stock and, ideally a southern extension to say, Lewisham. Displaced LO stock can be used elsewhere and Euston will gain a bit of space for other services. Finally I do find the service imbalances across undergound lines rather interesting. On one hand there is the District, the central section of which needs to be relieved of the traffic from some of its western branches. On the other hand we have the Bakerloo which requires trains to turn well short of H&W because of insufficient traffic levels. Is this a function of the over-concentration of LU lines in the NW london area (Piccadilly, Central, Metropolitan, Bakerloo, Jubilee and Northern branches all serve the area) or failure to evenly allocate branches to these lines at an earlier stage?
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Ben
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Post by Ben on Sept 2, 2011 3:50:51 GMT
I'm sure a rather heavy book could be written on this subject, but it could probably be summised into just 'history'. The District (and thus the LERs) had London domination as their goal, whereas the Met had grander ambitions further north. You could speculate that Londons position in the South of England also helped indirectly, as the railways going north were after long distance traffic primarily, whereas the Southern was far more interested in commuter traffic. The Southern was thus composed of a tangle of lines from its constituants, whereas railways the other side of the river were more corridors. Who knows. Journey time plays a part though for the Bakerloo.
Youre right though Doc, emminantly sensible to integrate extensions with new stock. Watford to Hayes is an extremely long journey! Hope to make it though before I'm only 6 foot underground...
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Post by mrjrt on Sept 2, 2011 10:44:19 GMT
If the Croxley Link gets the green light it will only require the 4th rail to be reinstated between Harrow & Wealdstone and the Watford High Street junction. The Croxley link wouldn't require 4th rail from Harrow...it'd only require it from Watford High St. Junction, surely? 6tph Overground plus whatever the Bakerloo is doing in peak times is a large provision between Queens Park and Harrow. Very large, especially if the DC is running 6 carriages. I agree the Bakerloo plus an improved LO would be an over-provision, the solution to which is to cut the Bakerloo back to Willesden Junction. The problem there is that it would still have to share track to Queens Park, so you either cut the service back to Queens Park, or extend the tunnels from Queens Park to Willesden Junction. It's simpler if you accept some shared running though, as stated elsewhere...swapping Bakerloo trains for LO trains would be like for like capacity-wise. My preference would be to extend from Willesden Junction either up to Finchley Central via Brent Cross then taking over a branch, or to extend south west and either take over the Ealing Broadway branch of the Central, or to add to the proposed Park Royal interchange (Bakerloo, Central, Piccadilly) thence continuing down that way. London Midland would then be required to add Queens Park as a stop to the Tring and MK trains (and drop Bushey in return - whats the point ! ). This would also work if LO stopped going to Euston and Watford-Stratford /Croydon etc ever came about . You couldn't cut the Bushey stops...it's essentially Watford South Station, and the amount of congestion through Watford town centre you'd add by forcing passengers to use Watford Junction would not go down well at all (not to mention the increased ticket costs!). Given that everything bar freight on the slow lines stops at Watford Junction, then an additional stop at Bushey costs little, versus Harrow, where trains are running at line speed by that point. The !960's AC electrifiction "did for" the DC - most of the business is really either very local or a transfer to and from other stations - note the numbers piling on at Harrow and Bushey onto the fast services. Indeed. In an ideal world, we'd rearrange the tracks so the DC and Slow lines were adjacent and paired by direction so trains could run 6 or so stops then run fast to Euston (say, Tring-Watford, then fast, and Watford-Harrow then fast, Harrow-Willesden then fast, Willesden-Camden Road slow). Essentially, my model is the Met line, with the Jubilee filling the role of the LO services. 4 Tph is probably the answer - but note the section Queens Park to Euston is much less used than say Harrow to Queens Park - capacity into Euston isnt really an issue - but capacity round the corner to Camden Road with cross London freights is. Yup. That freight needs to go elsewhere, even if that somewhere is continuing on the NLL through Hampstead. It already has the path on the NLL...it'd only impinge through services from the Goblin, which whilst an important goal to strive from, are lower priority than services (marginally) closer to central London. Extending the B/loo to Watford would be a real costly waste of money - especially with a Crossrail option of extending to Watford / Tring and MK as recomended in the London and South East RUS recently. Don't get me started on that...I'd much prefer a Willesden-Euston-TCR-Waterloo-Clapham scheme than a Crossrail branch that should by all rights be taking over the Chiltern service to Aylesbury via Princes Risborough. Are the DC rails still available to link the two lines? No, there is a gap of a couple of miles from Highbury and Islington to around Primrose Hill. ...but of course, there are the two missing lines directly above them that will be restored in the mid-term. That gives you Willesden-Gospel Oak-Camden Road-Stratford on AC, and Willesden-Primrose Hill-Camden Road-Dalston on DC. This would mean that the deranged councilors at Watford & St Albans would not be able to have their ridiculous, misconceived and isolated Light Rail System.The LRT scheme is going ahead. It's not ridiculous or misconceived and will eventually extend beyond the Abbey Station and also beyond Watford Junction. As I have stated before on this Forum I am a great advocate of Light Rail Systems and Tramways and really like the SF MUNI and Boston T Green Line. The St Albans scheme was founded because no money could be found to finance the installation of a loop at Bricket Wood station. The LRT will remove any chance of a through services to London via Watford Junction! Extensions at the St Albans end of the line will be restricted due to the narrow streets, steep hills and a lot of historic buildings. An extension to Hatfield would be a good idea but why not use heavy rail instead as there would be then many potential uses for the line. An extension beyond Watford Junction running to Watford High down the DC lines was one of the more loony ideas that were proposed. To get to the centre of Watford lot of investment would be required in order to build a bridge/subway to cross the WCML and then along the streets to Watford; all this when there was no enough finance for a loop at Bricket Wood. Assuming the Croxley Link gets the go ahead then extend it to cross the WCML and run to St Albans & Hatfield. This trains would be new S Stock not German trams rescued on the trip to the scrap yard; yet another one of the loony ideas! It is a crazy scheme as Xerces says. For the sake of a primitive signalling token (seriously, how expensive could a track circuit that only shows a green signal when a train is in the other loop be?) Any money spent on tram extensions through Watford Town centre would be far better spent on diving under the WCML so the LO can operate a through service. Met trains would require DC installed, but LO trains already have pantographs available. When you think of trams to Watford town centre you realise how backwards we have come from the Met's plans to extend from their current station into Watford Town centre then under Clarendon Road up to Watford Junction then up the branch to St. Albans!
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Post by andypurk on Sept 2, 2011 11:45:44 GMT
Poor Bakerloo! I'm still reeling from Glom's damning verdict in the RIPaS section: the Bakerloo is the unwanted, retarded step child of the Tube. Perhaps the time has come for the powers that be to re-vamp the Bakerloo beyond faithful station restorations? Aside from the long-proposed-long-unrealised extension into southeast London, the desire to re-work Euston does present an opportunity to raise the line's profile. At the northern end, the line could and should be re-extended to Watford Jn to co-incide roughly with new signalling and stock and, ideally a southern extension to say, Lewisham. Displaced LO stock can be used elsewhere and Euston will gain a bit of space for other services. Although you won't displace much LO stock, unless you want to remove any service from South Hampstead and Kilburn High Road. There is actually quite a high demand from Euston for the LO services and not everyone arrives by the Underground. Nearly every line has trains which stop short once outside the central area. Of the lines that you mention, the Northern is probably the only exception (and even here there are two northern branches to service excluding the Mill Hill East Shuttle). The Jubilee stop short at Wembley Park (and occasionally Willesden Green and West Hampstead), the Central stop short at White City and Newbury Park (amongst others), the Piccadilly at Northfields and Arnos Grove, etc.
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