The Anonymous Widower

Searching For The Dudding Hill Line – Harlesden

After Dudden Hill Lane, I took a bus to Kensal Rise station, from where I took the Overground to Harlesden station.

You don’t have to walk far to find the Dudding Hill Line, where it crossed Acton Lane

The Dudding Hill Line Crosses Acton Lane

The Dudding Hill Line Crosses Acton Lane

But I couldn’t see the rumoured bridge-cum-tunnel.

May 8, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | 2 Comments

Searching For The Dudding Hill Line – Dudden Hill Lane

I stated my thoughts on the Dudding Hill Line here and so I thought I’d better go and see if the line was capable of what I suggested.

I took the Jubilee line to Dollis Hill station and walked up to the bridge in Dudden Hill Lane, where it crosses the Dudding Hill Line.

What surprised me was that to my untrained eye, it looked like a well-maintained railway line.

Not some badly rusted and overgrown line, which hadn’t been seriously used in years.

May 8, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | 3 Comments

Thoughts About The Dudding Hill Line

A friend, who is an expert on the Dudding Hill line or DHL has just e-mailed me after reading my post about Old Oak Common. He says that one of the conditions of the planning permission given for the Radlett Freight Terminal, is that the DHL is opened up, so it can take container traffic. There is a problem at the bridge-cum-tunnel at Harlesden.

I have traced the DHL on the map from where it starts at Cricklewood to past Old Oak Common and on to Acton.

Significantly, its northern end is by Brent Cross Shopping Centre, which is being expanded to form part of the new Brent Cross Cricklewood town centre, for which it is proposed to add a new railway station.

So the line effectively runs between two of London’s biggest and most-needed housing and commercial developments at Brent Cross and Old Oak Common.

I would suspect that there are opportunities for new stations at several places like Neasden and Harlesden.

This whole area of London is rapidly building up a set of questions about public transport that must be answered.

1. How do freight trains from London Gateway and Felixstowe come along the North London line and reach the Radlett Freight Terminal? It’s not clear if it is possible for trains to switch to the Midland Main line in the area of West Hampstead. If not, then that is a possible new piece of infrastructure, that would allow the movements between the ports and Radlett.

2. It has been proposed to put a station at North Acton on the North London line to link with the Central line. Surely, if Old Oak Common is to be built on the Overground, then the interchange to the Underground, would probably be incorporated in that station.

3. Should the Gospel Oak to Barking service be extended past Gospel Oak? As in a few years, this service will be run by new electric trains, which will probably be the Overground’s Class 378, to terminate these services at either Old Oak Common, Clapham Junction or Richmond, would surely make the running of a more frequent service on the GOB easier.

4. If passenger services are to be run on the DHL, then surely this line must be electrified, as this would allow the Overground to run a unified fleet. It would also enable trains to proceed up the Midland Main line, if that was thought to be a worthwhile thing to do. It would also allow freight trains from the west and eventually Southampton to run to Radlett and the north, without a chanmge of motive power en route.

5. If the DHL is electrified then it would probably be using overhead wires, as it effectively links two lines so equipped. So should the short section of the North London line to the west of Acton Central be changed to overhead wires rather than third rail? It would make for a tidier railway, but as the trains are dual voltage, there is no urgency to re-electrify!

The planners in the London Overground part of Transport for London, must be enjoying themselves playing with the best train set in London.

The more I think about all this, especially after seeing how Hackney has responded to being Overgrounded, I come to one conclusion.

If Old Oak Common and Brent Cross stations go ahead, then the Dudding Hill Line must be electrified to take freight trains and an Overground-style passenger train service.

But then what do I know about running trains?

May 8, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 3 Comments

The Ugly Duckling Is Coming To The Aid Of HS2

I’ve called the Overground an ugly ducking that is turning in to a swan before and today, it would appear that it is getting the chance to help out the troubled and unloved HS2. A study has been announced on the Global Rail News website entitled Overground Station For Old Oak Common. Here’s the start of the report.

WSP has been appointed to begin the next stage of planning for a new London Overground station at Old Oak Common.

The consultant is to carry out a Grip 3 study of three options with the hope of establishing the best solution to connect Overground services with the proposed HS2 and Crossrail interchange.

An interchange station at Old Oak Common would certainly make it easier for the good burghers of Hackney and other forgotten areas to access HS2 and Heathrow Airport.

But surely compared to the billions being spent on Crossrail and HS2, a simple interchange station, with links to the Overground, would just be small change. Wikipedia says this.

Proposals being considered by Transport for London include a scheme to realign the routes of the West London and North London line around the Old Oak Common site to create a new London Overground interchange station. The proposal envisages diverting the NLL Richmond route to curve around the eastern side of Old Oak Common, and re-routing the WLL to branch west south of the Mitre Bridge before curving north along a short section of the Dudding Hill Line to join the West Coast Main Line. New platforms serving both the NLL and WLL would be built on the southern side of Old Oak Common, adjacent to Wormwood Scrubs. Alternative versions of this scheme also consider cheaper options such as terminating the WLL at Old Oak Common or two separate London Overground stations.

But perhaps the great and the good don’t want to allow the various plebs and hoi polloi better transport links. They may have also noted that a new station would give better access to Wormwood Scrubs Prison for visitors and escapees.

If Old Oak Common is created as a major interchange, then surely the Gospel Oak to Barking services of the Overground, should be extended at least to the new station. And what about the Dudding Hill line, that passes through the area. Could it finally have found a use except for the odd freight train?

All of this says to me that an Overground station at Old Oak Common is a no-brainer, but then politicians don’t do no-brainers.

 

May 8, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 1 Comment

Planning Another Trip

Since my return from Gdansk, I’ve been thinking about another trip to Poland.

I would go a bit more southerly and probably start with two nights in Krakow. I would probably then go to Prague, possibly spending a night en route at either Wroclaw or Poznan.

From then it would be on to Dresden, a city I’ve always wanted to see. From there there would be an intermediate stop before Cologne, where I would run for home using a Eurostar ticket, as I outlined in this post.

So the trip would look something like this.

Day 1 – Krakow

Day 2 – Krakow

Day 3 – Wroclaw/Poznan/Other (?)

Day 4 – Prague

Day 5 – Prague

Day 6 – Dresden

Day 7 – Weimar/Nuremberg/Other (?)

Obviously, nothing is cast in stone and any suggestions would be gratefully received.

May 7, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | 4 Comments

Being Wise After The Event

The last two days of this trip were a bit hurried. Thinking about it a couple of days after I returned, I think I should have given myself another night in Berlin and come home via Cologne on the Friday.

This is possible at a cost of €154 in First Class leaving Berlin at 10:47. And then you have another  for €99  Standard Premier on the Eurostar. This totals at €253

Alternatively you can buy the Berlin to Cologne ticket from DB for €117 and then buy a ticket from Cologne to London on Eurostar for €114.  This route costs €231 and allows you to use any train you like between Cologne and Brussels.

I would think that on paper, the second route might not only be cheaper, but more convenient, as you could take a train to suit your Eurostar and perhaps have a good meal in Brussels, in the time you are waiting.

This joint ticket is available from several other cities like Bonn, Dusseldorf, Frankfurt and Munich. Munich to London in Standard Class costs £127, although I can’t seem to find a train to get to Brussels from Munich.

May 5, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 1 Comment

Would I Go Back To Heidelberg?

I would! But I would certainly go by a different route.

May 2, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

Home From Heidelberg

To get back home from Heildeberg, I took the train to Brussels changing at Cologne.  And as I usually do, I took one of the last Eurostars for London that arrived just after nine in the evening.

It was a long if beautiful journey from Heidelberg to Cologne, which went right up the western bank of the Rhine. Sadly my camera had expired, so the pictures will stay in my mind.

May 2, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

Would I Go Back To Berlin?

Yes! But I’d certainly find a better and cheaper way to come home.

May 1, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

In DB Style From Berlin To Heidelberg

I’d always wanted to go to Heidelberg, as it was probably the first German town, of which I knew the name. This was because I spent so much time from the age of about six watching one or other of my father’s Original Heidelberg printing machines. One is shown in this post. My simple job, was to call him, if the machines dropped any paper, which is a letterpress printer’s worst nightmare, as then other shets follow and paper goes everywhere, often damaging the intricately set type.

There is no museum in the town, but I just had to go.

So I bought an extremely expensive ticket at €215 for the journey, expecting a bit of DB TLC in First.

All I got was one cup of coffee which I had to pay €2.50 for.

My €2.50 Cup Of Coffee

My €2.50 Cup Of Coffee

But I suppose the seat was comfortable and I had most of the carriage to myself.

At least on my journey from Berlin to Warsaw, which is about the same distance, I paid only €79 and got a free cup of coffee and some biscuits that weren’t gluten-free.

As Berlin to Heidelberg is virtually the same distance as London to Edinburgh, I looked up the fares on the Scottish route.  Today it would be £208, but tomorrow it would be £120.  On the other hand for the German trip for say next Thursday, it will still be €215.

There is also one big difference in the UK, in that anybody, even Germans, over 60 can purchase for £30 a Senior Railcard, which reduces the prices I’ve shown by a third. And you can buy that at a ticket office, when you take your first journey. I did try to see if I could buy a DB Card, but the lady at the ticket office didn’t want to sell me one and didn’t have good English.

But the biggest difference between East Coast or Virgin and DB, is that on many long distance journeys you get snacks and endless tea and coffee thrown in with the ticket.

I have had customer service problems with Deutsche Barn in the past, most notably at Osnabruck.

No wonder the train was empty for most of the way!

May 1, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | Leave a comment