The Anonymous Widower

A Journalist Wasn’t Disappointed

I said in this article a few days ago, that I was disappointed to not be able to walk through the Thames Tunnel.

But this article on Wired, describes a walk by a journalist who wasn’t!

Katie Collins was a lucky lady!

May 28, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | 2 Comments

What Are The Retail Implications Of Crossrail?

The title of this post is from an article in Retail Week.

This article is typical of what we will see in the coming months, as commentators and analysts realise what effects Crossrail is going to have on London and the South East.

The enormity of the project is summed up by this paragraph in the article in Retail Week.

There are 40 construction sites in total and 1,700 companies involved – all the major developers are in on the act, and Transport for London is leading. London will be the greatest beneficiary, but the potential value of the Crossrail project to the wider UK economy is estimated at £42bn.

I think that most Londoners don’t know the effect that Crossrail will have on the city.

If you compare the figures with the Olympics, this article on the BBC says the 2012 Olympics cost £9bn and the UK economy received a boost in trade and investment of £9.9bn. For comparison purposes, the budget for Crossrail is £14.8bn.

It will be interesting to see what the true audited figures for Crossrail are in about 2020.

If they are this good, then we should be looking for more projects like this, all over the country.

 

May 27, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel, World | , , , , | Leave a comment

A Letter In The Times On Widowhood

On Friday in The Times, I had a letter published entitled The Widowed.

Sir, As a widower (letter, May 20), I feel that modern life may be making the word redundant.
Widowhood is no respecter of gender or sexual orientation, and all widowed are in the same possibly dark and unhappy place; so should we not just use the female form of the word?

After all lots of other words like actor, doctor and other professions are becoming applicable to all.

I wonder if there’s a language, where widower and widow are the same.

On a brief look using Google Translate, it would appear that in Finnish, Turkish and Welsh, the word is the same for both sexes.

 

May 27, 2014 Posted by | World | , , | Leave a comment

You’re Always Close To A Rat In London

It is always said, that in London you’re never far away from a rat. This article on the BBC asks if we’re never more than six feet away from a rat.

Six feet is a large distance compared to the close encounter, I’ve just had during my bath.

My bathroom isn’t completed yet, despite being started nearly two years ago. The bath works, but the toilet hasn’t been fitted yet and there is just a hole into the drains.

As I sat up in the bath, something brown and moving caught my eye on the floor.

It wasn’t a very large example, but I know a rat when I see one. In fact, it looked pretty healthy compared to some that my cats brought in, whilst I was living in Suffolk.

But it was probably less than a metre away from my eyes.

I was just on the point of thinking I should get out of my bath, so I pulled the plug and my only slightly dirty bathwater went down the drain, hopefully showing the rat where to go.

I suspect I should turn myself into the RSPCA, as I’ve probably been guilty of inflicting pain and suffering on an animal.

At least if he or she does come back, they”ll have had a good bath in reasonably warm water!

May 27, 2014 Posted by | World | , , | 1 Comment

A Statistical Provocateur

Not by words, but they are used in this thought-provoking article on the BBC web site.

It shows how the divorce rate mirrors margarine consumption, according to a web site called Spurious Correlations.

The trouble is that people tend to believe these relationships or not, as it suits them.

Perhaps the most famous statistical correlation is that smoking causes lunch cancer. But people still smoke! Or should that be idiots still smoke?

One correlation used by the Police, may have been found using my software called Daisy. Analysis by the Metropolitan Police showed that if they found a car, had no valid excise duty, insurance or MOT, then there was a fifty percent chance that if they stopped the car, they’d find evidence of a non-motoring offence. The logic behind this, is if you are say a burglar, drug-dealer or other crimnal, you are less likely to make sure that your car is legal.

May 26, 2014 Posted by | News | | Leave a comment

The Row Over Heathrow Expansion

There is a real row going on in the letters column of The Times over expansion at Heathrow.

Akbar al-Baker started it by saying people get used to aircraft noise. What does a Qatari national know about the rights of the individual citizen?

But I think it’s all an argument, where the usual British attitude of do nothing and it will be all right on the night, may be the right one.

Various factors will come into play over the next few years, that will also make Heathrow expansion less important.

I have read somewhere that Heathrow passengers are more likely to be travelling for leisure rather than business reasons.

Tourists on the other hand, are more likely to plan a trip on matters of convenience and cost.

So if you live somewhere like Derby, you probably have two or three airports that are easier to get to than Heathrow, so if say that holiday in Florida is cheaper via East Midlands, why would you go to Heathrow?

Even where I live close to Central London, I probably have a multi-airport choice to make on any flight.

If nothing as this choice of flights and airports increases, it will take the pressure off the need for an extra runway in the South East.

The only people, who probably need to fly into Heathrow are those, who have a connection to make, like a businessman going from say San Francisco to Minsk. These passengers will still fly through Heathrow, but increasingly as London gets to be an even more desirable tourist destination, will a transfer passenger decide to spend the night in London before continuing their journey?

It all goes to show how I would never rely on any statistics given out by Heathrow.

So many travellers are held to Heathrow by all sorts of factors, that clever marketing by alternative modes of travel can erode. Ryanair for instance is thinking about going to the United States.

al-Baker also called for Heathrow to become a twenty-four hour airport. He would wouldn’t he, as one of the big beneficiaries of this would be the gulf airlines, as then they could schedule flights to and from London on a virtually turn-up-and-go basis to and from their own twenty-four hour airports.

The man is obviously a man with no experience of UK politics, as no British politician, would ever sanction a twenty-four hour airport in the UK, except possibly on an island in the middle of the North Sea.

But then he’s paddling his own interests as a Director of Heathrow and the CEO of Qatar Airways.

But there are also a couple of rather large elephants in the room; the next generation of super-jumbos and new and upgraded railways.

Airbus A380’s fly into Manchester and I suspect over the next few years, they and the next generation aircraft will fly into several airports in the UK, like Birmingham, Cardiff, Stansted, Liverpool and Edinburgh to create high-capacity point-to-point services, putting more pressure on Heathrow as the long haul airport of choice.

It could be thought that Crossrail would benefit Heathrow, as it will give a quick, affordable and easy route to Central London and South Essex. But it will also enable long-haul travellers to transfer with ease to London’s next three largest airports; Gatwick, Luton and Stansted, so a convenient flight out of London after a long overnight flight, might not be at another terminal at Heathrow, but at another airport after a restful lunch at Farringdon or some other Central London location.

In future HS2 might have an effect on Heathrow, as when fully developed, Manchester Airport will be just over an hour from Central London.

A twenty four hour three-runway airport at Heathrow will only benefit the airlines and probably those in the Gulf more than most.

But if we don’t create it, nothing serious will happen, as people will find more convenient and affordable ways of getting from A to B.

May 26, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

BBC Breakfast’s Pointless Move To Manchester

It may be a day of a minor political tremor, but today is illustrating how pointless it was to move BBC Breakfast and probably many other programs to Manchester.

All of the major politicians are of course in Westminster, so Bill Turnbull is in London with Louise Minchin sitting almost by herself in the North, with a few lightweight guests. It is showing, it is a bad recipe for a good programme.

The sooner the BBC does the right thing and moves BBC Breakfast back to London the better.

May 26, 2014 Posted by | News | , , , | Leave a comment

I Track Down An Elusive Night Bus Map

A couple of weeks ago, when I was returning home, I thought I saw a new Transport for London Night Bus Map, drawn like a cross between one of their bus spider maps and the well-known, loved and understood tube map.

As I couldn’t find one either physically or on the Transport for London web site and I was coming round to the conclusion I’d imagined seeing the map.

But I finally found one today, that I could photograph at Walthamstow bus station.

North East London Night Bus Map

North East London Night Bus Map

This one is for the whole of North East London, whereas mostbus spider maps are for a specfic location like say Kings Cross. It certainly better than the old black and white night ones for a larger area.

Why is it London maps seem to get better and better and much of the rest of the country seems to be stuck in 1950s or even earlier.

May 25, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

God Said All London Buses Must Be Red

London’s buses have always been red in my memory and according to this piece, which is a response to the question of why London’s buses are red, they’ve been predominately red since the creation of the London Passenger Transport Board in 1933. Although buses from the London General Omnibus Company had started using the colour in 1907.

Today though I saw my first New Routemaster in a full black advertising livery.

God Said All London Buses Must Be Red

God Said All London Buses Must Be Red

I don’t think the bus suited the livery.

By the way, God or in London Transport’s case; Frank Pick, wouldn’t have liked this bus either, as it would grate with the overall philosophy he laid down for London’s transport system.

Has anybody else ever imposed their design philosophy on a city, as Frank Pick did for London to such a positive effect?

I wonder what he’d have thought of London’s New Routemaster.

One thing he would have liked was the process where Thomas Heatherwick was involved in the design of the bus. Pick in his years as London’s transport supremo, regularly hired the best architects and designers.

He was also prepared to back those, whose designs were unconventional, like Harry Beck‘s tube map, which has evolved to be one of the most recognisable maps in the world.

May 25, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | 8 Comments

Hackney Downs Station’s Newly Painted Bridge

Hackney Downs Station has been a pain for me in recent months, as they have been refurbishing the bridge over Dalston Lane and this means that the 56 bus has been diverted and I can’t use it to get to the station for a trip to my son’s house in Walthamstow.

But it looks to be finished now and the 56 and 30 buses are back on their normal routes.

The next phase of the development at the station is completing the lifts and reinstating the walkway to Hackney Central station.

I suspect they’ll be getting the orange paint out for when the station becomes part of the Overground.

May 25, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment