May 13, 2004

Whether frequency, speed, or something else is important depends upon the circumstances.

Michael Jennings | Inter-modal Competition

Recently, my laptop computer developed a fault. My laptop is my only computer, and it was thus very annoying to be without it for several weeks. Partly as a consequence, I am in the process of building myself a desktop computer out of various bits and pieces. The first step is just to get the thing to work in some form - I may upgrade some of the pieces to something nicer later. One thing that I needed was a screen. Lots of people have old screens lying around, and Brian Micklethwait wanted to get rid of his because it was taking up space in his flat.

So I just had to get it home. As I don't have a car, it had to be by public transport. The screen was an old model and heavy, and I did not want to have to carry it far. This led me to a different set of requirements when figuring how to get home to those that normally apply. In normal circumstances I would either walk to Victoria station, and catch a train to Selhurst just north of Croydon, which is where I live. Or I would walk to Vauxhall across the river, catch a train to Clapham Junction, and then catch the train from Victoria on its way through. (As Vauxhall is in Zone 2, going this way also works out cheaper).

However, both of these routes were clearly out in this instance. The screen was too heavy to carry to either of the railway stations. However, I could catch a bus in Vauxhall Bridge road to either Victoria or Vauxhall. However, there were disadvantages to both. To get to Victoria, I would have to cross a busy road, and walk a distance down the street to the nearest bus stop, get off a bus at a location not terribly close to Victoria Station, find the right platform, walk a substantial distance through a crowded station, go through ticket barriers, and get on the train. If I chose instead to get on a bus to Vauxhall, I would have to get off at a bus stop not especially close to the station, cross a complicated road intersection, and find the right train. I probably would have done this, except for the fact that I would have to change trains at Clapham Junction, which would mean carting the screen a fair distance including up and down stairs through another crowded station.

So what did I do? Well, I looked carefully at the bus map, and noticed that the bus to Vauxhall continued a substantial distance into south London. In particular it happened to stop right next to East Dulwich station. As it happens, not all trains to Selhurst start at Victoria: there is a less frequent service that starts at London Bridge and goes via East Dulwich and Tulse Hill. So as it happened, it was possible to get a bus to East Dulwich wich stopped right outside the station (although I still had to cross a road), where I could change to a train at a not very busy station with no ticket barriers and a relatively short walk. And this I did.

In this case, most of the usual considerations for choosing a route did not apply. I was not concerned with finding the route with the minimum time or the shortest route. (To say that the route I took was non-direct is an understatement). What I was concerned with was minimising the total walking distance, minimising the number of times I had to change from one vehicle or mode of transport to another, and avoiding having to walk in large crowds. Frequency was not very important to me, and journey time even less so. And this led me to make a completely different decision to the one I normally would.

Of course, Jeremy Clarkson would say that it would have been a great deal easier and faster if I had a car. And in this instance he would certainly have been right.

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May 10, 2004

Clarkson’s Great Race – and why frequency is often more important than speed

Patrick Crozier | Inter-modal Competition | Other Railways

In a comment to Jackie’s post on satellite navigation Mark Holland manages to mention last night’s Top Gear in which Jeremy Clarkson challenged his co-presenters to a race from the Top Gear HQ in Cranleigh to Monte Carlo. Clarkson drove, his colleagues took the train. Why exactly, they didn’t pop down to Heathrow like everyone else is a mystery but that was the challenge. And Clarkson won.

That’s a bit of a shocker. I know there are all sorts of things that slow down train journeys. You have to get to the station. You have to buy your ticket. They have to slow for bends, dodgy track etc. They have to stop. I presume that his colleagues had to transfer in Paris but, you never know, maybe they didn’t. And I am sure that Clarkson took a “French” view of speed limits.

But even so I am surprised. The top speed of a TGV is 186mph. Average I would guess is about 140mph. My guess is that Clarkson (even he has to be mindful of his licence) was rarely driving at above 110mph. One wonders what he might have done if he’d really been allowed to rip.

So what happened? I wonder if SNCF frequency was the culprit.

Continue reading "Clarkson’s Great Race – and why frequency is often more important than speed"


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May 09, 2004

The oddities of satellite navigation systems

Jackie D | Transport General

A couple of years ago, I drove to the South of France with my friends. We borrowed my friend's father's BMW estate, so that we could bring back as many crates of wine as possible. But after the first twelve hours of driving and map reading, at least one of us (that would be me) was thinking that the wine may not have made such an ordeal worthwhile.

One of those friends, soon after we returned from France, bought a Mercedes CLK with satellite navigation, and has since purchased a Mini Cooper (for himself) and a BMW (for his wife-type-partner), all with sat nav. The idea is that we'll be able to take one or more of these cars to France with us and fill them with booze, without the hassle of maps and the spats they can cause. An expensive solution to a minor problem, perhaps, but one I approve of wholeheartedly. After using satellite navigation to find several potentially troublesome addresses, I have become a major fan of the technology, and would not dream of driving a car without it.

But these sat nav systems are not without their bugs.

One day last month, I was visiting with someone who has satellite navigation in his BMW. We decided to go for lunch at a restaurant near Colchester, in the village of Great Tey. But we couldn't find Great Tey in the sat nav directory no matter how hard we looked. And then finally, there it was -- under Tey Great. "That's a bit cheeky," the car's owner commented.

A couple of weeks ago, driving around central London in the same car, we were trying to find a certain restaurant. But at almost every turn, the sat nav system directed us to drive the wrong way down one-way streets, or to take avenues that were closed due to road works. The driver explained to me that there were updates to the sat nav software that you could get, but as he'd only had the car a few months, he hadn't yet bothered to do so. That explained that, then.

Fast forward to this week: same car, same car owner, in deepest Fingringhoe. After a couple of drinks in a country pub, we got in the car and entered our desired destination into the sat nav system. The system advised us to make a U-turn.

We were still in the car park.

It also indicated that we were 7.3 miles from our destination. Once we'd pulled out of the car park, it told us that we were 9.6 miles from our destination. Half a mile up the road, it sent us down what appeared to be a mud track for a quarter of a mile, then spit us back out onto the road on which we'd originally been driving.

Somehow, I don't think that my hypothesis -- that the car is possessed, a British Christine -- quite hits the nail on the head. I've looked on Google for information on sat nav bugs, and have come up quite emptyhanded. While I'd love to take this as an indication that the car is evil, I suspect there is more to it than that. Any suggestions gratefully received in the comments.

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May 07, 2004

How not to name a transport company.

Michael Jennings | Rail Franchising

Company naming seems to go through trends, and we seem to be going through a particularly silly one at the moment, which is to give companies numbers as names. A case in point:

One problem that has occurred since rail franchising is that train companies forced to share London terminal stations with one another have taken to squabbling with one another about who gets access to which platforms and when, and as franchises are re-awarded, policy has been to create knew franchises in such a way that the London terminal stations are used by a single company only. (This essentially recreates the original companies that built the stations in the first place, of course). Very recently, a new franchise has been created to serve Liverpool Street station. After immense thought, and no doubt spending lots of money, the marketroids came up with a name for the new franchise: "One", presumably to imply that there was only one company serving Liverpool Street.

How is this stupid? Let me count the ways. Firstly, using such a common word as a company name is difficult if you want to find the company on the internet. The URL is impossible to guess, and it takes a few attempts before you can even figure out how to find it on Google. (It is here). I haven't tried it, but I suspect the same problem occurs if you attempt to ring up directory enquiries to find a phone number. And there is the problem discussed in the Times yesterday. How do you deal with an announcement like

"The train on platform seven is the 7.20 One service to Norwich".

And what does

"The train on platform six is the 3.47 One service to Cambridge" actually mean?

Unsurprisingly, announcers have quickly reverted to

"The train on platform seven is the 7.20 service to Norwich", which is presumably not what the people who own One really want.

One is not even the first train company in Britain to have run into this problem. The Great Western franchise (the railway famously built by Isambard Brunel) is owned by a company named "First", and the operation is collectively called "First Great Western". This company initially put the words "First Great Western" on the side of all their trains (with the word "First" helpfully in a different font, as that was a corporate logo), and found themselves suffering from the problem that passengers would walk from one end of the train to the other, trying to find a second class carriage. (I have not heard if any people with first class tickets sat down in second class thinking they were in first and were disappointed). This problem was solved in an equivalent way to what the announcers are doing. Many of the carriages were repainted simply with the words "Great Western", and the corporate logo was left off entirely.

Given how much money is spent on corporate branding, it surely isn't too much to ask that people think these things through. But they often don't.

(As another non-transport example of the same thing, mobile phone company "3" last year sponsored two series of cricket matches in Australia. Hence the "3 Test series" between Australia and Zimbabwe that consisted of two matches and the "3 Test series" between Australia and India, that consisted of four matches. At least in this case the corporate name was invented well before it was decided that the company would be sponsoring cricket matches. The "One" people have no such excuse).

Correction: I repeatedly wrote "Great Eastern" when I meant "Great Western" when I first posted this article. Silly me.

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May 04, 2004

How to drive when you have passengers

Patrick Crozier | Road Miscellany

“So, how was my driving?”

“Terrible. You were driving too fast, cutting people up, driving too close to the car in front…”

“Oh”

“You never used to be this bad.”

“Yes, I always thought you were a good driver.”

This came as something of a shock especially when it came from my mother and my sister. I (of course) thought my driving was fine. But then, we all think our driving is just fine. Of course we do. You are hardly going to drive in a way you think is dangerous. Or, at least, not normally, you’re not.

And then, there is the problem that as passengers most of us are more on edge than we are as drivers. It’s all to do with being in control, I guess.

And it was France. And we all know how they drive.

But that’s not the point. Good manners requires considering the feelings of others. And when driving considering the feelings of others means driving in a way they are comfortable with. And if that means driving in a way you regard as ludicrously slow then so be it. Even in France.

There is another point, I suppose. Passengers are very reluctant to criticise drivers. There is always a fear that you are going to wreck a relationship. Which, of course, means that vital information is not going to be communicated. The answer: perhaps before we even get into a car, we should initiate a discussion:

“Is your driving going to alarm me?”

Or perhaps:

“If you find my driving alarming please tell me and I will do my best to moderate it.”

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Plane and Car v The Train

Patrick Crozier | Inter-modal Competition

For my trip to Alsace I could have chosen rail. Waterloo to Paris; Paris to Strasbourg; Strasbourg to Colmar. Booking it would have been a pain and it would have worked out more expensive than flying but it could have been done.

But…my pregnant sister was coming along.

This changed everything. After that fact became known there was no mucking about. So, it was a plane to Basle and hire car from thereon.

The thing is that although that was the decision I made and although it seemed obvious, I am still not quite sure why that was the one I made. I think it was because it meant that my sister would spent the least possible time trapped. On a plane you are trapped. It’s a rotten place to feel ill. No, I wasn’t expecting my sister to feel ill (she’s at a stage of pregnancy where you don’t tend to) but it was more that she might. But although you are trapped on a plane the entrapment doesn’t last unlike a five-hour train journey.

The hire car also gave us one significant advantage once we got to Colmar: flexibility. We could change our plans, go sightseeing and we wouldn’t need to call cabs. Very useful.

In the end, hiring the car worked out pretty expensive but looking back and even armed with the knowledge that French train travel is dirt cheap I don’t think I would have changed things. Paying to remove some of the hassles of travel was, in this case, very much worth it.

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April 27, 2004

Superconductive Maglev!

Brian Micklethwait | New Trains

This New York Times article today, which Patrick has NOT yet linked to (unlike the previous NYT bit I linked to today from here without mentioning his link from here – very embarrassing) says something very Transport Blog relevant, in among a lot of other stuff:

SCHENECTADY, N.Y. – In a onetime printing plant on the edge of this tattered manufacturing city, a small company named Superpower churns out sample after sample of what looks like shiny metal tape.

The tape has five layers. The middle one, a ceramic film one-tenth as thick as a human hair, exhibits one of nature's most tantalizing tricks. At very low temperatures, the ceramic abruptly loses all resistance to electrical current.

Superconductivity! It's now coming on by leaps and bounds:

Success could spring superconductivity from the modest niches that it has occupied in fields like medical diagnostics and give it wide commercial applications. In addition to cutting costs and raising reliability in generating and distributing electricity, superconductive wire could replace copper wire in motors to save space and cut energy costs in factories and on ships. …

And here comes the Transport Blog relevant bit:

… Railroads might finally embrace maglev technology, which allows high-speed trains to ride magnetic fields above superconductive rails.

So how is this being achieved?

The alloys used in medical imaging superconduct only at supercold temperatures, about 450 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. To reach that point, they have to be cooled by liquid helium, which is expensive to make and manage.

By contrast, ceramic superconductors work at temperatures above minus 321 Fahrenheit, allowing them to be cooled by liquid nitrogen, an inexpensive industrial refrigerant. For that reason, they are called high-temperature superconductors, though they are still far from the dream of a room-temperature superconductor.

Scientists eh? Above minus 321 Fahrenheit is a "high temperature".

It sounds vaguely like a new kind of railway line that will automatically cover itself, with no help at all from the weather, with the wrong kind of snow.

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Shanghai Maglev!

Brian Micklethwait | New Trains

Via this posting, which I got to from … can't remember … oh yes, from this, I found my way to this New York Times story, about a brand new "Maglev" in Shanghai:

Their digital cameras were flashing furiously now, and passengers began calling friends on their cellphones, eager to share the thrill. With a glance out of the big bay windows came an impression of art to accompany the technological awe. Mondrian and Dali came to mind as the farmers' plots were reduced to streaking geometrical abstractions, and time seemed to bend, with the thick traffic on the parallel highway down below zooming in reverse.

For a brief instant, the car's friendly display read 432 kilometers per hour (268 m.p.h.), the train's peak speed, and just then a passenger cried out: "Slow down, this is way too fast. Whoa, where are the brakes?" Faster-than-a-bullet-train technology is a marvel to be sure, the man's cry seemed to say, but in an eight-minute train ride to the airport there is no time to read, or scarcely even time to think.

And this could be one reason the Shanghai maglev has yet to catch on since the eight-minute service was begun in January. On an average day there are reportedly only 4,000 riders, less than one-sixth of capacity.

Personally, I love riding on trains that are nearly empty, just as my favourite pubs are the ones that no one else likes and where I can get a bit of peace and quiet. For someone like me pleasure tends to be transient. My favourite trains fill up or are discontinued. My favourite pubs go out of business and get turned into yuppie hutches.

ShanghaiMaglev.jpgThis maglev will soon fill up, presumably. Economically, it may scrape along making an "operating profit", but its true costs will never be repaid. Why do people build such things? Partly because they tend to look so pretty.

But, question: will Shanghai as a whole benefit from this service? Will it, in that wider positive externalities sense, be profitable? And do they plan to extend it out into the wide open spaces of China?

One thing is for sure. Shanghai is one great place, and getting greater all the time.

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April 25, 2004

Railways need density

Patrick Crozier | Rail Economics

By which I mean that railways are at their most profitable (or least unprofitable) when they operate in densely-populated areas with large populations. This matters to me because I believe that profit is a very good indicator of whether something should be done or not.

Empirically, this seems to hold out. Profitable railways can be found in Japan’s cities and suburbs. In Britain, in London, there are some commuter TOCs which don’t need any subsidy at all and most of them need (or, at least, until recently needed) very little. Most of the subsidy (insofar as it can be apportioned) ends up supporting services outside London. In the past, private companies have found it (just about) profitable to build underground railways in both London and New York.

Although states do not operate on a strict profit and loss basis, ultimately, how much an infrastructure project stands to lose will play a factor in whether it gets built or not. States seem to have found that it is only worth building (or running) subways in densely-populated parts of the world. Thus they’ve built them in Tokyo, Paris and Moscow, but not Birmingham or Edinburgh.

Why, this should be, I am not quite sure. I guess it has something to do with marginal costs in that the marginal cost of one extra rail passenger is, in fact, very low (no need for extra drivers, station staff or signallers), while the marginal cost of an extra road passenger is much higher. And, at some point, the average cost of a rail passenger becomes less than that of a road passenger.

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Why doesn’t Los Angeles have much of a metro?

Patrick Crozier | Rail Economics | US Railways

Los Angeles (I was surprised to discover) does have a metro. But at 270,000 passengers a day it’s pretty insignificant in comparison to Tokyo’s 5m, Moscow’s 9m or even London’s 2.5m.

The real surprise is that in terms of total population and population density (the things I think are the biggest single determiners of whether a railway is viable or not) Los Angeles is remarkably similar to both New York and London.

All down to the evil machinations of General Motors? [In the 1940s (?) GM bought up LA’s trams, ripped up the tracks and replaced them with buses.] Personally, I don’t much buy this argument. If a Los Angeles metro or tram system had been such a good idea someone would simply have relaid the tracks.

No, I think something else is going on here. Two possibilities: one, that subways are, in fact, a really bad idea and London and New York are simply victims of their own history; two, something else is going on. Are LA’s roads significantly wider than in other places, perhaps?

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Profit is a pretty good indicator of whether something is worth doing or not

Patrick Crozier | General Points (not just transport)

In the economic sphere, I mean. Obviously, buying your mother a box of chocolates is a pretty unprofitable thing to do (in strict monetary terms, that is) but (for most of us) it is still worth doing.

The problem is…I’m not sure why (profit is such a good indicator, that is). I think it is wrapped up with the whole idea about why markets work but I can't quite work out why. So, if there are any free marketeers out there who could tell me I would very much appreciate it.

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Los Angeles is not as densely populated as New York but it’s a pretty close run thing

Patrick Crozier | US Railways

When I read Gordon and Richardson’s piece about urban expansion (aka sprawl) I was doubtful about their claim that Los Angeles is more densely-populated than New York. According to these figures (from Wendell Cox’s outfit) I was right to be. Having said that the differences are not great and it does strike me that a lot depends on how you define a city’s limits and whether you include things like industrial areas and parkland.

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Why free markets tend to produce good results

Patrick Crozier | General Points (not just transport)

At their most basic level free markets depend on trade, voluntary exchange, swapping, call it what you will. But think about what goes on in some of the swaps in your life. When I go to work essentially what I am saying is that the money is more valuable than my labour, or, at least, that I guess that that will be the case. At the same time my employer is saying that (to him) my labour is more valuable than the money he is about to give me.

In other words we both win.

And that is why free markets work.

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All buses are not the same

Patrick Crozier | Buses and Jitneys

Introducing the Hampton Luxury Liner:

homeani_s.jpg

Walnut trim, eh? Looks like I'm going to have to eat some of my words.

Mind you, $37 for a single trip - Long Islanders must be loaded.

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April 24, 2004

Misuses of the English Language #3: Sprawl

Patrick Crozier | Misuse of the English Language | Planning

I don’t like the use of the term. The linguists out there will know the proper technical term for this but “sprawl” is a word which has two bits to it: a descriptive bit and a judgement bit. It describes urban expansion. Its judgement is that this is a bad thing.

Right here and now I don’t particularly wish to pronounce on whether urban expansion is a good thing or a bad thing, just to say that it is a legitimate matter for debate. And as such one should not seek to prejudice that debate by using a judgmental term like “sprawl”.

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 IN BRIEF

May 17, 2004

Rethink roadworks - letter in the Times ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Private motorway puts up tolls as jams loom - on the state-owned alternative. I thought that was the plan all along ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Cameras to focus on high-speed offenders ...link
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BA annual profits rise 70 per cent - profits? BA? Surely some mistake ...link
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Network Rail directors to get big bonuses - !? ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
May 14, 2004

Speed cameras make us hated, say police ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

37 rowdy travellers thrown off plane - good ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Network Rail criticised - by National Audit Office ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
May 13, 2004

Don't like buses? It's a tram by any other name - First Group announce their results ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
May 10, 2004

Average delay of 0.1 minutes per train - on the Tokaido Shinkansen. "…including delays caused by natural disasters such as heavy rain, typhoons, and heavy snowfall" ...link
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Road Traffic Technology - the website for the road traffic industry ...link
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May 09, 2004

£5 charge 'has not hit Oxford St' - according to the Mayor ...link
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Excessive Essex - it's Britain's speed camera capital ...link
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Councils cash in on bus lane cameras ...link
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Crossrail delayed - yet again ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Self-propelled swarming robot traffic cones - what will they think of next? ...link
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May 08, 2004

More Scottish grannies pulled over for driving too slowly! - I guess this is what happens when you have David Coulthard as a role model. Thanks to Mark Holland for the heads up ...link
PCCC | Comments (1)

Deutsche Bahn shortlisted for East Coast rail franchise ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Honest drivers are driven mad by the boy racers ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Uninsured drivers cost £500m a year ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Partial victory for Tube man sacked for playing squash - actually, it's an overwhelming defeat ...link
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SRA is too big for its boots, says regulator - don't you just love turf wars? ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
May 05, 2004

Richard Bowker interview ...link
PCCC | Comments (1)

Eminent domain abuse - that's compulsory purchase to us Brits. Commonsense and Wonder point to some examples ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
May 04, 2004

Howells calls for speed cuts to save lives ...link
PCCC | Comments (1)

Abolish compulsory purchase - says Peter Gordon, almost ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Tourists stranded as airline collapses ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Regional trains that run empty should go to hell, says rail chief - quite ...link
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Aesthetics and airplanes - aircraft are coming over all style concious ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 28, 2004

Atlantic £60 fares hope ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Little and large battle for air supremacy - Boeing v Airbus. Graphic ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Slam-door train deadline is put back by a year ...link
PCCC | Comments (4)
April 27, 2004

Rail firms accept liability for Potters Bar crash ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 26, 2004

Why PRT will ultimately fail - PRT = Personal Rapid Transport ie the stuff beloved of sci-fi writers ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 25, 2004

New Wolmar column - and how quickly people change their tune ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

World's first toll motorway - TOLLROADSnews has the story ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

NYC Taxi Monopoly - $300,000 just to drive a cab? Strewth! ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Home work is not real! - oh, but it is, according to our very own Brian Micklethwait ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

268mph on the Shanghai Maglev - which is the good bit ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 24, 2004

Why sprawl is good - 1997 article by Peter Gordon and Harry W. Richardson comparing Portland and LA. LA has a higher population density than New York apparently ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Sweden to charge traffic toll in capital ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Ignoring the cost of car ownership - Beyond Stupidity thinks we don't know how much our cars cost ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Regulator lashes out at railways blueprint ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

GPS bus tracker - Beyond Brilliance on a development that could make bus travel slightly less bad ...link
PCCC | Comments (1)
April 23, 2004

Drilling for victory, and the black gold will never run out - there really is quite a lot of oil out there ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Helmets 'put the young off cycling' - and not just the young ...link
PCCC | Comments (6)

It may not feel like it, but traffic is speeding up - oh yeah ...link
PCCC | Comments (1)

Put profits before people - David Carr draws conclusions from the North Korean rail crash ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 22, 2004

Edinburgh road charging concerns - John Lewis fears 10% loss in sales ...link
DJF | Comments (0)

New Glasgow tram plan - to run west from Glasgow city centre along both banks of the Clyde ...link
DJF | Comments (0)

Airlines fight plan for delays payout - the EU wants to force them to compensate passengers for delays ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Moscow's Metro shows its age ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Congestion charge cost £300m, say Oxford St traders ...link
PCCC | Comments (1)
April 21, 2004

Metronet fined £11m over Tube ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Fares to fall by 20pc in year, says Ryanair ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 20, 2004

Follow my train of thought - interview with Michael Holden, boss of South East Trains ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Train companies rattled by rail overhaul proposals - some people don't like Mr Bowker's proposals ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 19, 2004

Bowker signals rail upheaval - well, actually, he's in no position to do so. What this looks like, is a desperate attempt to keep his job by appearing relevant. Cynical? Moi? ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 18, 2004

Boeing stakes all on the Dreamliner - potentially interesting report but the claim that the 707 (and not the Comet) was the world's first passenger jet does rather spoil it for me ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 16, 2004

"This device is especially valuable in teaching women to drive" - but what is it? A whip? A cane? A ducking stool? Brian has the answer ...link
PCCC | Comments (1)

Search for Channel crossing solutions - one says a railway was the only way - the other says we should have built a bridge ...link
PCCC | Comments (1)

Japanese tycoon resigns in Seibu corporate scandal - Seibu is a railway (amongst other things). The tycoon was once the richest man in the world. If only we could have scandals like that ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Child car seats 'must be used to age of 11' ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 13, 2004

Cross-Channel tunnel timings - it takes a long time to get from autoroute to motorway ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

M25 cameras catch 10,000 in 7 miles - on the M25 ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Strike ballot for railway workers ...link
PCCC | Comments (3)

Ryanair deal on Charleroi to sidestep European ruling ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 12, 2004

Neighborhood impacts & congestion pricing - David Sucher has a go at Peter Gordon. He [Sucher] thinks that road pricing will just lead to traffic spilling onto still-charge-free roads. Well, if that doesn't start an inter-blog flame war ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)

Vive la revolution! Vive la digging! - Neil Collins on the Eurotunnel mess ...link
PCCC | Comments (0)
April 10, 2004

Last train pulls out of St Pancras - until it is re-opened as the Eurostar terminal ...link
PCCC | Comments (1)

State traffic management doesn't work - TOLLROADSnews has some examples ...link
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April 09, 2004

Rail fare rises 'abuse monopoly' - First Great Western put up the fares ...link
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April 08, 2004

Tunnel vision gave us a watery white elephant - the Channel Tunnel isn't much cop thinks Tim Luckhurst ...link
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Lights and Eurotunnel - they're going bust says the Times ...link
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Rise in motorcyclists drives up road deaths - because safety is dangerous, probably ...link
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Guillotine falls on Eurotunnel board ...link
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'Clever' car to solve congestion - maybe, though, considering that it's being developed by the EU, probably not ...link
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April 07, 2004

Wireless broadband to be installed on GNER trains ...link
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JRTR #38 - is out. This edition: trams and fares ...link
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The drive to vilify our motorists ...link
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Japan cracks down on 'killer' cyclists ...link
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Hazard County - Mark Holland thinks that some of the South Coast's safety aids are anything but ...link
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April 06, 2004

Air taxis beat Moscow's traffic - for when a blue-flashing light and a greased palm just won't do ...link
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Ask "why" five times - Photon Courier on a Japanese management principle which I am pretty sure is used on their railways ...link
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HOT Lanes - Peter Gordon on America's answer to congestion charging ...link
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Autopilot to thwart future attacks - so if terrorists can no longer crash aircraft into buildings does that mean we will soon be able to take things like tweezers and nail files on board again? ...link
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British engineers hit new heights - story about a viaduct in the Massif Central which will be the highest in the world relieving (and I can say this from personal experience) a notorious stretch of road ...link
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Rail delays get even worse ...link
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Thames Trains fined £2m for Ladbroke Grove crash ...link
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April 04, 2004

Scramjets won't work - says Jeremy Clarkson before launching into a round of Yank-bashing ...link
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April 03, 2004

Bullet Train Remakes Map of South Korea - the New York Times reports on the development of high(er - not yet Japanese bullet) speed trains in Korea, and also China. ...link
BHM | Comments (0)

Concorde grounded for ever as BA drains lifeblood - they're taking out the oil which for technical reasons I don't pretend to understand pretty much means they'll never fly again. Bastards ...link
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Councillor jailed for redrawing road map - for a third of a mil so might I. Oh, the evils of compulsory purchase ...link
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Plot to blow up Madrid express foiled ...link
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Congestion charge for pedestrians - and about time too. But only if pensioners get charged double ...link
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More sprawl please - TM Lutas makes the case and then, somehow, turns his attention to Segways ...link
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Higher council tax bills as bureaucrats grab buses - says the Adam Smith Institute ...link
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"Cruise Missiles" A Bigger Factor In Sleep Crashes Than Tiredness - speed-limited Heavy Goods Vehicles are a menace according to the ABD. Safety is dangerous ...link
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April 02, 2004

Blame Prescott - Iain Murray reads the Select Committee report ...link
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Rail networks offer bargains to early travellers - after a break of 52 years one might add ...link
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