Flying Claret
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- Joined
- 14 Aug 2014
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- 209
So, this is a Greater Manchester town whose nearest station is in Merseyside.
Or, a Lancashire town who's nearest station is in Lancashire....
So, this is a Greater Manchester town whose nearest station is in Merseyside.
Or, a Lancashire town who's nearest station is in Lancashire....
Another example in Scotland is Grangemouth, with a freight line already existing and the trains go along the freight line to turn at Falkirk Grahamston anyway, also there are lots of people who would benifit from a station there as they would not have to get the bus to Falkirk before geeting a train. Another point is that at Grahamson they come up the freight line and sit for 35 minutes anyway, plenty of time to run the train up to Grangemouth and back, however there are no current plans to do so.Loads of examples in Scotland, many of which already mentioned.
I’d say St Andrews probably fits the bill here too. Loads of traffic to and from nearby Leuchars, so no prospect of reopening the link to the town itself.
Cumnock could arguably be included here too, possibly Mauchline. The Glasgow and South Western actually passes these places, no chance of any station reopening
And there's a bus which runs eight times an hour with journey times of below 30 minutes to Dundee, which I'd guess is the most (or second-most, after Edinburgh?) common destination from St. Andrews.Loads of examples in Scotland, many of which already mentioned.
I’d say St Andrews probably fits the bill here too. Loads of traffic to and from nearby Leuchars, so no prospect of reopening the link to the town itself.
Cumnock could arguably be included here too, possibly Mauchline. The Glasgow and South Western actually passes these places, no chance of any station reopening.
Atherton's quite handy if you want to stay in the GMPTE area.
The 99 must surely be one of the busiest and most frequent interurban bus services in Scotland. I think it's success makes a rail link far harder to justify than if public transport between Dundee and St Andrews was as poor as most other nearby towns!And there's a bus which runs eight times an hour with journey times of below 30 minutes to Dundee, which I'd guess is the most (or second-most, after Edinburgh?) common destination from St. Andrews.
Statto said:
Leigh, the nearest station is Newton Le Willows, although the railhead for Leigh is Wigan.
Atherton station is about 2 miles closer to Leigh than Newton Le Willows.
I discovered 20 years after closure that the Harrogate-Ripon-Northallerton line was making a healthy profit. Beeching was ignorant of or blatantly disregarded that there were two sources of income. He only took the farebox income from Ripon as the income for the whole line. He disregarded Harrogate passengers using the Queen of Scots Pullman, non-stop between Harrogate and Darlington, and Liverpool-Newcastle trains that were rerouted when the line closed and removing through trains from Harrogate, a large spa town then in the West Riding of Yorkshire.I read recently that the short Clevedon branch was almost at break-even operationally before it was axed. Another short-sighted closure decision.
Chard in South Somerset, decent sized town though close to Crewkerne and Axminster railways stations and would need the line rerouting to serve the town centre, as station at Chard Junction could work but by the time you've travelled to it you might as well have gone to Axminster.
Oswestry seems a relevant candidate. Reasonably size market town with large catchment area. I very much doubt there’s a sound business case (despite the govt hilariously suggesting so recently when culling HS2) to reopen the line up to Gobowen 3 miles away.
Quite, although not for much longer as the manufacturing side of the business is moving elsewhere.Amusingly, the home of Brecknell-Wills the pantograph manufacturers. At least they don't really need a rail connection!
There are few other places that would say the same.I discovered 20 years after closure that the Harrogate-Ripon-Northallerton line was making a healthy profit. Beeching was ignorant of or blatantly disregarded that there were two sources of income. He only took the farebox income from Ripon as the income for the whole line. He disregarded Harrogate passengers using the Queen of Scots Pullman, non-stop between Harrogate and Darlington, and Liverpool-Newcastle trains that were rerouted when the line closed and removing through trains from Harrogate, a large spa town then in the West Riding of Yorkshire.
What he failed to add was the Army income at two large camps from personnel travel warrants, regular whole troop trains from Ripon to various parts and equipment brought in and out of Ripon by pickup goods trains. The MOD paid for this traffic directly to BR. This made a loss from the booking office into a small profit.
He also ignored profit from the goods yard yet included the operating costs of non-stop passenger trains and freight trains even though they were routed this way as an operating convenience to avoid congested York. If they had been routed away by another route then it would have reduced the operating costs and losses.
What I cannot find is the income generated by the daily pick up goods train to the naval ordnance factory at Melmerby just north of Ripon.
Locals considered our rail line was stolen from us by incompetence.
Such as?There are few other places that would say the same.
Such as?
Quite, although not for much longer as the manufacturing side of the business is moving elsewhere.
I remember as a kid going into Chard and wondering what the big building was for as it only said Brecknell-Willis part of the Fandstan(?) Electrical Group
Probably not mentioned because it does have two stations named for it (even if they are not convenient for the centre)I'm surprised that no one has mentioned Dudley. A string of stations just outside the town, but none actually in it. Looks like the plan is to add it to the tram network.
Just wanted to clarify that the X5 goes to Oxford, not Bicester, and that the new EWR station will be on the north side of Winslow and only around 15 mins on the MK-Buckingham-Aylesbury X6 bus from the middle of Buckingham (so rather convenient).The X5 stagecoach bus goes Milton Keynes - Buckingham - Bicester
I'm surprised that no one has mentioned Dudley. A string of stations just outside the town, but none actually in it. Looks like the plan is to add it to the tram network.
That's one that may well happenTavistock
I've always agreed with this. The few short miles of railway west of Bedwyn should be reinstated to Marlborough, with Bedwyn Services should terminate there instead.I always thought that terminating GWR Thames Valley services at Bedwyn was really weird when Gt. Bedwyn itself is so tiny and nearby Marlborough (with its large school) would have been a far more logical terminus. Now, it's a fairly short car journey from Marlborough to Bedwyn or Hungerford, so the cost of reinstating branch line and station outweighs any benefit.
Are you advocating reopening the branch from Savernake to Marlborough?The few short miles of railway west of Bedwyn should be reinstated to Marlborough,
Are you advocating reopening the branch from Savernake to Marlborough?
This seems very logical but how long is the branch? At £40million a mile and a new station can we afford it?The branch that used to join up with the Reading-Taunton line just west of Bedwyn.
Certainly possible to get a line into and a Station on the southern side of Marlborough.
Certainly makes more sense to terminate Bedwyn services at somewhere of more significance (and that currently has no rail service) than the nowhere place of Great Bedwyn.