The Anonymous Widower

One Of My Least Favourite Stadia Will Get a Station

The Ricoh Arena at Coventry is a reas9onable stadium, unless you want to get there when the buses aren’t running from the centre. That happened on News Years Day in 2011 as I reported here.

But it would now appear that by December 2013, it will have its own station! About time too!

January 28, 2012 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

Is Hull Going to be Connected Properly to the Rest of the UK?

Modern Railways are quoted in their February edition, that NetworkRail are going to investigate pushing the TransPennine electrification on from York to Selby and Hull.

This sounds like a good idea and I suspect that all those Hullensians will be pleased. It will also keep NetworkRail’s electrification train busy, especially as that line doesn’t have too many bridges, tunnels and viaducts.

January 28, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

Looking At the Thames Tunnel

The Thames Tunnel is the oldest underwater tunnel in the world and was built between 1825 and 1843 by Marc Brunel and his more famous son Isambard.  It is now used to carry the East London line under the Thames and you can actually look into the tunnel from the platforms at Wapping station.

I was looking from the Northbound platform, just by the exit and the stairs that lead up to the street. When the station was designed, they decided to put protective railing to stop you failing on the line, but these do not obscure the view down the tunnel as the train approaches.

January 26, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 1 Comment

The New Island Platform at Cambridge

This view of the new platform, shows the problem we have at many stations in the UK.

The New Island Platform at Cambridge

The only way to and from the far platforms and the one where the picture was taken is by the bridge at the end, which either means a climb and a descent of stairs or two lift rides. One of the problems of overhead lines is that the bridge needs to be high with a lot of steps.  In fact at Cambridge a subway as at Stratford would be better, but that would have increased the cost substantially.

But surely, in this day and age something better can be designed, that was quick and easy to install and could be installed at many stations.

January 26, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

A Smart New Train

I went to Cambridge on Tuesday in this smart new Class 379 train, built by Bombardier.

Note the powerpoints for mobile devices like iPhones.

Sadly, I only got a refurbished Class 317 on the way back and I couldn’t face forward as that irritated my back, which the 379 didn’t!

On the 31st I’m going to Ipswich for the football and now, I’ll take a train to Cambridge early, have a late gluten-free lunch in the City before taking a train to Ipswich.  I’ll come home direct.

January 26, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

Aurora Borealis

This year seems to be the best in my life for the aurora borealis  or northern lights in the media.

I’ve only seen it once and that was from a British Airways jumbo, crossing the Atlantic. The pilot spent a long time making sure that everyone who wanted was able to see the wonderful display as we passed down towards San Francisco over northern Canada. I suppose it keeps the passengers busy on a long flight.

I have been though to one of the best places to see the aurora in the UK. And that is in the cab of a train going from Edinburgh to Inverness in the evening. The night I did the journey, the time was wrong and anyway it was cloudy.  But the driver had seen them many times, as they climbed over the Drumochter Pass, which at 1450 ft high is the highest railway line in the UK.

January 24, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

The Success of the East London Line

I found this article on the web. It predicts that in 2011-2012 they’ll be a large increase in passengers on the East London Line.

Here’s the first couple of paragraphs.

The London Overground network has “grown faster than anticipated” with nearly three and a half times more journeys made per week in 2011 than in 2007, according to a TfL report on the train operator. Nearly two million journeys were made per week in September last year compared with 0.6 million in 2007.

But the increase has led to higher levels of crowding, and the local government body predicts that there will be 100 million journeys made on the service in 2011/12 as user demand proliferates this year due to predicted popular events including the Olympic Games and the Queen’s Jubilee.

I think it proves that building new rail lines or improving old ones encourages a lot of people to use trains.

 

January 10, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

The Rubbish Talked About HS2

I listened to some of the phone-in about HS2 on Radio 5 this morning, but gave up after most of those in the discussion, weren’t letting facts get in the way of a good selfish argument.

So here’s a few facts and my observations.

The West Coast Main Line is rather a nightmare.  It is overloaded now and longer and bigger trains would probably only mop-up a small amount of the increase in passengers that will happen in the next few years. In my travels any Virgin train to or from Glasgow was severely overloaded and this section needs action now.

It was intended that the speed limit on the line would be increased, but because the line isn’t very straight, the cost would be high both in monetary terms and also in blockades whilst it was upgraded. Wikipedia says this about the reasons for the bad design of the line.

Because of opposition by landowners along the route, in places some railway lines were built so that they avoided large estates and rural towns, and to reduce construction costs the railways followed natural contours, resulting in many curves and bends. The WCML also passes through some hilly areas, such as the Chilterns (Tring cutting), the Watford Gap and Northampton uplands followed by the Trent Valley, the mountains of Cumbria with a summit at Shap, and Beattock Summit in southern Lanarkshire. This legacy of gradients and curves, and the fact that it was not originally conceived as a single trunk route, means the WCML was never ideal as a long-distance main line.

The East Coast Main Line is better, but it doesn’t solve the problem on the western side of the country.

So those who talk about increasing the capacity on the West Coast Main Line had better look at the engineering problems involved.

Christian Wolmar, a respected commentator on rail, said on television this morning, that the money for HS2 would be better spent on improving local tranport in cities and large towns, by providing trams and better bus services.  He has a point, but there is one fault in his argument.

If we take Manchester as an example, where the tram system is being substantially developed, this will make it easier for long distance travellers to get to Manchester Piccadilly and the West Coast Main Line. If trams are frequent and have substantial car parking outside of the city, it may well persuade many more to take the train rather than driving.

So in fact, his plan will in the long term increase the long distance train traffic increasing the need for long distance services from Manchester and in a decade or so for HS2.

More passengers will also be brought to the line, by improvements to cross country and branch lines.  Some of these like Manchester to Leeds are scheduled to be electrified and this can only attract more passengers to the fast London lines, where their local station has no connection.

One point on this is that Network Rail is investing in a special overhead line installation train, that can install a mile of overhead wiring every night with only minimal line closure. This will mean that some lines where only a marginal case exists now, will be  electrified. An example is possibly from Felixstowe to Nuneaton via Peterborough, which would allow freight trains to be electric hauled all the way to the North of England and Scotland.

Another big problem is freight, which most would feel is better carried by rail to and from the ports to where it is needed.  A few years ago, Felixstowe had just three freight trains a day out of the port.  Now it’s a lot higher. Much of the freight will come and go through Felixstowe, Southampton and in the future the new London Gateway development and it will need to be either collected from and delivered all over the country. This would add greatly to the number of freight trains going everywhere.  Many of course, will have to go up to Birmingham, the North West and Scotland.

So whatever we do we’ll have to find some way to take the freight north or alternatively free up the West Coast Main Line, by building HS2. Or do we put more trucks on the motorways and clog them up?

Those that propose upgrading the West Coast Main Line with longer and bigger trains, forget one problem, that under the current plans also applies to HS2. And that is what to do with the totally inadequate station at Euston. Of London’s main stations it is one of the worst, as I said here. It will have to be rebuilt whether we build HS2 or not. It really doesn’t have the good ongoing transport links that Kings Cross, Liverpool Street, London Bridge and Paddington have or in some cases will have after Crossrail.

In fact it could be argued that if HS2 has a station at Old Oak Common, this might be a better London terminus for that line, as it links to Crossrail, the Great Western Main Line and possibly Heathrow.

There are also a lot of technology that will make HS2 better from an engineering, environmental and passenger point of view.

For a start tunnelling technology has improved substantially in the last decade or so. If you look at the speed of building the Crossrail tunnels, I think that this shows a big increase to the similar tunnels bored for HS1. Having listened to Justine Greening’s statement in the House of Commons, this improvement is being used to put more of the line underground. We may actually be getting to the point, where tunnels are cheaper to build that lines on viaducts.

We also know a lot more about how to minimise problems when we build large projects.  Crossrail for example seems to be causing a lot less problems with construction than HS1 did. Admittedly, it has caused a bit of a problem at some Central London station sites, but no more than say the average large building site or an office block.

Project management has also got a lot better over the last few decades and it is much more likely these days that a large contract is built on time and on budget. Provided the politicians and the civil servants don’t stick their oar in too much and change the specification, it will be all right in the end.

As the Sunday Times pointed out at the weekend design is getting better and the trains on HS2 could be a lot better than Eurostar. We might also see other technologies like anti-noise cutting the noise signature of the trains.

It has also been said that passengers won’t use HS2 because it will be too expensive and too much hassle.  But here is where technology will help, in such things as buying tickets, where hopefully we’ll see a touch-in touch-out system like Oyster.

So the doom-mongers will continue to knock HS2, but it has a lot going for it.

The trouble with rail projects, is that if we had a referendum about spending £32 billion on rail or the same amount on roads, the public would vote for the roads. But within a few years they’d be just as gridlocked.

January 10, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Double-Decker Trains for HS2

According to the Sunday Times today, a design consultancy, Priestmangoode has been asked to make the trains on HS2 as sexy as possible.

I’m all for this and have stated that we should make trains more passenger friendly several times.  Here’s a piece where I advocated a better approach to the trains to the West Country and the north of Scotland from London using rebuilt High Speed Diesel Trains.

Transport for London have used this design-led approach on the New Bus for London and I hope it goes well for them, when the bus is introduced next month.

So get the trains right and of course build them in the UK and we might have a railway to be proud of.  As someone, who’s travelled from London to Nice on Eurostar and a TGV Duplex, we don’t have much competition from the French.  The TGV Duplex may look impressive on the outside, but inside it’s rather cramped and stuffy and the ride is not as good as a High Speed Diesel Train.

January 8, 2012 Posted by | Design, Transport/Travel | , , , , | 3 Comments

My Worry About HS2

HS2 is the proposed new high-speed railway to Birmingham, the north of England and Scotland.

I have my doubts about the viability of the line, but feel that it should be built, if only to release capacity on the other main lines to the north for freight.

My big worry though is that because so many Nimbys oppose HS2, then there will be opportunity for a political party to stand at the next election on an anti-HS2 ticket. After all the cost of the line at £32billion would go a long way in other directions.

It would be unlikely that the Conservatives or Liberal Democrats would do this, as it is their policy, but the Labour Party might despite it being theirs too!  After all power is everything!

I can’t see the Greens being against HS2, but UKIP is according to this on their web site.

So will all those opposed to HS2 vote for UKIP?

I certainly hope not!

January 7, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment