The Anonymous Widower

Before Crossrail 2 – A Narrow Four Track Station

As I said in my post on Brimsdown station, squeezing a four track railway through the station could be challenging.

But space can be saved, by not having any platforms on the fast lines, as in normal operation they will not be needed.

So would this be acceptable to the Health and Safety Authorities?

There is one station I use regularly, where two fast tacks run within ten metres or so of the slow platforms that I use.

That station is Shadwell station on the Docklands Light Railway, where the c2c lines into Fenchurch Street are on the other side of the viaduct. This Google Map shows the layout of tracks through the station.

Shadwell Station

Shadwell Station

I would also borrow the idea from the DLR of putting a single platform between the two slow lines.

At Shadwell too, there is no bridge, but a series of steps lead up and down to the single platform. To make the station step-free there is a single lift at the end of the platform.

Surprisingly, in 2010-11, Shadwell had ten times the passengers of Brimsdom.

So perhaps you’d put a wide subway under the tracks, with perhaps a height of two metres or whatever is normal and then connect it to the single platform using steps, escalators and just a single lift. A similar layout to this is also used at Burnham station on Crossrail.

This station design has several advantages

1. The subway could be used by those not using the train, as they went about their business.

2. Passenger gates, waiting rooms,toilets, kiosks and staff could be stationed where they are needed – On the platform!

3. No fast trains would pass platforms with people on them.

4. Only a few trains not stopping in the station would come alongside the platforms.

5. Width can be designed in where it is important for safety and operational needs. So the single platform would not be narrow and an adequate gap could be left to the fast lines.

6. A safety barrier could be used to separate the fast lines from the slow lines and the platform to cut the opportunities for suicide.

At Burnham they do get problems with the layout, when the relief (slow) lines are not working. Wikipedia says this.

Unusually for a station on the Great Western Main Line, Burnham was built with platforms that serve only the relief lines, which makes it vulnerable to losing services when engineering work closes the relief lines and leaves trains only on the main lines. Consequently the station is frequently served by a replacement bus service at night.

I suspect though that this wouldn’t be so much of a problem along the Lea Valley as there are alternative lines, which seem are connected by buses.

July 19, 2015 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | 2 Comments

Before Crossrail 2 – Brimsdown

I have a bit of a love hate relationship with Brimsdown station, despite having rarely used it as a start or end point of a train journey. It’s just that I’ve spent many minutes waiting for trains to cross the level crossing, in a car or with my bike. When I worked at Enfield Rolling Mills, I seemed that every other day, I had to wait perhaps ten minutes for a train to pass.

As you can see on a relatively quiet Sunday morning, the level crossing inconvenienced quite a few.

This Google Map shows the layout of the station and the roads around it.

Brimsdown Station

Brimsdown Station

This is going to be one station, where four-tracking and removal of the level crossing will not be easy.

I think that the four tracks could be squeezed through as there is green space on each side of the tracks, but there is so little space around the station that a bridge or an underpass for traffic would be impossible.

So I suspect the only thing to do is create alternative pedestrian and bicycle routes from one side to the other and close the level crossing.

It will not be popular!

July 19, 2015 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 3 Comments

Before Crossrail 2 – Meridian Water

Meridian Water is a large property development in North London which sits in the curve of the North Circular Road between Edmonton and Walthamstow, with the large Tesco and IKEA stores on its Southern boundary and the Edmonton incinerator to the North. Wikipedia describes the current site like this.

The Meridian Water development site is centred 1.2 km south east of the town centre of Edmonton Green. It comprises an area of approximately 0.82 km², 0.72 km² of which is land capable of development.

In economic geography the site consists largely of vacant or ailing industrial/transport use, and in natural geography is characterised by the waterways of the mid-Lea which pass through or beside it to the east: theRiver Lee Navigation, the Lee Diversion, the River Lee Flood Relief Channel, and Pymmes and Salmons Brook.

It is very much a part of North London, that is not doing its best to boost the prosperity of the city. The developers have a £1.5billion plan for the development of the site. This Google Map shows the area.

Meridian Water

Meridian Water

Most of the site is between the North Circular Road and the various rivers and canals, although a portion is on the north side of the A406. This aerial photograph with the development marked in red comes from this page on the Enfield Council web site.

Aerial View Of Meridian Water

Aerial View Of Meridian Water

What has this massive development got to do with Crossrail 2?

Note the loop in the red boundary to the top of the picture. That encloses Angel Road station, which is clearly shown on the Google Map.

Meridian Water needs good transport links and this report in the Enfield Independent describes what Enfield Council and the developers are doing about it.

Enfield Borough Council has named the firm it has chosen to turn Angel Road Rail Station into a ‘thriving’ new hub.

Atkins, a global design and engineering firm, has been chosen to design the new rail and bus terminal, which will see an increased service of four trains per hour.

It is also stated in some place that the station will be renamed Meridian Water.

As Angel Road is on the list of probable Crossrail 2 stations in the Lea Valley, only a stupid developer would not want to have their development directly linked to Crossrail 2 and all the cornucopia of destinations it brings.

I also wonder how much the developers would pay to have the upgraded Meridian Water station, as a terminus, from where trains could turn back under London.

July 19, 2015 Posted by | Transport/Travel, World | , , , , | 3 Comments

Before Crossrail 2 – Capacity And Level Crossings From Tottenham Hale To Hertford East

It is being proposed that Crossrail 2 goes up the West Anglia Main Line just after it surfaces from the central tunnel and then it would take the Hertford East Branch to the terminus at Hertford East station.

There are some issues and problems on the West Anglia Main Line that have to be solved before Crossrail 2 can be fully developed.

1. Services At Lea Bridge Station

The service level at the new Lea Bridge Station must be settled before the full plans for Crossrail 2 can be drawn up.

Wikipedia says that it is intended to have three trains per hour stopping at the station in both directions. All Southbound trains would go to Stratford and two Northbound would go to Bishops Stortford and one to Angel Road.

I don’t think that this level of service will be provided, as Transport for London like to set a minimum of four trains per hour, which exists on many places on the Overground. Surely, if the large development at Meridian Water is to realise it’s full potential, Angel Road will need a frequent service to Stratford and Liverpool Street, in addition to the full Crossrail 2 service.

There is also the complication of possible services between the Chingford Branch and Stratford using the Hall Farm Curve.

Between the Hall Farm Curve and Stratford, there is probably enough capacity on the two track line to accommodate the extra services, but what about north of where Crossrail 2 emerges from its central tunnel  probably in the area of Coppermill Junction?

2. The Service Level On Crossrail 2

The service level from Liverpool Street to Hertford East is currently two trains per hour, which would probably be doubled to four trains per hour, as this is Transport for London’s preferred minimum.

The question has to be asked if there will still be a service between Hertford East and Liverpool Street via Hackney Downs?

Train commuters tend to be a conservative bunch and they may not take kindly to being told that instead of going into Liverpool Street they’re going to Angel and Kings Cross.

So I suspect that just as when Thameslink is completed there will still be services on the Sutton Loop Line, I suspect they’ll still be two trains per hour between Hertford East and Liverpool Street.

3. Extra Termini

The South Western end of Crossrail 2 has quite a few branch lines that can be used to extend the system, but in the North East, there aren’t the obvious termini.

With a railway like Crossrail 2, it is important that the line is balanced as this makes it easier to operate. The East London Line has four terminal platforms at both ends and each platform operates a four trains per hour service to its paired platform, thus giving sixteen trains per hour through the core.  I think Thaneslink and Crossrail will both use a similar operating principle.

To accomplish this, Crossrail has the ability to turnback trains short of the terminus of the line at stations like West Drayton and Chadwell Heath,

I suspect that to make it easier to balance the service through the core tunnel, there will be one or more stations on Crossrail 2 that can turn trains back. The three most important stations; Tottenham Hale, Cheshunt and Broxbourne might be provided with such a facility. These stations could also act as interchanges between Cambridge and Stansted services to Crossrail 2.

I do wonder if the planners of Crossrail 2 are looking at putting a facility at Angel Road, which will become an important station because of the Meridian Water development.

There is certainly more opportunities to create extra termini on the line, than would there would appear from a cursory look.

4. Capacity From Tottenham Hale To Broxbourne

There are a lot of possibilities for making more and better use of Crossrail 2 services up the Lea Valley, but all of them will add to the number of trains running between Tottenham Hale and Broxbourne.

In addition if the services through Lea Bridge are increased then we’ll see the following trains running up the line.

  • Stansted Expresses – Liverpool Street-Stansted Airport – 4 tph
  • Cambridge Expreses – Liverpool Street-Cambridge – 2 tph
  • Liverpool Street-Bishops Stortford – 2 tph
  • Stratford-Bishops Stortford – 4 tph
  • Liverpool Street-Hertford East – 2 tph
  • Crossrail 2-Hertford East – 4 tph

The frequencies are speculation, but when you add them up, they do illustrate how more capacity is needed on the line, especially when you take into account the fact that the Cambridge and Stansted services will want to travel much faster than the local stopping services.

The planners for the West Anglia Main Line are already planning an increase in the number of lines from two to four as this Future Developments section in Wikipedia says.

If Stansted Airport’s expansion is authorised it is planned that the line will see many further changes. Long term proposals include four-tracking between Coppermill Junction and Broxbourne junction; an additional tunnel and platform edge on the Stansted Airport branch; one additional train per hour serving Stansted and up to six further trains per hour at peak times, including four into Stratford as a terminus. More stations, such as Broxbourne, will also have platform extensions to accommodate 12-car trains.

It seems likely that two tracks will be built alongside the line to Cheshunt as part of Crossrail 2. Intermediate stations from Tottenham Hale will transfer to Crossrail 2 releasing capacity on the main line for additional trains

I think that the last paragraph could be saying that stations like Northumberland Park, Angel Road, Ponders End, Brimsdown, Enfield Lock and Waltham Cross will have two fast tracks without platforms and two slow Crossrail 2/local tracks with platforms.

Whatever it means, the four-tracking is one of those projects that is needed whether Crossrail 2 is built or not.

I would hope that Network Rail’s surveyors have shown that four-tracking is possible. It will certainly need a design of narrow station.

5. Level Crossings

Levels crossings are numerous on the West Anglia Main Line, with examples at Northumberland Park, Brimsdown and Enfield Lock, south of Waltham Cross. The post on Enfield Lock shows queues at the crossing. This Google Map shows queues at Northumberland Park.

Northumberland Park Station

Northumberland Park Station

Removing this level crossing would look to be particularly difficult, but surely with the development of Meridian Water just to the North East, the time is now right to sort it once and for all.

Incidentally, when I worked at Enfield Rolling Mills in the 1960s, driving across the railway was a slow and tedious business, because of jams at the Brimsdown and Enfield Lock crossings.

In the 1980s the A1055 Meridian Way was built, which must have taken some pressure from these two level crossings.

I have found this page from Hansard in 1958, which mentions the Brimsdown level crossing and another which must have now been closed at Ponders End.

Mr. Ernest Davies asked the Minister of Transport and Civil Aviation whether he has yet reached a decision in regard to the elimination of the level crossings at Brimsdown and Ponders End, Enfield; and when authorisation for the necessary work will be given.
Mr. Nugent  My right hon. Friend has informed the Middlesex County Council that we are ready to consider a scheme for a new road and. bridge across the railway at Ponders End from Lea Valley Road to Nags Head Road with a road connection on the east side to the Brims-down industrial area. If the details of the scheme are satisfactory, I hope that1198we shall be able to approve it in this financial year.
Mr. Davies  While thanking the Minister for that reply and congratulating him on having succeeded in achieving agreement among the various parties and authorities concerned, as this scheme has been hanging fire for a very long time, may I urge him to speed up this matter as much as possible in view of the continued congestion in this area?
Mr. Nugent  We shall do it as quickly as we can.

It’s now nearly sixty years!

I think any plan to four-track the West Anglia Main Line must include removal of these crossings.

6. Conclusion

I think it is essential that the West Anglia Main Line is four-tracked and the level crossings south of Broxbourne are removed before any other work on Crossrail 2 starts. I would also rebuild the Hall Farm Curve at the same time.

 

July 18, 2015 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

Before Crossrail 2 – Enfield Lock

After visiting the house where my mother was born, I took a bus to Enfield Lock station.

The footbridge must be one of the steepest I’ve seen. At least you can cross the line at the level crossing by the station.

This Google Map shows the station.

Enfield Lock Station

Enfield Lock Station

Note that there appears to be a pedestrian subway on the North side of the level crossing, which also seems to be holding up lots of traffic.

As there is another level crossing at Brimsdown station, when I worked at Enfield Rolling Mills in the 1960s, driving across the railway was a slow and tedious business.

In the 1980s the A1055 Meridian Way was built, which must take some pressure from these two level crossings and a third at Northumberland Park station.

 

T

 

 

July 18, 2015 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 2 Comments

Before Crossrail 2 – Ponders End

Just as I have tag Before Crossrail that documents Crossrail before construction started, I have now started one for Crossrail 2.

This is the first post and it shows Ponders End station.

It is not the worst station I have seen, but although entry to the Northbound platform is step free, it is rather a climb to get across the tracks to the other platform and the bridge over the Meridian Way that runs alongside the railway. This Google Map shows the station.

Pomders End Station

Pomders End Station

It is definitely not a station with an abundance of facilities, although it is claimed to be step-free.

The station certainly needs at least a couple of lifts and perhaps another on the other side of Median Way.

July 18, 2015 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

Call For Crossrail 2

In The Times today, there is a letter from a wide cross section of business leaders calling for a start to be made on Crossrail 2. ITV have reported a major speech by Boris Johnson on the subject today.

I am very much in favour of the construction of this North-East to South-West line across London, which was first proposed in the 1970s.

Cynics amongst you, will probably say that I am in favour of Crossrail 2, as I live just a few hundred metres away from the proposed double-ended Dalston station, that will transform the area and make my house rise substantially in value.

In my view there are several reasons why Crossrail 2 should be built.

1. HS2

HS2 is currently planned to terminate at Euston station, although I think that could be changed by a more innovative solution. But whatever happens to the London end of HS2, it needs to be simply connected into the knitting of the Underground, so terminating somewhere in the area between Kings Cross and Euston, is probably a certainty.

Every recent design for Crossrail 2 shows it serving the three important London stations of Kings Cross, St. Pancras and Euston. It also links these stations to Victoria and Clapham Junction.

Have you ever tried to use the Victoria Line between Euston and Victoria with a heavy case or a baby in a buggy? It’s bad enough at normal times and impossible in the rush hour.

So when HS2 starts squeezing more passengers through the congested Euston Underground station, it will be a disaster.

I believe that the only way to connect HS2 into London is to build Crossrail 2 first.

2. Sorting The Northern Line

If there is one line of the Underground that needs some substantial sorting it is the Northern Line. Probably because it the oldest deep line of the Underground, it never seems to be where you want it to go! For instance, I can get to Angel fairly easily, but often want to a station on the other branch of the line through London.

The line is being improved in the following ways.

1, An extension to Battersea is being created, that may eventually go to Clapham Junction.

2. Future developments at Bank station should see an improved station with new or larger platforms and tunnels.

3. Rebuilding plans exist for the bottleneck of Camden Town station, but every plan seems to offend one pressure group or another.

4. Long term objectives include splitting the line into two, with all City branch trains going to Morden and all Charing Cross trains going to Battersea.

Crossrail 2 will have interchanges with the Northern Line at Angel, Kings Cross St. Pancras, Euston, Tottenham Court Road, Tooting Broadway and possibly Clapham Junction. So it looks like that Crossrail 2 will certainly make journeys easier for users of the Northern Line.

But Crossrail 2 will have its biggest effect at Euston station, which is a station that needs serious improvement.

1. The station is a maze of cramped tunnels and is not by any means step-free.

2. Euston Square station needs to be properly connected to the Euston main line and Underground stations.

3. Changing between the two branches of the Northern Line at Euston, is not easy, as you have to walk a fair distance in crowded tunnels.

Adding a Crossrail 2 station at Euston won’t be a trivial matter, but it gives everybody a chance to dig their way out of the problems left to us by history.

In  Crossrail 2 Tunnels Under London, I speculated that Crossrail 2 will be dug very deep and that the uphill excavation technique used at Whitechapel will be used to connect to existing stations.

Could techniques such as this be used to excavate a new Euston Crossrail 2 and Underground station beneath Euston Road, that linked upwards into Euston main line station and Euston Square Underground station?

At the very least techniques should be investigated so that Euston is extended without all the hassle of demolition. After all, architects and engineers worked out how to extend Kings Cross and St. Pancras, whilst keeping the stations running during the construction.

3. Easing Congestion On The Victoria Line

This summer, the Northern end of the Victoria Line is being closed for most of August whilst a crossover is changed at Walthamstow Central. According to this press release on the Transport for London web site, this will mean thirty-six trains an hour from Walthamstow Central to Brixton from April 2016.

But this is only correcting one of the faults of a line that was built to an inadequate specification in the 1960s, which resulted in some crap inaccessible stations and a foreshortened line compared to what it should have been.

Crossrail 2 will effectively by-pass the central part of the Victoria Line as the two lines connect at Tottenham Hale, Seven Sisters, Kings Cross, Euston and Victoria.

 

4. Development Of North East London

I have lived in the North East sector of London for well over thirty of my nearly sixty-eight years.

Some of the problems I observed around White Hart Lane stadium in the 1960s, are still there and only now fifty years later, is that area being redeveloped, with a new football ground, a big supermarket, lots of houses and a virtually new White Hart Lane station. The long awaited development has been totally necessary for at least forty years.

But that area of Haringey is just one small part of North East London, that needs help to create more quality housing, successful business and jobs and leisure opportunities for all.

At least developers are busy all up the Lower Lea Valley and in Waltham Forest.

1. As I said earlier, Tottenham are at last starting to build a new football stadium.

2. Haringey is developing the Tottenham High Road

3. There is a massive development starting at Meridian Water, which I wrote about here.

4. Thames Water are even doing their bit, by developing the reservoirs into the Walthamstow Wetlands, which will become  the largest urban wetland nature reserve in London.

Transport for London are doing their best to improve transport links in North East London, with the expansion of the London Overground and the upgrading of the Victoria Line.

Crossrail 2 with its stations in the Lea Valley and at Tottenham Hale, Seven Sisters and Dalston will be the high capacity link to Central London, that could create real wealth in some of these poorer areas of London.

5. Avoiding Waterloo

From North East London to Waterloo is not the easiest of journeys, unless you can get on the Victoria Line easily and just walk across at Oxford Circus. This is a route I sometimes use, but generally in the week I use a bus to Bank and then the Waterloo and City Line. We’ve had all the fuss about the Night Tube, but I think to get seven-day working on the Waterloo and City and the Northern City Lines is more important.

Network Rail have announced they are going to upgrade Waterloo, but will this solve the problem of getting to the station?

However, Crossrail 2 will give many a new route to places like Southampton and Portsmouth, that avoids Waterloo, by changing at Clapham Junction instead. Other routes will also be available via Victoria, Tottenham Court Road and Wimbledon.

From South West London, as many stations will be  connected to Crossrail 2, anybody going to Central London will be able to go direct.

I believe that Crossrail 2 will take a lot of pressure, from one of London’s busiest stations.

6. Better Connectivity

Some of the very important places I need to get to are quite difficult from Dalston. I suspect others say that about their parts of London.

For me, the difficult ones are the stations at Charing Cross, Waterloo and Paddington, although Crossrail will ease going to the last, as I’ll just change at Whitechapel. Crossrail 2 will ease getting to Charing Cross and Waterloo, as I’ll just change at Euston or Tottenham Court Road onto the Northern.

In some ways Crossrail 2 is just adding two more arms to a spider centred on Bond Street, Tottenham Court Road and Farringdon stations.

When Crossrail, Crossrail 2 and Thameslink are completed, so many journeys across the capital from the suburbs will just be either direct or a single change in the centre.

Thinking Outside The Box About Building Crossrail 2

I suspect that due to the cost of building a rail line like Crossrail 2, that there are some very radical plans for building  the line.

So let’s look at the various parts of the project.

1. The tunnelled section between Tottenham Hale and Alexandra Palace to Wimbledon together with the below-ground stations will be the major cost of Crossrail 2. All of the central stations, with the exception of Chelsea are interchanges.

2. The trains hopefully will be a follow-on order to the Class 345 trains that have been ordered for Crossrail.

3. It would also to be hoped that other designs could be lifted across or modified to keep costs at a minimum.

4. The three surface sections of the line up the Lea Valley Lines, up the East Coast Main Line and  spreading out from Wimbledon, have stations in various states of repair and only a few have full step-free access.

Crossrail is being built, by boring the tunnel and then creating the stations and upgrading the surface sections, but I would almost build Crossrail 2 in the reverse order.

Although the surface sections are not in the best of health, whereas Crossrail linked two four-track railways together, a lot of the lines in the outer reaches of Crossrail 2 only have two tracks, which will mean that upgrading them to the required standard will be a lot easier.

So after finalising the design for the whole line, I’d build Crossrail 2 like this.

1. Rebuild all surface racks and stations to the required modern standard with the removal of level crossings and the addition of appropriate step-free features. Obviously, higher levels of passenger comforts would be added like better information and integration with surface transport, wi-fi, perhaps a decent coffee shop, warm waiting room and clean toilets.

But then we should be doing this with all stations in the UK and not just those touched by Crossrail 2. How much would it encourage people to travel by rail, if they knew that all stations, they would encounter on a journey would be of a high standard?

2. All of the surface lines for Crossrail 2 are electrified, even if some use third-rail electrification. One of the costs of overhead electrification is raising bridges and structures to give clearance, so I would use dual-voltage trains in the same way as Thameslink.

3. The new trains, which hopefully would be the same Class 345 trains, as those on Crossrail would then be introduced on the surface lines. Depots would need to be built.

4. The  Central London interchange stations of Seven Sisters, Dalston, Angel, Kings Cross/St.Pancras/Euston, Tottenham Court Road, Victoria, Clapham Junction, Tooting Broadway and Wimbledon would all be upgraded, so that they are ready to accept the access tunnels from the new Crosrail 2 platforms.

As I believe that Crossrail 2 will be dug at a depth of around or more than fifty metres and it will be connected to existing stations, as Whitechapel has been by uphill excavation, these modifications will not be as great as those at the Crossrail stations like Liverpool Street, Tottenham Court Road, Bond Street and Paddington.

Looking at the list of stations, I can add these notes.

Dalston Junction, Angel, Kings Cross St. Pancras, Tottenham Court Road, Victoria and Clapham Junction have been recently or are being rebuilt and I would hope they have been future-proofed for connection to Crossrail 2.

Seven Sisters, Dalston Kingsland, Euston and Wimbledon need substantial improvement or rebuilding, so this would include provision for Crossrail 2.

5. Only when all the surface sections and the Central London stations were upgraded and ready, would the two tunnel boring machines be threaded between Tottenham Hale and Wimbledon.

This phase would be completed as follows.

  • Connecting or uphill excavating from the tunnels into the existing stations.
  • Fitting out the tracks and the new platforms.
  • Testing of systems and trial running of the trains.

It does sound simplistic, but then engineers will have learned a lot from building Crossrail.

6. Finally, the Chelsea station would be built. As this is a completely new station leaving it until after the line has been built in much the same way as Pimlico was built for the Victoria Line would probably ease construction of the line.

 

 

 

July 18, 2015 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | 2 Comments

Are Tracks And Platforms At Stratford Ready For Crossrail?

On my way back home, I came via Stratford from where I took a TfL Rail Shenfield Metro train into London.

I’d come from Pudding Mill Lane and was surprised I could walk directly on to the platform between the westbound Central and Shenfield Metro Lines. These are platform 3 and 5 respectively.

I took these pictures whilst waiting for the Class 315 train to arrive.

I was surprised, that the view had very much the air of tracks and platforms that were now ready for Crossrail. I suspect that signs and signals will need to be completed and tested.

I should say that on my way into Liverpool Street I got a good look at the lines that will probably be diverted into the tunnel. I don’t think it will be many months before they start track-laying here.

The original layout has been preserved, where the two westbound (Platforms 3 & 5) and two eastbound lines (Platforms 6 & 8) respectively share a platform, so that passengers can transfer across between trains. It’s a layout that should be used more often.

July 17, 2015 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

Pudding Mill Lane Portal – 17th July 2015

I went to Pudding Mill Lane station to photograph the progress on the creation  of the Crossrail tunnel portal.

The ramp which the trains will use to enter the tunnel surprised me by how steep it was.

I don’t know whether it was done deliberately, but the Eastbound platform at Pudding Mill Lane station is going to make a superb viewing platform, where parents and grandparents will take children to see the trains.

I can also see Tourist Guides for London saying that this will be the way to go to an event at the Olympic stadium or even just to view it.

July 17, 2015 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | 1 Comment

From Mitre Bridge To Ladbroke Grove – 16th July 2015

I walked from Mitre Bridge to Ladbroke Grove along the |Grand Union Canal.

One aim was to see if I could get decent pictures of North Pole Depot, the Crossrail works and the flyover to the East of the depot.

I am endebted to this article on London Reconnections entitled Old Oak Common Part 2 – Putting the pieces together for this description of what happens in this area.

The track layout below is derived from the Context Reports produced in 2009 by Crossrail for each local authority, and then checked where possible against the HS2 plans. Among other features this shows a new ramp joining the existing GWML empty stock flyover just east of OOC. This new ramp gives a clear route to the Crossrail depot independent of the GWML depot lines, and the plans show it being built across the finger of land at the west end of the ex-Kensal Green Gas Works development site. It will be double track, and the alignment on the incline back down towards Old Oak Common will be widened so that the GWML empty stock has a segregated track down from the flyover.

So the flyover is so that empty stock can get between the depots at Old Oak Common and Paddington.

Note that some of the new Crossrail tracks can be seen in the foreground of the pictures of North Pole Depot, which will be used for the Hitachi Class 800/801 trains for First Great Western. The tracks closest to the fence are the tracks leading to Crossrail’s depot. The two actual running tracks are further over and hidden by the ramp up to the flyover. They can be seen in this post in front of the retaining wall.

I’m not sure where actually Crossrail’s depot will be, but Wikipedia states that it will be at Old Oak Common. The article goes on to indicate that all will change again, when HS2 runs through the area.

 

July 16, 2015 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment