Before GOBlin Electrification – Upper Holloway
I went to Upper Holloway station on my way to Waitrose.
It is not a grand station, being just two ramps and staircases from the Holloway Road to two more than adequate tidy platforms. It is not unlike Crouch Hill station.
At present there are roadworks outside, as the road bridge over the railway is being replaced. I suspect that this project will have to be completed before electrification through the station is started. Obviously, when the new bridge is finished it will have sufficient headroom for the overhead line equipment.
Upper Holloway isn’t an official interchange but as the station is in middle of a slope between Archway and Holloway Road stations, which eases walking in one direction, it can sometimes be a useful interchange.
But the station will need improvements to its step-free access.
August 15, 2015 Posted by AnonW | News | Before GOBlin Electrification, Electrification, Gospel Oak And Barking Line, Upper Holloway Station | Leave a comment
Before GOBlin Electrification – Harringay Green Lanes
To get to the Gospel Oak to Barking Line, I get a 141 bus from outside my house to Harringay Green Lanes station.
It is another tidy station serving a retail park on the site of the old Harringay stadium. Like most of the stations on the line, there are no lifts and the two platforms are served by stairs and ramps.
Other than the inadequate step-free access, note the following about the station.
- The platforms are not unduly long, but there would appear to be foundations from previous ones, that were longer.
- The bridge although obviously sound, probably needs a bit of work to bring it up to the required visual standard.
- The station is an out of station interchange to Harringay station and work could be done to make the walking route easier. I estimate that the distance is about 50% longer than the Hackney Downs/Central Link.
- There is a lot of commercial and retail use in the area, that may be redeveloped.
Note too, that the Piccadilly Line crosses underneath and there is a long distance between the stations either side on that line. No plans exist to create an interchange, but it is a station, where that should never be ruled out.
This is a Google Map showing the area around the two Harringay stations.
I think that by 2050, Harringay Green Lanes station will be very different.
August 15, 2015 Posted by AnonW | Transport/Travel | Before GOBlin Electrification, Electrification, Gospel Oak And Barking Line, Harringay Green Lanes Station | 7 Comments
About This Blog
What this blog will eventually be about I do not know.
But it will be about how I’m coping with the loss of my wife and son to cancer in recent years and how I manage with being a coeliac and recovering from a stroke. It will be about travel, sport, engineering, food, art, computers, large projects and London, that are some of the passions that fill my life.
And hopefully, it will get rid of the lonely times, from which I still suffer.
Why Anonymous? That’s how you feel at times.
Charities
Useful Links
Top Posts
- Jamie Oliver's Fish Pie
- Electric Freight: A Solution To The WCML Capacity Conundrum
- Google AI Is Using This Blog
- US Government Sends Stop Work Order To All Offshore Wind Projects Under Construction
- Where Should You Travel On An Elizabeth Line Train?
- Life-Saving Baby Incubators Uused In Ukraine Pass The NHS Test
- Bollard Advertising
- Back To The Future With BYD Double-Deck Buses
- Can Toddlers Get Uncomplicated Pancolonic Diverticular Disease?
- The Automatic Splitting And Joining Of Trains
WordPress Admin
-
Join 1,883 other subscribers
Archives
Categories
- Advertising Architecture Art Australia Banks Battery-Electric Trains BBC Buses Cambridge Coeliac/Gluten-Free Construction COVID-19 Crossrail Death Decarbonisation Design Development Docklands Light Railway Driving East Coast Main Line Electrification Elizabeth Line Energy Engineering Entertainment Floating Wind Power Flying Football France Freight Germany Global Warming/Zero-Carbon Good Design Gospel Oak And Barking Line Greater Anglia Great Western Railway Heathrow Airport High Speed Two Highview Power Hydrogen-Powered Trains Innovation Internet Ipswich Town King's Cross Station Law Liverpool London London Overground London Underground Manchester Marks and Spencer Network Rail New Stations Offshore Wind Power Olympics Phones Politics Project Management Religion Research Scotland Shopping Solar Power Stations Step-Free Stroke Television Thameslink The Netherlands Trains United States Walking Weather Wind Power Zopa
Tweets
Tweets by VagueShot




















