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Post by stew001 on Jul 13, 2008 17:33:49 GMT
Ok I emailed TfL about this and they seemed more confused than me... After reading articles and information about the Chelsea-Hackney line it appears to be that they dont know to either build it to tube standards or National Rail standards. I know that London Underground abandoned the plan but Cross London Rail ltd are only promoters and they will be under TfL control soon. Also on the safeguarding leaflet from Crossrail it has Piccadilly Circus on the map and i know there can only be a stop there if the Chelsea-Hackney line is built to tube standards. So do you think/hope it will built to tube standards or National Rail? I hope it is built to tube standards there seems to be so many more benefits. Thanks alll
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Post by Deleted on Jul 13, 2008 18:18:38 GMT
Also on the safeguarding leaflet from Crossrail it has Piccadilly Circus on the map and i know there can only be a stop there if the Chelsea-Hackney line is built to tube standards. Why couldn't Piccadilly Circus accommodate mainline trains?
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Post by cetacean on Jul 13, 2008 21:00:40 GMT
We've been discussing this very issue towards the end of this thread. I think the answer is "because alwaystouchout says so". I think it's a bit early for the gauge of the tunnels to have been decided. Edit: fixing link
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Post by stew001 on Jul 13, 2008 23:59:41 GMT
Also on the safeguarding leaflet from Crossrail it has Piccadilly Circus on the map and i know there can only be a stop there if the Chelsea-Hackney line is built to tube standards. Why couldn't Piccadilly Circus accommodate mainline trains? Im not 100% sure why Piccadilly Circus can only be a station on the line if it is built to tube standards i think it is do do with the amount of space within the station... but apart from that im not 100% sure.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 14, 2008 8:01:16 GMT
I hope it is built to tube standards there seems to be so many more benefits. Benefits, such as banging your head on the low ceiling? I doubt we would see a whole new tube profile line - just extensions. However, there are other small/medium profile options such as Bombardier ART, Japanese linear motor metro, or even the abandoned Space Train concept that allow for smaller cost-saving tunnels than NR loading gauge but with much more comfortable interiors than tube trains.
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Post by Chris M on Jul 14, 2008 8:20:28 GMT
I hope it is built to tube standards there seems to be so many more benefits. Benefits, such as banging your head on the low ceiling? I'm guessing he was referring to the design standards and/or signalling/headway standards of a tube (metro) line as opposed to a suburban NR line rather than the tunnel diameter.
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Post by max on Jul 14, 2008 10:11:10 GMT
I've always thought that although the line is supposed to serve Chelsea, it doesn't do that very well, with a big gap between Chelsea and Parson's Green stations.
More stations = more money, but if the line were diverted slightly, there is an obvious site for a station on Fulham Road near the hospital, and then the line could capture the District Line at Fulham Broadway rather than Parson's Green. I don't know how they would prune back the District Line service, but doing it this way there would be no need at all for District Line main line trains to serve the stub, so all that would be needed would be Edgware Road to Fulham Broadway shuttle.
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Post by cetacean on Jul 14, 2008 10:53:02 GMT
I did once do the calculations for running via Earls Court (above ground to West Brompton) so you can get rid of the whole branch. I can't remember the exact number, but it adds a negligible distance to the length of the tunnel.
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Post by amershamsi on Jul 14, 2008 11:09:32 GMT
I hope it is built to tube standards there seems to be so many more benefits. Benefits, such as banging your head on the low ceiling? well, if you would not stop growing... I've always thought that although the line is supposed to serve Chelsea, it doesn't do that very well, with a big gap between Chelsea and Parson's Green stations. There's plans for one - Kings Road. Imperial Wharf would be good. The problem is price, of course. I can imagine that if the credit crunch turns into a depression, we might see a lot more big civil engineering projects, however the depression deep enough to require 30s style building isn't likely.
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Post by stew001 on Jul 14, 2008 19:20:14 GMT
I hope it is built to tube standards there seems to be so many more benefits. Benefits, such as banging your head on the low ceiling? I doubt we would see a whole new tube profile line - just extensions. However, there are other small/medium profile options such as Bombardier ART, Japanese linear motor metro, or even the abandoned Space Train concept that allow for smaller cost-saving tunnels than NR loading gauge but with much more comfortable interiors than tube trains. NOOO. If money was actually invested into the line it could be a turning point for the tube. I mean the jubilee line extension proved how good a tube line can be if money is invested into it. Yes tube trains are smaller but you dont hit your head on celling. London Underground could design new trains to actually be nice but again its money. Im sorry people say the tube is not nice because its hot and cramped well yes of course it is any underground line would be unless there was air conditioning. Apart from things the tube cant control such as the heat, the tube is much better run , cheaper, easier to use than any National rail service in my opinion.
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Post by cetacean on Jul 14, 2008 20:01:08 GMT
Er, the Jubilee Line Extension is full to capacity after less than 10 years. It's a brilliant illustration of why building new lines to tube standards is a waste of money. For a small additional cost it could have been built with larger tunnels* and longer platforms and we wouldn't be having to build Crossrail to relieve it.
(* obviously it couldn't have been an extension of the Jubilee if this had happened)
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Post by edwin on Jul 14, 2008 20:18:07 GMT
Er, the Jubilee Line Extension is full to capacity after less than 10 years. It's a brilliant illustration of why building new lines to tube standards is a waste of money. For a small additional cost it could have been built with larger tunnels* and longer platforms and we wouldn't be having to build Crossrail to relieve it. (* obviously it couldn't have been an extension of the Jubilee if this had happened) Your last point contradicts your first... If it wasn't an extension of the Jubilee line then it probably wouldn't have existed. And it's not at full capacity, since it has rubbish signalling at present.
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Post by Chris M on Jul 14, 2008 20:42:30 GMT
The trains are full to capacity and more. Have you tried getting on an eastbound train in the evening?
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Post by Deleted on Jul 14, 2008 20:53:22 GMT
Apart from things the tube cant control such as the heat, the tube is much better run , cheaper, easier to use than any National rail service in my opinion. I'm glad someone likes us! But the size of the trains is irrelevant to the quality of the service - SSR trains are the same size as mainline trains, so it still makes sense to have full size tunnels if possible.
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Post by amershamsi on Jul 14, 2008 21:23:56 GMT
Space train sounds like a good idea - big trains, small tunnels.
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Post by stew001 on Jul 14, 2008 22:45:46 GMT
The trains are full to capacity and more. Have you tried getting on an eastbound train in the evening? Yes quite often, its the same a most of the tube lines in the peak. The other thing if it was built to tube standards money could be invested into other things such as more stations where necessary as there would be a massive gap between Parsons Green and Chelsea also in other places such as between Homerton and Leytonstone. The platforms should be built so it can accommodate 12 car trains. When Crossrail is built and running it will run at full capacity eventually then everyone will find faults with it. The jubilee line is not at full capasity yet at all. Once it switches to ATO the service would be much increased and therefore more trains per hour and therefore more capacity. Also Crossrail has not been built to help the jubilee line extension, yes it will provide congestion relive but thats it. To be honest I think the current alignment might be scrapped anyway.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 15, 2008 4:17:01 GMT
You have to also consider that we're building lines for the next 100 years and the population is going to get older and probably fatter. This means bigger seats or more standing room, climate control, lifts from street to platform level, and so on. A tube line can't give you the first two in any decent amount.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 15, 2008 10:21:45 GMT
I mean the jubilee line extension proved how good a tube line can be if money is invested into it. Sorry, but that is a bit of a "trainspotter lacking reality" comment! The Jubilee Line was the second most expensive metro per km ever constructed, yet thanks to restrictive signalling is already packed to capacity. It was only built to tube profile due to it being an extension. By the way, the most expensive metro per km, the Oedo Line in Tokyo was also small profile! Smaller profile tunnels and in particular shorter platforms are generally cheaper to construct than large profile (NR), however smaller profile trains cannot hold as many passengers. High train throughput (30tph+) is possible for both loading gauges if the line has good signalling and is self contained. However if the line is not self contained, and has to conform to NR signalling standards then the train throughput will be lower (circa 24tph).
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Post by Deleted on Jul 15, 2008 20:30:57 GMT
I dont see why we dont just built a deep level SSL. After all they thought of doing it years ago. But built it out to somewhere useful either side of London. Do not however mix it with other SSL, Tube or NR systems. Keep it like the Victoria and built stations that not only can cope with crowds on the platforms but to and from street level. Stratford and West Ham are good examples, yes the platforms can cop but the stations can't already and its onlt going to get worse at these two stations.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 1, 2008 1:00:34 GMT
I think favouring small profile and self-contained lines is 'tunnel vision' as far as the big transport picture is concerned. It's fine for pure metro systems, but not everyone's journey begins or ends in Central London; the tube also fulfils another function - to form part of a longer journey. Currently cross London journeys are mostly a nightmare, particularly for anyone with luggage. However the problem seems to me to be that Crossrail has drifted in scope.
Thameslink not only gets people from further away into more parts of the city without interchange, it gets people right through to the other side. If you take the longer distance journeys out of the tube and onto longer distance through routes you gain capacity not only in the trains, but also in the interchanges and termini. Plus many London NR routes are constrained not by track capacity but by terminal capacity.
The main problem I see with Crossrail 1 is that the project has been too preoccupied with being self contained at the expense of the greater benefits we've already seen on Thameslink. The core route should have been Colchester to Reading as a minimum, Ebbsfleet or beyond on the south east branch, and maybe High Wycombe or Milton Keynes to the North West - giving a proper destination for all those Paddington terminators.
I find the argument about people clogging up platforms waiting longer for a train to their destination somewhat spurious - the platforms are huge anyway, but if you need to, spend the money on bigger platforms and you don't need all that interchange capacity at Paddington or Liverpool Street just so people can pile off one train and onto another going in the same direction!
IMO Crossrail 2 is a disappointment with an Epping terminus. It needs to connect onward to the main line at Chelmsford, and/or have a link through to Stansted, otherwise what is the point in converting miles of central line to a new loading gauge, other than a slightly quicker journey for a few Epping folk? I can't remember if there were any definite service plans at the other end but I'd say Basingstoke and Guildford as a minimum. Perhaps Gatwick too. I'd also favour a plan that provided an interchange at Clapham, rather than using the wimbledon route.
As originally conceived, a regional through route, the NR gauge is essential for both projects, but as they've become scaled back to more limited routes it is hard to see what the point of the NR gauge is, other than greater capacity. On Crossrail 2 in particular, if it can't connect Chelmsford and Stansted to Guildford and Gatwick, and it's just going to join the Wimbledon branch to the Epping branch, maybe it should be a tube line.
All this said, I'm pleased to support Crossrail in its current form as the only major transport project likely to happen anytime soon. Apart from anything else it's much better than money spent bailing out more banks.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 4, 2008 18:31:19 GMT
Basically they are so worried that 'performance pollution' is mess up Crossrail that they don't want to extend it any futher. Tho that says to me they expect any other laines services to be so late that it will trnasfer across London via Crossrail and affect large parts of the network. I can see there point.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 15, 2008 20:01:45 GMT
Basically they are so worried that 'performance pollution' is mess up Crossrail that they don't want to extend it any futher. Tho that says to me they expect any other laines services to be so late that it will trnasfer across London via Crossrail and affect large parts of the network. I can see there point. I apologise for such a long winded post before! I understand the 'performance pollution' argument. However to me, it negates most of the benefit of having an NR profile line in the first place. In the case of Chelsea to Hackney, it's very hard to see how a mainline profile could be justified unless the line connects into mainline services. Finally, if 'performance pollution' is such a problem, how does Thameslink manage to function most of the time? Isn't it so very British to essentially accept poor performance to the extent that your flagship project is designed around it? They wouldn't be impressed in Tokyo!
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Post by slugabed on Dec 15, 2008 22:02:45 GMT
[/quote]
Finally, if 'performance pollution' is such a problem, how does Thameslink manage to function most of the time? Isn't it so very British to essentially accept poor performance to the extent that your flagship project is designed around it? They wouldn't be impressed in Tokyo![/quote]
As an occasional user of Thameslink "suburban" service (Sutton loop) I know that "performance pollution" is an issue.Southbound trains particularly are often allowed up to 7 mins at Herne Hill (judged by the departure describer) to make up lost time and/or await a clear path across the main LC&DR line.(Though,to be fair,the delays seem shorter since the Eurostars went). There will perhaps always be a trade-off on through-London routes such as Thameslink or any planned for the future,between the benefits of greater variety of destinations and better stock utilisation on the one hand,and the dangers of minor delays escalating over a whole region,on the other. Thameslink seems to have squared the circle by allowing generous make-up times at a place where delays are likely.This is perhaps a more pragmatic solution than throwing ones hands up in horror and insisting on an entirely self-contained route!!
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Post by singaporesam on Dec 16, 2008 14:30:45 GMT
Why restrict to NR gauge. To deliver the most bang for the buck the logical thing would be to adopt Chinese type A metro trains , or possibly go to 3.2m wide like HK and Singapore . NR gauge is a rather narrow minded approach IMHO.
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Post by amershamsi on Dec 16, 2008 14:50:33 GMT
Thameslink not only gets people from further away into more parts of the city without interchange, it gets people right through to the other side. If you take the longer distance journeys out of the tube and onto longer distance through routes you gain capacity not only in the trains, but also in the interchanges and termini. Plus many London NR routes are constrained not by track capacity but by terminal capacity. Which is why Crossrail seeks to allievate terminals.MK is too far really - Reading is too far, as is Maidenhead. With a mix of inner- and outer-suburban journeys, you need compromise stock (see the problem with S stock - trying to do both metro and inner suburban causing all sorts of compromises). There does need to be more branches in the West, but the eastern ones are going to be overloaded from very early on, even with the additional 6tph Liverpool Street to Gidea Park stoppers - there wasn't meant to be two. Colchester as a Crossrail destination is to put it bluntly, stupid. You'd have to have a junction with both fasts and slow out of Liverpool Street, you'd cripple any chance of upgrading frequencies in the core, and would be trying to do too many things at once. As for Ebbsfleet, given that Dartford would need a massive amount of work, and Abbey Wood is the wrong way around, I can't see why it would be a good idea!more capacity, congestion relief (better than Crossrail 1's) on the Central line. IIRC it's one bridge that would need changing, and maybe a couple of platforms - the line was originally NR. Chelmsford and Stansted were suggested by LOIS, but IIRC it was a Chelmsford-Epping-Stansted service. Not too hard to change. Like Reading re-signalling, they don't want it on there.Guildford is the only sane one there - Guildford and Horsham via Epsom is pretty OK if Stansted and Chelmsford (not included as different scheme) are on there. Gatwick is absurd!The only branch I think has been cut back from the original route is Maidenhead instead of Reading (and the dropping of Aylesbury as it was stupid). Crossrail 2 was trying to make a Crossrail out of Chelney, to which the answer was "don't bother".current thinking suggests a tube line, as it's more flexible and can have a station at Piccadilly Circus, providing better relief.
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Post by max on Dec 16, 2008 17:55:51 GMT
One debate about Crossrail is whether it should be a suburban stopper or a semi-fast/fast regional express with a more strategic cross-country role.
The current set-up is an extremely expensive way of enabling people to have a one-seat ride from Ilford to Southall, and the claim that it is essential for London's prosperity is bizarre. Why does the future of London depend on giving a handful of east/west destinations a one-seat ride to Central London. Or depend on relieving the Central Line for that matter? Why Shenfield not Enfield? Of course, there is the one seat ride from the City to Heathrow. But that's the problem. Years of planning by career bureaucrats has resulted in something hopelessly confused and politicised. The rest of us become impatient, "just build the damn thing", but not because its necessarily the best way to spend £20 billion, but because until it gets built, nothing else will get built
So what is the best use for a Cross-London tunnel? My argument has always been that a longer distance service to regional railheads around Britain is better because there are a lot more people who want to travel from Norwich to Bristol (and their hinterland), peak and off-peak, than Brentwood to Maidenhead, and this long-distance option is the sort of journey where the train fails badly because of those blasted 18th century rail terminals in London, and people drive or fly instead.
Compare with Thameslink, which is functioning very well as a regional semi-fast service, well beyond the boundaries of London. The Sutton Loop is really there as an afterthought, no one else wanted it, and the Midland stations in North London are relatively sparse. The core service is Brighton to Bedford, but that's because that is where the wires stop. Were it not for privatisation, the wires would very likely have been progressively extended, and then you would have seen Brighton to Nottingham services as well. With Thameslink 2000, it will be interesting to see which of the proposed services prosper and which services fade away.
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Post by cetacean on Dec 16, 2008 18:42:22 GMT
Crossrail is about getting people from London's own railheads (Paddington, Stratford, Liverpool Street) to its employment/entertainment centres (West End, City, Isle of Dogs, Heathrow). It has absolutely bupkiss to do with getting people across London. The outer branches only exist because its easier operationally than not having them. Basically everywhere west of Paddington (that isn't Heathrow) and east of Isle of Dogs and Stratford is irrelevant, and losing them would reduce the utility of Crossrail by 0.0000000234%. If you approach the project on any other terms, you've completely missed the point.
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Post by max on Dec 16, 2008 19:05:35 GMT
Well, then why pick one of the least important commuter railheads in London? Apart from Marylebone, is there any other terminus than Paddington that brings fewer commuters into London? Go from Liverpool Street to Waterloo and Heathrow instead.
This is precisely my point, too many blind assertions and assumptions about the importance of Crossrail descend into hopeless confusion if they are prodded in any way.
Last time I looked, stations beyond Shenfield (Southend, Colchester, Ipswich, Norwich) etc. were bringing in more people into London than London to Shenfield. The problem here is the peak load problem. Spending £20 billion on something that is going to be useful for two hours a day doesn't make any sense, and if all we need is a Stratford to Heathrow shuttle (which I dispute) then what is going on spending all those millions on extra trains and upgrading the extra bits. Whatever the solution, it should prove to be useful 24 hours a day, not 4.
This is beginning to sound distinctly cultish, either people understand and worship Crossrail, or they are inferior beings in some way. Crossrail supporters: the Scientologists of the railway world.
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Post by cetacean on Dec 16, 2008 19:53:57 GMT
Well, then why pick one of the least important commuter railheads in London? Apart from Marylebone, is there any other terminus than Paddington that brings fewer commuters into London? Go from Liverpool Street to Waterloo and Heathrow instead. And which main line station might you pass on the way to Heathrow? And they can switch to it at Stratford. Positive cost benefit ratio of the marginal cost of said works.
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Post by max on Dec 17, 2008 7:44:54 GMT
What on earth is that supposed to mean? Clapham Junction? Well, why not. Stratford, Liverpool Street, City Thameslink, Waterloo, Clapham Junction, Feltham, Heathrow. Sounds a lot more useful to me.
Why the obsession with a Shenfield stopper, do you have shares in Amstrad or something? Increased interchanges means more pressure on Stratford and a larger station than necessary. Also, as I pointed out, a regional crossrail is more likely to be more useful to more people throughout the day, and do its bit for clearing the M25 a bit. Wider benefits.
So where did that figure of 0.0000000234% come from then? Basically, no one has a clue what the supposed benefits are, which is why I think this is getting culty. Shenfield line is the original reason for Crossrail all those years ago (I've been there since the beginning, and I was using Liverpool Street Central Line when it was in a state of collapse, its much improved now). And in the west, well nothing needs relieving, but Paddington is obvious.
If soneone would care to come up with a list of actual objectives that Crossrail is supposed to achieve, I will come up with a list of ways for doing this that would cost 1/2 the price, or dismiss the objectives as pointless.
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