The Cutty Sark Opens Again on Thursday
The Cutty Sark reopens on Thursday after a very expensive rebuild. They certainly seem to have done a good job.
I have some doubts about the amount of money spent, but hopefully, the money will be repaid in extra visitors to London and also if it has helped create a new generation of craftsmen.
The Cutty Sark is one of the few sights of London, I can remember visiting as a child, probably after a trip upriver on a boat. What sticks in my memory is the figurehead collection.
It is one of those sites that is worth a visit, even if you have no time to visit the museums. There is a Marks & Spencer and a couple of coffee places, including a small Starbucks to get a quick lunch and quite a few places to sit, so for me as a coeliac, if I’m close, I know I can get a quick lunch, in quiet times like today.
I do feel very strongly, that big projects should leave a legacy. And so, I think it is important, that this restoration should be used to train the next generation of craftsmen. I know there aren’t many Cutty Sarks, but I suspect that a lot of the skills are also applicable to other historic marine craft from Victory and Belfast downwards to the MTBs of the Second World War.
We are getting better at this sort of legacy and for an example look at CrossRail. Part of the deal to build the enormous tunnels under London, was to create a Tunneling and Underground Construction Academy at Ilford. It will initially provide trained personnel for CrossRail, but it also has a wider brief to train people for soft-ground tunnelling projects, wherever they arise.
It is an idea that should be followed.
A Second New Bus for London is Spotted
Tonight I spotted a second New Bus for London in the Balls Pond Road.
It appears to be numbered as LT6.
They all appear to have registration numbers starting with LT
Indian Ocean Made Me Cry
I’m watching a new series on the BBC, called <Indian Ocean, where Simon Reeve circles the ocean of that name.
He started at the the Cape of Good Hope and of course he had to show the African Penguins that inhabit the coast.
Those penguins always make me cry as I remember a wonderful holiday C and I had there in one of the first winters of the new century.
She loved those penguins and I’ll always remember the day we saw them in Boulder.
The Mersey Ferries in the 1970s
They’ve just shown the opening clip of the Liver Birds on BBC2, with its picture of the back of the Mersey Ferry, Mountwood, which is still going, but after being renamed Royal Iris of the Mersey. In three years time, I will have known those boats for sixty years.
Incidentally, I don’t remember much of the first series or two of the Liver Birds, as C and I didn’t have a television until about 1973, although we had seen the odd episode at our parents respective houses. I think the first series we really saw was about 1975, when Elizabeth Estensen joined the show.
The Capacity of a Bus Route
As I said in a previous post, I’ve travelled on a New Bus for London five or six times, and only once was the bus full to capacity. That was around six in the evening, when I took it home from the Angel and it was standing room only, as it would have been on every bus from there at that time.
I find this strange as the 38 is a very busy route and obviously the bus has a curiosity value. I too, would always choose it because it is more comfortable and getting on and off is easier. So perhaps we have other factors at work. Could it be that because of its flexibility the New Bus for London is faster at stops and people use it in a different way? Perhaps they tend to get off a stop or two earlier and walk. I have no idea and only a detailed analysis will give the answer.
But it all goes to show that when calculating the capacity of a bus route, it is not a simple process.
The capacity probably depends on three main parameters.
- Obviously the capacity of the bus is important. Doubling the carrying capacity of a bus though may not double the capacity of the route as you’ve still got to get passengers off and on the bus.
- The average journey time it takes to get from one end of the route to the other is also important, as the more trips you can do, the higher the capacity of the route.
- But probably the most important factor is the sum of the dwell times at each of the intermediate stops.
For years London has always had two door buses, with the front one for entry and payment and the middle for exit. I can’t understand, why this isn’t the norm around the country as it cuts the all-important dwell time at stops dramatically. It also makes the entry and exit of wheelchairs and buggies so much easier and fully complies with proposed disability regulations.
The New Bus for London, with its three exits and two staircases, adds another variable to the calculation of route capacity, as it undoubtedly cuts the dwell time at stops.
There are other factors which will effect the dwell time at stops.
- Well-designed wheelchair ramps, that don’t block the entrance or exit.
- Better design and location of bus-stops.
- Hybrid buses, which can accelerate away quicker.
- Electronic ticketing, that is no worse than London’s Oyster.
- Announcement of stops on the bus, so people know where to get off.
- Bus and walking maps at all stops, so passengers know the best bus to take.
- Having a conductor, may make a substantial difference on a busy route.
A lot of the country has a long way to go.
But buses are expensive at between £100,000 and £200,000 a time and it is criminal to spend that on a bus and then not use it to its maximum capacity. If you do use buses to their maximum capacity, you might need a couple of buses fewer to provide the same service.
When London learns more about the New Bus for London, they may find that because of the way people use them, that the number of buses required for a route may be slightly less than those they need now. As I said before, only a detailed analysis will give the answer!
A Bus With Added Service
I have travelled on a New Bus for London about five or six times now and like all things, be they cars or corkscrews, that have been properly designed, you see more and more good features, the more you use them.
Today, I picked up a New Bus for London at the Angel to go back home. The downstairs wasn’t full, but there was a lady in a wheelchair in the wheelchair space, sitting opposite her two friends.
I was sitting at the back, as given luck, I might have been able to get off a few metres or so before the stop and save myself some walking. Just after the stop before mine, the conductor walks past me to the lady in the wheelchair and has a short chat. At the stop, I jump on to the rear platform and step off, but without saving any walking, although I did save a half-minute or so. As I walked to the lights to cross the road, I saw the reason for the conductor’s chat. The lady and her friends had exited smoothly from the middle door. Wheelchair entrance and exit on a standard London bus is not difficult, but it sometimes does result in a time delay. On the New Bus, not only does the design minimise loading and unloading delays by allowing three routes for the able-bodied, but a conductor with a bit of forethought, like today, can minimise any problems before they happen. I think the lady was impressed with the service she received.
Incidentally, it was originally stated that New Buses for London would run with the rear platform closed and no conductor at weekends. According, to the conductor, this policy has been reversed. Read into that what you will! I just think that passengers like the extra service and security. Several users have also told me how much they like the ability to get on and off at convenient places using the rear platform.
The stop I used on the Balls Pond Road illustrates how by being clever Transport for London can use the new buses to advantage. The stop shown in the picture is perhaps thirty metres before a set of traffic lights, where most of the buses get caught for a couple of minutes. The conductor can use this time to allow late-arriving passengers to get on the bus. And they already do! So I think we’ll see a lot of bus stops moved to create and then take advantage of an increased loading window, if the stop is just before traffic lights.
The Proliferation of Hybrid Buses
Whilst I was sitting in the window in Starbucks eating my sandwich, I noticed that a lot of the newer buses were labelled as hybrids, with the green logo on the side.
So I counted for a few minutes and found that out of 15 buses under three years old, 20 % were hybrid.
The Goodyear Blimp Over the Balls Pond Road
I took this picture, as I came back from getting my paper this morning.
If looked to me, that the Goodyear Blimp was flying along the Balls Pond Road toward Highbury Corner for the Arsenal Chelsea match at lunchtime. I’m not sure about the flying rules for airships, but if the pilot was in the left hand seat, he could have been flying just to the north of the road. That would be standard procedure in a fixed wing aircraft, when flying visually.
I see the blimp is down to be over the London Marathon tomorrow.
London in the Rain
I took these pictures over the last couple of days in the rain.
I suspect this rain is due to the large number of Irish-built buses that have arrived in the last week or so. The Northern Irish may be exporting buses, like the 38 in the picture, but do we have to have the rain as well?
















