The Anonymous Widower

Lea Bridge Station From The Train

After travelling round the Walthamstow Reservoirs, I continued on the train to Stratford. I took these pictures, as the train passed the disused Lea Bridge station, which is going to be reopened.

There ewas no sign of any work going on.

May 29, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

Is Heathrow Connect Worth Keeping?

Today, I’ve gone to Heathrow using Heathrow Connect, ostensibly to take the pictures of the new Stockley Viaduct on the way in and the way out.

There seemed to be very few people going the whole way in either direction and at a price of £13.05 for the round trip with a Senior Railcard, it’s not cheap. But then if you went from Paddington to Heathrow by Underground, it’s only probably about twenty minutes slower.

Quite a few people were using the intermediate stations like Ealing Broadway and Hayes, but as these would not be on special expensive Heathrow prices, I suspect that they are not very profitable for the company.

When Crossrail is completed in 2019, Heathrow Connect is going to be dropped anyway as the new railway will call at all  Heathrow Connect stations.

One thing I didn’t like about it was the lengthy underground walks to the station from Terminal 1.

I hope Crossrail will be improving the interchange to the terminals, when it opens. But then Crossrail will not be serving Terminal 5 and a change of train will be required.

How customer-friendly is that?

As Terminal 5 is exclusively British Airways, they must be splitting blood.

May 29, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

The Viaduct At Stockley Coming From Heathrow

I took these pictures coming back.

Such an impressive structure, is one of those that can’t be photographed too many times.

Note that coming back around midday the Heathrow Connect train was almost empty until it pickedup passengers in the Ealing area.

May 29, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Viaduct At Stockley Going To Heathrow

I mentioned in this post, that one of my reasons for using Heathrow Connect was to get pictures of the new viaduct at Stockley that carries the Heathrow branch of Crossrail over the Great Western Main Line.

The pictures were taken going to Heathrow.

It looks to be a very substantial viaduct. But then news reports are saving it is one of the largest bridges in the area since Brunel built the Great Western.

May 29, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 1 Comment

Restrictive Rules On Heathrow Connect And Express

I might go to look at Stockley Junction today and the best way would be to get Heathrow Connect to the airport and back.

So I checked up whether I can use my Senior Railcard on the train services. This section on the Heathrow Express gives the details about how you can. There is also this statement.

Yes, you can use a number of railcards on Heathrow Express to obtain discounted travel. To qualify you must purchase at the ticket office, not online or on board.

Obviously, they don’t agree with TfL’s policy of closing ticket offices.

They also don’t agree with the policy of the Gatwick Express as stated here.

Gatwick Express now accepts railcards online allowing you to make great savings on the already discounted online price if you have one of the following cards:

So Heathrow and Gatwick are out of step. Or you can always use the Piccadilly line, where the main problem is overcrowding.

It does appear though that according to Boris, as reported here, Crossrail will have a similar ticketing regime to the Underground.

So perhaps time will be up for the rip-off Heathrow rail services?

May 29, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Two Relics Of My Past

On my trip today, I passed these two immaculate Class 20s going about their business, whilst coupled together nose-to-nose.

Two Relics Of My Past

Two Relics Of My Past

When I started seriously collecting engine numbers around the age of ten, these engines were just being delivered. |So they’re nearly sixty years old!

Note that they often run in pairs like this to have more power and make it easier for the driver!

May 28, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | | 1 Comment

Do They Get Many Foreign Tourists In Chingford?

I took this picture on a Class 315 going from Liverpool Street to Chingford and Walthamstow.

Do They Get Many Foreign Tourists In Chingford?

Do They Get Many Foreign Tourists In Chingford?

Are they getting lots of foreign tourists or are they just hopeful?

I suspect the train may have occasionally worked the Stansted Express.

May 28, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | | Leave a comment

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

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

It’s Only A Toilet For A Train

Some of the designs that impress me are ones where something is properly redesigned for the twenty-first or even the twenty-second century, often re-using the current outdated infrastructure.

That is why I like some of the architecture in the UK like the British Museum, the Tate Modern and Kings Cross Station have been extended in a modern style.

The UK Rail Industry has several stations on my list of good improvements, but it is also good at updating rolling stock. The stopgap High Speed Trains are still thundering to the extremes of the UK and who would predict, when the last one is retired from active service? If I live to a hundred, I suspect that some of these trains will outlive me! After all they would become a marketing man’s dream on a long tourist route like down to Cornwall, up to the North of Scotland or perhaps across Australia or Argentina, offering unprecedented comfort in a vintage train. We’ve also got the example of the HST’s humble cousins, the Class 455, which scrubbed up so well, some passengers thought they were new trains.

The UK Rail Industry has an expensive road block coming up in 2020, with the Persons of Reduced Mobility (PRM) legislation coming into force. Many older trains like the Class 156 would have to be scrapped and replaced if they couldn’t be updated to meet the new regulations.

But never underestimate the power of good design and engineering  and one of the biggest problems of the refurbishment of the Class 156 described here, namely a fully-accessible toilet has been solved.

The new toilet has been designed and built by PCC.eu and they call it a Comfort Zone. I first saw it described in this month’s Modern Railways.

As I travel occasionally on some of the Greater Anglia trains, that have now been updated, I shall be interested to see how it works in practice.

As the floorspace needed is smaller than the traditional PRM toilet and providing decent on-train facilities is not just a UK problem, it looks to me that this is a classic where-there’s-muck-there’s-money design.

It also shows that one of the best ways to make money is to design or invent something.

May 24, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | 3 Comments