Hardly a massive detour: WOF - WOS with flying start is only a minute and allow for the gondola perhaps 5 minutes. Think of the time savings for those on MalWolds (CotsVern?) axis who do not wish to alight and are saved one stop in Worcester.
Think of the people who want to get to their places of work, shops, bus station, etc, etc, who already have a nice short walk from Foregate Street - but apparently they don't fit with your fantasy, so don't count.
I am unsure why we need to "acknowledge the existence of" Parkway in this debate when your post seems to describe it as simply a place where existing trains might in future stop on the Cotswold and XC lines rather than something to immediately cause a massive recast of services around Worcester.
Let's see. Shrub Hill is the only station with car parking in central Worcester, so at the moment anyone using their car to get from home to the station has to go to Shrub Hill, despite the city's lousy central road network and lone bridge over the river. From next year they will be able to drive to a place with lots of parking spaces, with easy access to the M5, the eastern and southern bypasses and all the roads that connect with those.
What do you think is going to happen to custom at Shrub Hill as a result? Once the effects of that are understood, then a recast of services around Worcester might be just what happens.
Worcestershire parkway isn't really a Worcester station anyway, so I can't see any relevance at all. I've always lived far nearer to Shrub hill anyway, as do a decent proportion of residents. On the upsides, it has parking, it has the old Kay's office block which could make excellent housing, and the dead-on-arrival retail park might as well go over to something useful. It's also only 5 minutes further from the bits of the town centre that anybody would want to visit. Basically shutting foregate Street is the only sensible option. Shove a wee escalator up the hill and really there wouldn't be any objections
Are you serious? Worcestershire Parkway isn't a Worcester station? See my comments above about road access all around the city of Worcester, avoiding the centre. Just wait and see what happens when it opens and people have the choice of going there or battling their way to Shrub Hill to catch a train.
In this discussion I have to ask what is Worcester Parkway Station for exactly? To me a parkway station outside a city is for commuters and visitors to park outside the city and continue their journey into the city by public transport. That is why I spoke about the need to know the service pattern envisaged for this station. If it is for visitors and commuters into Worcester then to my mind it is pretty useless if it will get only the Cotswold trains running into Worcester. This makes me think that it is intended for the long distance passengers to London and possibly on the Cross Country services when the new franchise comes into operation.
Did you actually read my reply to your previous post? Of course it's for London and XC passengers - though if it had a decent service to Birmingham in prospect, people currently using WMR services from the centre of Worcester would flock there in droves.
You seem to be confusing a Parkway railway station with a bus park-and-ride site. Didcot Parkway is slap bang in the middle of Didcot, so not much use to anyone trying to get a train from the edge of town to the centre.
^^^I think that's where you are not correct. I think Parkway stations are for the sons and daughters of white flight, people who moved out of city centres decades ago and now would find it a bind to go into a city centre station to pick up the London /Brum / Oxford train from their bijou properties in the countryside.
Do you know what the roads in central Worcester are like? I'd suggest not. And are you seriously suggesting the people who use Bristol Parkway should have to fight their way to Temple Meads to get on a train?
It's Worcestershire parkway. It's nothing much to do with Worcester, more a railhead for rural users to get to London and Birmingham. It's probably a waste of time and money even for that, and neither operating company seems very keen, but some people can't see two railways cross without wanting to build a complex expensive station there.
Going back 20-30 years there was an ambition for it to be an easy change from Worcester for trains going south rather than getting the very irregular train to Cheltenham. Since then XC have been fairly clear they aren't stopping any big trains there, and growing traffic means there's more ambition to improve the direct Bristol service instead.
Oxford Parkway station is used by people from the city and from parts of Oxfordshire that are distinctly rural - should they change its name?
Probably not surprising that GWR aren't too keen. On the one hand they get it in the neck from Worcestershire politicians, both local and MPs, who want faster trains to London, but the same people also want those trains to stop three times in the space of four miles to serve Worcester. If they were given a choice of just making two calls, guess which one of the three would get dropped? Begins with an S and an H...
Please don't tell me that people living in Worcester suburbs near the bypasses are going to bother trying to drive to Shrub Hill to catch a London service once an alternative is available. People were never that keen on driving to Oxford station before the Parkway opened. Nowadays few bother. Anyone looking for a parking space at Oxford station is now spoiled for choice.
The GWR Bristol service should be improved anyway, irrespective of whatever XC services call at the Parkway, as it also offers the prospect of a better service for Ashchurch, which XC clearly finds a chore to stop a few Cardiff services at now. Given the current XC fleet, they would be doing well to stop any large trains almost anywhere...