The Anonymous Widower

Will St.Pancras Cope With More Trains On Thameslink And Eurostar?

This lunchtime I walked through St. Pancras station from the entrance by Kings Cross station on Euston Road, through the Underground ticket hall and the shopping mall past the Eurostar Entrance and exit to get a train on Thameslink.

It is a long walk, but if you want to catch Thameslink after arriving in the area on a 30 bus, it’s the shortest way. When Thameslink had a station on the Pentonville Road it was just a short walk through the passages at the bus stop direct to the Thameslink platforms.

What made matters worse was that a Eurostar train had just arrived and the ticket hall and shopping mall were teeming with passengers and masses of luggage. After all it was Friday and the time was about that, where early morning trains from Paris and Brussels will arrive.

The Thameslink station wasn’t busy, but at this time there are only about half-a-dozen trains an hour each way through the station.

But in 2018, there will be twenty four trains an hour each way for a lot of the day.

As by then, Eurostar or other operators should be running to Amsterdam and Cologne, these will be delivering a whole lot more passengers into the station.

So I can’t help feeling that St. Pancras will be an incredibly crowded station.

I’m probably lucky in that I can pick up Thameslink at London Bridge by using a 141 bus or perhaps at Farringdon using a 56.

If the Thameslink station had been built as an island station with escalators at more than one place, the problems would have been mitigated, as I said in this post. I won’t withdraw my concluding paragraph in that post yet.

St. Pancras is very much a fur coat and no knickers station!

Show on top and draughty and lacking at the bottom!

It’s up to Thameslink and Network Rail to convince me to do so.

August 15, 2014 - Posted by | Transport/Travel | , ,

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