The Anonymous Widower

Open Data Will Improve Public Transport

I was actually looking to see if anybody else had spotted that London buses now have time displays, which I reported here.

But I did find this article entitled, Smart data will only work if the network data is truly open.

The article says that London has one of the biggest real-time passenger information systems in the world. All of the data is available free for developers. The article then says this.

Developers have created more than 100 apps for the city’s buses alone. They offer everything from route planners for the disabled to scalable tube maps, with live updates when lines are disrupted, and apps that let you know where to board a train so you can get off as close to your exit as possible.

So is it right to think that as time goes on, more and better apps will be written to make difficult journeys easier?

You could envisage apps, where you entered your start and destination and the system made suggestions, as to how to get there fastest, when say the local low life had nicked the signal cable or a bus or train had broken down.

The one thing that the article misses, is the data connection from the smart device to the central system.

Surely to cope in the near future, all vehicles will have a wi-fi connection. First Manchester is reported here to be fitting wi-fi to all its buses.

Once you have a fast local connection between vehicles and passengers, other possibilities will become feasible.

As an example, I often catch a 38 bus to the Angel, where to get to Kings Cross, I change to a 73 bus or take the Northern line. If the bus had a rearward facing camera, I could link to this to check for the 73 bus.

One of the great things about this technology is that you don’t need everybody to be using it on a bus, as bus passengers will talk to each other and share their information. I say this because you see people at bus stops texting to find the arrivals and then showing them to other passengers.

None of the apps because of the open data will cost Transport for London a penny. The reverse could be true in that the apps might encourage more passengers to travel and travel on the more lightly-used part of the network. If more people travelled by bus, hopefully this would reduce car traffic, thus allowing more road space for buses.

Such is the power of software!

April 11, 2014 Posted by | Computing, Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

If You Want To Know The Time Get On A Bus

I was on three big red taxis today and they’ve had a software upgrade on the information display.

I haven’t noticed the time before, but I was away Tuesday and Wednesday and only took one bus yesterday.

Since I created this post, I’ve been on about six or so buses.  All were showing the time! Even a very elderly example! I did see a New Bus for London pass and it looked like this was showing the time as well.

It will be interesting to see the indirect effects of this technology change!

Will people be on time more, as they should spot they are late, even when they’ve left their watch at home?

Will it cut watch thefts, as people might wear them less on public transport?

Will there be a clamour for more clocks on the Underground, the Overground and trains?

April 11, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 4 Comments

Do British Trains Do Toilets Well?

I travel on trains a lot and so I tend to use the facilities quite a bit.

I have come across the concessional blocked one on a train, but in the last few months, all have been immaculate.

A lot of the ones I’ve used in stations over the last year, have been immaculate too, like the ones at Southport, Wigan and Lowestoft!

In my travels across Europe, if I give the British toilets say  eight out of ten, some countries don’t get above five. And we’re not talking about countries with lower standards of living than the UK.

So perhaps toilets are something that British trains do well?

April 11, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

Why Is Liverpool Street In London So Named?

I pass through Liverpool Street station in London several times a week. As I have strong educational and connections to Liverpool, I’d started to wonder why the street that gives the station is so named.

Liverpool Street is the street that lies in front of the main south entrance to the station and you cross it going between the heart of the City of London and the station.

It is obviously, a road that doesn’t go or point anywhere near Liverpool.

So it is either a name chosen by some developer in the mists of time or perhaps it is named after a historical figure.

The obvious candidate is one of the Earls of Liverpool. According to Wikipedia, it was named after the Second Earl of Liverpool, who was Prime Minister from 1812 to 1827.

Wikipedia doesn’t record if he visited the city after which his title was named.

April 11, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel, World | | Leave a comment

Painting The Bridge At Hackney Downs

There no messing about here, as they get to work painting the railway bridge at Hackney Downs station.

Compare these pictures with those I took on Wednesday in Manchester.

April 10, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | 1 Comment

Is Hastings Going To Get A Modern Railway?

It has been reported that the Marshlink line between Ashford and Hastings is going to be upgraded so that high-speed Class 395 trains can run along the South Coast.

Hastings to London would be reduced to 68 minutes. In this post, I said the following.

To illustrate the poor train service in this part of Sussex, if you go from Charing Cross to Hastings, you can do it normally in about one hour forty-five minutes, on a train with innumerable stops. At the moment a lot of the services are replaced by buses due to landslips. If you read Wikipedia on theHastings Line, you’ll see how it was built by the worst of Victorian gerry-builders and how some of the line has been single-tracked, so that normal-sized trains can use the line. Until 1986, the line was operated by special narrow trains.

So the reduction in journey time is a good one.

April 10, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

From Upminster To Romford

When I heard this morning, that the Romford to Upminster line was to get a new train, I thought it was something I should visit. So I took the District line to Upminster, used the branch to get to Romford and came back to Liverpool Street on the first train. These pictures tell the story.

Both trains two and three were Class 315. The train to Romford was surprisingly busy for about twelve o’clock. They both sounded to be in reasonable mechanical condition and the only problem with the trains, is the awful pink colour around the doors.

It looks like these trains will be sent to Wales after refurbishment. So perhaps the Welsh can choose another colour scheme.

April 10, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | 2 Comments

New Train For Romford To Upminster

Until this morning, I didn’t know there was a train line from Romford to Upminster. But there is and it has a comprehensive Wikipedia page, which says it generally has a half hour service run by an elderly Class 315.

Today though, one of my trawls picked by the news that Transport for London has asked for tenders for new trains for the West Anglia and Gospel Oak to Barking services.  The story is on Global Rail News. This the last paragraph.

Thirty of the new trains will replace the current West Anglia stock, which will undergo a deep clean and rebranding. Eight more will go the newly-electrified Gospel Oak to Barking route, with the remaining unit going into service on the Romford to Upminster line.

So the Romford to Upminster line gets the 39th train.

This section is on Wikipedia about the future uses of Class 315.

As most duties of the 315s will be taken over by new Class 345 Aventra trains once Crossrail is built, it has been suggested that the 315s could be cascaded to the Wales and Borders passenger franchise to be used on Valley Lines services in the Cardiff area following electrification.

If most of the class do go to Wales, it will be a long way to move the single train on the Romford to Upminster line for servicing.

I can only see one reason why the order will not go to Bombardier to deliver some more of the excellent Class 378 and that would be because the company didn’t feel it wanted to bid.

 

 

April 10, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | 1 Comment

Manchester Metrolink’s E-Ticketing

Manchester tram system, Metrolink, is introducing electronic ticketing. This is one of their trial readers.

Manchester Metrolink's E-Ticketing

Manchester Metrolink’s E-Ticketing

The system is called Get Me There and from what I can find, it will be on another different system to London’s Oyster.

As Oyster is being modified to accept contactless bank cards, I would hope that Manchester will do the same.

As we are still a united kingdom, surely we need a set of ticketing rules that are the same across the country.

First amongst these rules is that all ticketing systems for public transport must work with contactless bank cards.  Surely, the lack of any major opposition to the abolishing of cash on London’s buses, is proof that London has got their offering right. In two years or so, no visitor to London with a contactless bank card will need to buy a ticket.

This surely is a great attraction to all visitors to a city.

The next step in London, may well be that if you are over the requisite age, you can nominate a bank card to be your Freedom Pass, thus cutting the number of cards people have to carry.

April 9, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

Is This From A Green Perspective?

I saw this sign in Manchester.

Is This From A Green Perspective?

Is This From A Green Perspective?

As one myself, I of course think that pedestrians look right.

April 9, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment