Why City Thameslink is the Worst Station in Britain

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 603

  • @CharlesTysonYerkesOfficial
    @CharlesTysonYerkesOfficial Месяц назад +1159

    Its because it had nothing to do with me.

  • @izzieb
    @izzieb Месяц назад +431

    Also worth adding that City Thameslink is where northbound trains switch to AC, which is another potential failure point for Thameslink services and something I've experienced several times on the route.

    • @Garner84
      @Garner84 Месяц назад +12

      Is it, I thought they change at Farringdon?

    • @railotaku
      @railotaku Месяц назад +46

      @@Garner84 Used to be - they moved the change to City as if for what ever reason a Northbound fails to change over it can be put in the sidings just north of the station

    • @lionzion86
      @lionzion86 Месяц назад +18

      @@Garner84 There's a driver placard to raise/lower the catenary at the ends of City Thameslink platforms

    • @KasabianFan44
      @KasabianFan44 Месяц назад +41

      @@Garner84
      Southbound trains still switch to DC at Farringdon, but northbound trains now go AC from City Thameslink.
      The line is actually dual-voltage between the two stations in both directions, so I suspect it’s a case of having a “backup”. If your train has a fault and can’t change its power at the first station, continue to the next one and try again. If it fails again, only then should you take the train out of service.

    • @peterclark211
      @peterclark211 Месяц назад +4

      ​@Garner84 a sign going south indicated 'PANT UP'. Never spotted a 'PANT DOWN- in the opposite direction.

  • @realjacobfoster
    @realjacobfoster Месяц назад +301

    Used City Thameslink for the first time today. Was pleased to find a video about how bad it is in my subscriptions as soon as I got home

    • @IJBLondon
      @IJBLondon Месяц назад +7

      Did you agree?

    • @realjacobfoster
      @realjacobfoster Месяц назад +5

      Can’t say it was the best, but pleased to report that everything was on time

    • @sglenny001
      @sglenny001 Месяц назад +3

      Used st pancreas early this year quite decent service

    • @rachelcruickshank7269
      @rachelcruickshank7269 Месяц назад +8

      @@realjacobfosterI quite like Thameslink. I live on the Brighton mainline and it’s very convenient to be able to get trains direct to central London, Luton and Cambridge. The seats aren’t very comfy but they feel roomy and safer than trains with separated carriages. I guess I’m used to the delays 😂

    • @SimonForrester
      @SimonForrester Месяц назад +5

      In combination with the Elizabeth Line, Thameslink makes getting to Heathrow so much less hassle, especially if you’ve got suitcases. No faffing about, a lift between the platforms at Farringdon is SO much better than having to get the tube 😊

  • @sabinebogensperger1928
    @sabinebogensperger1928 Месяц назад +137

    Yes please to a video about the big C and little c! Thanks!

    • @tomq6491
      @tomq6491 Месяц назад +18

      Somebody recently called me a big C. I am glad to find out he meant the financial centre.

    • @lordmuntague
      @lordmuntague Месяц назад +8

      @@tomq6491 As long as he didn't call you a merchant banker...

    • @tomq6491
      @tomq6491 Месяц назад +4

      @@lordmuntague 😄

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha Месяц назад +5

      The number of strange quirks and differences is huge. One of many that spring to mind is that the current monarch can't enter The City without an invitation.

    • @jonathanma2741
      @jonathanma2741 Месяц назад +7

      There is a great video by CGP Grey on the topic

  • @fritz46
    @fritz46 Месяц назад +155

    Munich is currently building a second tunnel for the S-Bahn system, basically for the same reason, because all the trains have to use the existing tunnel which is at the limit of its capacity. And yes, it's expensive. Very expensive.

    • @tamara3984
      @tamara3984 Месяц назад +4

      And it hasn't been that long ago that they finish the refurb and the closures for that were a disaster. Still better than having to change into the team from Ostbahnhof to Hauptbahnhof, as it used to be before.

    • @1258-Eckhart
      @1258-Eckhart Месяц назад +1

      *tram

    • @ijmad
      @ijmad Месяц назад +7

      Another example, in Paris RER B and D share the tunnel between Châtelet-Les Halles and Gare du Nord which is also the source of capacity bottlenecks and horrendous delays from time to time.

    • @class87srule
      @class87srule Месяц назад +1

      ​@@ijmadIs that the one that goes to Disneyland?

    • @ijmad
      @ijmad Месяц назад +6

      @@class87srule RER A goes to Disneyland. That one is super busy too! Paris has five cross-city rail lines (RER A, B, C, D, E), London so far only has two (Elizabeth + Thameslink).

  • @fridovanorden8930
    @fridovanorden8930 Месяц назад +178

    Regarding the non-indicative name: Berlin's subway has a station called 'Stadtmitte' (City center). That's about as fuzzy as 'City Thameslink'

    • @hyperdistortion2
      @hyperdistortion2 Месяц назад +36

      Tokyo Station has entered the chat…
      A city of 35m people with many, many termini and major interchanges… but one station simply called ‘Tokyo’. Still, a very pretty station it is, too!

    • @quintuscrinis
      @quintuscrinis Месяц назад +9

      @@fridovanorden8930 awkwardly though City Thameslink makes perfect geographical sense - it's right in the centre of The City and on the Thameslink line

    • @rogink
      @rogink Месяц назад +2

      @@quintuscrinis I'm not doubting Jago, but the map showed City Thameslink to the left of Holborn Viaduct. As the latter is not in the City, my assumption would be the same for this station.

    • @quintuscrinis
      @quintuscrinis Месяц назад +1

      @rogink or maybe it isn't quite in The City. It is definitely the closest though and the one used by "City" workers hence being closed in Sunday.

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Месяц назад +9

      Wien Mitte is even worse, it is far away from city at all, outside Ring.

  • @wiredwomble7958
    @wiredwomble7958 Месяц назад +62

    I travel into and out of City Thameslink for work 3 times a week. The longer distance trains (Brighton/Horsham Bedford/Cambridge/Peterborough) running a few minutes late you have to play guess who will get to Blackfriars first and therefore into City first - The 8 car stoppers (St Albans/Luton) or the 12 car long distance. The board can be jumping around all the time.
    And don't get me started on late running Peterborough trains (now see what you did!). They turf us off at Finsbury Park (having stopped all stations in the core) and then run straight to Peterborough. Tell you to get the next train which is often cancelled so it can become an hour or more wait.
    Another problem from Finsbury Park is that they have to swap drivers for the core so if the core driver is not there yet (their train from the core is delayed) it then delays the train at FP.
    Thameslink in general just cannot cope with delays anywhere on their network, it is not just at City Thameslink.

    • @mbrady2329
      @mbrady2329 Месяц назад +5

      I'm very happy that I've only ever had to catch Cambridge and Peterborough trains as far as Finsbury Park!

    • @Benjamin.Jamin.
      @Benjamin.Jamin. Месяц назад +5

      Eh as someone who can just about remember getting slam door diesels which terminated at a dark dingy decrepit stinking pigeon infested St Pancras, the Thameslink of today still blows my mind.
      Yeah, I get that it sometimes goes wrong but my word it's an improvement.

    • @bobpockney
      @bobpockney Месяц назад +4

      ​@Benjamin.Jamin. Having commuted from Bedpan days up to the 700s, I know what you mean. However, Kings Cross Thameslink was also an awful, dismal and cramped station.

  • @neilmossey
    @neilmossey Месяц назад +64

    My model railway I haven't built yet will be modelled on the Thameslink core, because I'm figuring the scenery will be easier.
    Brilliant video thanks!

    • @phaasch
      @phaasch Месяц назад +12

      You could build it under the floorboards, with little viewing panels in each room.

    • @lassepeterson2740
      @lassepeterson2740 Месяц назад +3

      Should do City Thameslink during 1959 as model .

    • @neilmossey
      @neilmossey Месяц назад +3

      @@phaasch genius thanks

    • @neilmossey
      @neilmossey Месяц назад +1

      @@lassepeterson2740 Haha - perfect!

  • @wiredwomble7958
    @wiredwomble7958 Месяц назад +59

    And as a station it is awful too, catch a train late evening (it shuts at about 11pm weekdays) and it is soleless, drab and boring. Never arrive too early.

    • @CAL1MBO
      @CAL1MBO Месяц назад +4

      Agreed. It always closes just as it's about to be fc**** useful

  • @ivorwhitecar
    @ivorwhitecar Месяц назад +59

    When I was a driver at Ashford (Kent) we walked down through St Paul's Thameslink to Smithfield sidings, before it was finished, to 'Learn the road'. The plan was to run slam door trains through from East Kent, the ones that ran to Holborn Viaduct. It never happened as LFB wouldn't allow them due to evacuation concerns so only sliding door trains were permitted.

    • @rogink
      @rogink Месяц назад +4

      Odd you mention 'slam door' trains. My assumption was they have been history in western Europe for 20-30 years. The other day I saw a Flixtrain leaving Berlin Hauptbahnhof. Rather alarmingly I saw a passenger closing the door as the train was leaving!

    • @z00h
      @z00h Месяц назад +2

      @@rogink what the OP is talking about is carriages with doors in each compartment. What you're talking about is typical European carriages with manually operated doors, which are still being widely used across Europe.

    • @rogink
      @rogink Месяц назад +3

      @@z00h Really? I don't think we've had commuter trains with separate compartments since the 70s. The usual meaning for 'slam doors' for the type that passengers open and close from and to the platform.

    • @kevinrayner5812
      @kevinrayner5812 Месяц назад +1

      I didn't think it was evacuation concerns but the fact that slam door trains were illegal, if that is the right word, on underground lines. Metropolitan Line loco hauled slam door coaches and the Watford Line trains, were they T stock, were allowed as I think they pre-dated the law change making all underground trains have sliding doors, so they allowed to continue to run. As Thames Link was a new line so to speak, that loop hole wasn't allowed.

    • @CheeseAlarm
      @CheeseAlarm Месяц назад +3

      @@rogink I remember travelling on commuter trains with separate compartments and slam doors (in S London) in the early 80s. And slam door (but not separate compartments) up until the late 80s. Maybe even later, I don't recall. And, the 125s had slam doors that you had to lean out of the window to open more recently than that.

  • @AndreiTupolev
    @AndreiTupolev Месяц назад +90

    Still can't be as bad as the unmissed King's Cross Thameslink, a horrid cramped, sometimes dangerously overcrowded hole

    • @mbrady2329
      @mbrady2329 Месяц назад +15

      It's certainly missed by passengers who used to change onto the Tube there! 🤣

    • @hairyairey
      @hairyairey Месяц назад +5

      It's still available for emergency evacuation

    • @geocachingwomble
      @geocachingwomble Месяц назад

      That's a second world war war grave that was why they closed it

    • @ricequackers
      @ricequackers Месяц назад +25

      I've never used that station, but I go past it regularly on my commute. A bit spooky how it's been frozen in time exactly as it was on the day it was closed in 2007, with big ominous DO NOT ALIGHT HERE signs along the platform.

    • @hairyairey
      @hairyairey Месяц назад +4

      @@ricequackers There was a plan to sell the station building above but it seems no-one wanted it. It would be difficult to build anything large there with the railway lines underneath.

  • @cedriclynch
    @cedriclynch 24 дня назад +2

    When the Thameslink line opened it crossed Ludgate Hill on a bridge and you got a brief view of St. Paul's Cathedral. Then the line was moved underground, so that people coming out of St. Paul's Cathedral would not get a brief view of each Thameslink train.

  • @ChubbyChecker182
    @ChubbyChecker182 Месяц назад +29

    The next station Blackfriars is the best station in London for me awesome views from the platforms over the Thames.

    • @stevegreen8262
      @stevegreen8262 Месяц назад +2

      *previous station

    • @tamara3984
      @tamara3984 Месяц назад +9

      ​@@stevegreen8262that very much depends where you're coming from. 😂

    • @tamara3984
      @tamara3984 Месяц назад +6

      When you have to change across to another platform it is a nightmare though.

    • @malcolmbacchus866
      @malcolmbacchus866 29 дней назад

      Hate it. It may be good for the views from the platform but it blocks more of the view from the riverbanks than the old two bridges did. And looks worse.

  • @batman51
    @batman51 Месяц назад +40

    As someone who dealt with BR South Eastern lettters of complaint etc. in the 60s/70s the idea of re-opening the Snow Hill line regularly popped up (along with some really crackpot ideas) but the answer was always, we don't want to cause/be caused delays by trains north of the river. Presumabley someone said, never mind, just do it.

    • @1258-Eckhart
      @1258-Eckhart Месяц назад +6

      He was called Ken Livingstone and/or his transport guru Dave Wetzel.

    • @AndreiTupolev
      @AndreiTupolev Месяц назад

      @@batman51 with the original concept, it was just one route, to Bedford, so much easier to manage. Plus St Pancras could be used if there was disruption

  • @Julius_Hardware
    @Julius_Hardware Месяц назад +43

    7:27 On the contrary, not being able to go to Luton is a good thing. Though for other stations on the line I accept your point.

    • @johnspurgeon9083
      @johnspurgeon9083 Месяц назад +4

      Oh dear, another one on the bandwagon knocking Luton! Far worse places are available.

    • @E350tb
      @E350tb Месяц назад +14

      @@johnspurgeon9083 well, yes, but Thameslink doesn’t serve the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone or the Pacific Ocean Garbage Patch.

    • @nathanw9770
      @nathanw9770 Месяц назад +2

      Peckham Rye 💀

    • @washimpatwary1446
      @washimpatwary1446 Месяц назад +3

      @@E350tb They serve Croydon though

    • @malcolmbacchus866
      @malcolmbacchus866 29 дней назад +2

      That sounds as if you suffer from Luton intolerance.

  • @southcalder
    @southcalder Месяц назад +25

    I recall reading an industry paper on the fancy new Automatic Train Operation through the Thameslink core, and how it meant they could squeeze a ridiculous number of trains on to this pair of tracks. The engineer happily compared it to the RER A through Paris, bringing many branches together.
    However, there are some huge differences. RER A doesn’t have anywhere near as many branches as Thameslink, some of those branches are only served by RER A trains, and where they share, it’s only with a single other operator, SNCF (RER A being an RATP operation). Its geographical reach is far shorter than Thameslink, and doesn’t go much beyond the greater Paris area, whereas Bedford to Brighton is closer to an InterCity length of route. Its core stations are further apart and it’s paralleled through the centre by Metro Ligne 1, which deals with much of the local traffic. RER A has permissive signalling that allows drivers to pass block markers at caution (a common feature of French signalling for what we would call “Automatic” signals), so you can actually have a train arriving on a platform before the other has fully departed, while on Thameslink core, a block marker is a mandatory STOP. RER A has its problems, but most are related to age of the infrastructure.
    A better comparison would be RER B and RER D, who share a core, and have atrocious delays.

  • @GeoGhost
    @GeoGhost Месяц назад +18

    6:44 - That is one of the biggest understatements I've heard for the core 😁 Little fun bit of trivia. The inclines either end are two of the steepest in the country for a mainline railway. The north end is said to be the steepest, but I've not found anywhere to officially back that up other than "what everyone says".
    Another fun bit because of this... when coming to a stand on the hill, particularly heading down to Blackfriars, it's a bit of a struggle to get moving at times. In fact if we take trains in under half power, the signal box has to be informed so the route can be cleared all the way through to the next station to avoid the train getting stuck on the incline.. again.
    Anything that can happen, will happen, and there will always be some degree of chaos. As oddly beautiful as it can be at times. That's what I've learnt xD

    • @kbtred51
      @kbtred51 Месяц назад +3

      Crossing over Ludgate Hill then down into snow Hill was the steepest, now it's over Blackfriars and under the raised road bed on Ludgate Hill.

    • @nathanw9770
      @nathanw9770 Месяц назад +1

      I thought the steepest incline was the Lickey incline near Birmingham

    • @Benjamin.Jamin.
      @Benjamin.Jamin. Месяц назад

      As you seem to know about these things... Any idea why they left the kink in the line through Farringdon? It seems odd.

  • @philwoodward4297
    @philwoodward4297 Месяц назад +22

    Do remember, though, that a decent chunk of the passengers at City Thameslink are only going to Farringdon or St Pancras or London Bridge, so they're basically using the service as if it were a Metro line and they don't care if all the trains are late as long as they're running every few minutes. I'm often there when every train on the board is very late, but as they're trying to recover the service there's a steady flow of trains through the station and that's fine for my purposes.

  • @ricolasroc5890
    @ricolasroc5890 Месяц назад +24

    Not rambling really, covering a lot of ground quickly, yes. Excellent as ever, and loving the topless shot of City Thameslink...
    ...as it were.

  • @yorktown99
    @yorktown99 Месяц назад +18

    The trouble with City Thameslink is that it is operationally a terminus, but physically is a through station without any proper connection to the Underground Network. The crazy interlining of service patterns just makes it worse.

    • @mbrady2329
      @mbrady2329 Месяц назад +2

      If I'm not mistaken, it's adjacent to the Central line running tunnels.

  • @ace-paidinfull5240
    @ace-paidinfull5240 Месяц назад +16

    2:33 glad to see some sort of footage of this famous holborn station, when i go by on the TL i always try to look for the clues on where the station was but its not as clear as id like and ive never seen much footage on youtube either

    • @apaleslimghost
      @apaleslimghost Месяц назад

      the view today from roughly the same location/direction as that photo: www.google.com/maps/@51.5154099,-0.1033058,3a,75y,22.36h,87.23t/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1scyrTe4OdidEskQAprtjrXg!2e0!6shttps:%2F%2Fstreetviewpixels-pa.googleapis.com%2Fv1%2Fthumbnail%3Fcb_client%3Dmaps_sv.tactile%26w%3D900%26h%3D600%26pitch%3D2.765811463648845%26panoid%3DcyrTe4OdidEskQAprtjrXg%26yaw%3D22.362304433463027!7i16384!8i8192?coh=205410&entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI0MTAyMC4xIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D

  • @tantaf123
    @tantaf123 Месяц назад +21

    I've been dealing with tough troubles in real life with one of my relatives being admitted to the hospital since last wednesday, but watching the latest Jago video always puts a smile on my face. :)

    • @WardyLion
      @WardyLion Месяц назад +2

      I hope they will be ok :(

    • @tantaf123
      @tantaf123 Месяц назад

      Let’s just say I don’t do well in these types of situations.

  • @gerrymckenna4878
    @gerrymckenna4878 Месяц назад +9

    Another interesting fact about this line is that it used to over Ludgate Hill ( the road towards St Paul's ) and now dives underneath hence the very steep gradient between Blackfriars and City Thameslink. Some amazing construction completed within very tight constraints, physical and timewise.

  • @harstan7333
    @harstan7333 Месяц назад +2

    The location of the station effectively underground is mentioned, as is the consequentially steep gradient between it and Blackfriars, but not the fact that the original line crossed over Ludgate Hill on a prominent bridge. Although this bridge was considered by some to be an eyesore and something of a bottleneck, it was a City icon (as shown in many old prints and photos) and is missed by many. Watching an LNER J50 trundle across with a freight to or from Hither Green was a memorable sight.

  • @tsguy-h3q
    @tsguy-h3q Месяц назад +5

    One solution I feel would work for City Thameslink is to give it an extra platform (that would be between both running tracks). The station would be rebuilt with two island platforms with 3 tracks. The two outer tracks would be your regular platforms while one in the centre can be used as a buffer to soak an extra train while the main platform clears. This would massively improve station capacity as a station is usually what limits the capacity of a pair of tracks.

  • @russellmiles8783
    @russellmiles8783 27 дней назад +3

    I loved Holborn Viaduct. I used to travel to it every day for university. And I remember when Canon Street was closed all weekend.

  • @britishredfox
    @britishredfox Месяц назад +7

    While more and more of the old Network Southeast livery disappears over time, it still has a remarkable amount intact. I kind of wish they'd keep it all.

  • @VotasBird
    @VotasBird Месяц назад +57

    3:38 "Obliterated 1990" is wild 💀

  • @davidsutton7276
    @davidsutton7276 28 дней назад +2

    We have the same problem in Manchester. The through lines at Piccadilly station go north along the Castlefield Corridor, which also has only two tracks. It is a continual congestion point and causes many delays. It was intended to increase it to four tracks and build extra through platforms at Piccadilly when the Ordsall Chord was built, a new link between Victoria and Piccadilly Stations. This never happened, and so the Chord is only used at one third capacity. So trains continue to queue to travel along the Castlefield Corridor.

    • @marksimmons5805
      @marksimmons5805 28 дней назад +1

      We dream of having that sort of rail investment in central Manchester to ease chronic congestion, but London gobbles up any funds available all the time. We would love to have a City Thameslink in Manchester - so stop moaning!!

    • @davidsutton7276
      @davidsutton7276 28 дней назад

      @@marksimmons5805 I take it your remark is aimed at Jago and not me! I entirely agree with you.

    • @marksimmons5805
      @marksimmons5805 28 дней назад +1

      @@davidsutton7276 Of course! Just irritated at the lavish provision of public transport in the capital. You simply don’t see this disparity in other European countries between the capital & large provincial cities.
      Rant over!!

  • @quintuscrinis
    @quintuscrinis Месяц назад +59

    Does this mean Sundays have a much better reliability?

    • @Cowman9791
      @Cowman9791 Месяц назад +26

      Yes, its a case where if you don't have trains running, no cancellations or delays can happen there in the first place - and a 100% on time record with 0 trains out of 0 being delayed on a typical sunday.

    • @alanclarke4646
      @alanclarke4646 Месяц назад +5

      ​@@Cowman9791so an atypical Sunday train COULD be delayed, even though there are NO trains? 😂😂

    • @quintuscrinis
      @quintuscrinis Месяц назад +2

      @Cowman9791 I was meaning that the implication is that Farringdon (on the same line with all the same trains) would have the same issue, unless the Sunday service was better when Farringdon has the chance to come out better by still being open and off-setting some of the damage that makes Ciry Thameslink the worst.

    • @srfurley
      @srfurley Месяц назад +6

      @@alanclarke4646
      Trains still run on Sundays, and even stop there to change power supplies, but the station is closed, and the doors do not open. There may be less trains on Sundays, I don’t know the full Thameslink timetable.

    • @mbrady2329
      @mbrady2329 Месяц назад

      Any engineering works on the core section usually happen at weekends, which can sometimes come as a nasty surprise to passengers who were expecting to use it!

  • @rolandbevan7088
    @rolandbevan7088 22 дня назад +1

    There is a double cross-over at the southern end. If a double cross-over was to be put-in just before Farringdon, because the City T-Link platforms are long enough to take 16 carriages, it would be possible to change trains on each line, (by a split block in the centres) Trains to the southern destinations could then be turned around. Brighton trains would then have 12 coach trains to Bedford, keeping through services, and vis versa, and all the rest running with 8 coach sets.

  • @gdwnet
    @gdwnet Месяц назад +3

    5:19 that's a very interesting part of london. There is a circle that goes under some of the buildings which traces the outline of the old roman gladiatorial ring.

  • @chrnovids
    @chrnovids Месяц назад +10

    sat at City Thameslink on the way home from work watching this because my train is delayed

  • @Broadercasting
    @Broadercasting 6 дней назад +1

    I agree about the awful name. Any of those offered work. Even 'City' on its own as well as Ludgate Hill, or even closeby, Fleet St or Old Bailey or as the Viaduct is actually closeby from one entrance...

  • @michellebell5092
    @michellebell5092 Месяц назад +1

    It’s one of my favourite stations. It’s near Barts Hospital where I need to go twice a year routine check ups. It’s also near some nice churches and , should I ever come to afford to, I’d like to move to that area. Holborn Viaduct-Ludgate Hill etc . I often go there, just to go there .

  • @johnhaines4163
    @johnhaines4163 Месяц назад +19

    Sometime ago, when the Thameslink project was called "Thameslink 2000", my company did some consultancy work on the capacity of Farringdon and London Bridge. One bit of the briefing report I remember was the proposal that the trains would be automatically operated because, with trains running as close as 90 seconds apart, human drivers would "flinch" (i.e. brake too early) and the service would be delayed as a result.

    • @metlinematt
      @metlinematt Месяц назад +9

      That's interesting to read as an ex-Jubilee Line driver that used to manually drive on that line (before the Jubilee became ATO) and there were multiple points where we were under 90 seconds behind the train in front with no flinching involved - we were used to following tail lights all day.

    • @barrieshepherd7694
      @barrieshepherd7694 Месяц назад +5

      Pretty sure they are running under ETCS / ATO from Kentish Town at least to Blackfriars and maybe beyond to Elephant & Castle.

    • @hairyairey
      @hairyairey Месяц назад

      By automatically operated you mean the automation determines the stopping and acceleration. The driver still closes the doors and can stop the train in an emergency.

    • @barrieshepherd7694
      @barrieshepherd7694 Месяц назад +1

      @@hairyairey Yes - although the ATO can also - if agreed - operate the doors - the driver can always stop the train.

    • @hairyairey
      @hairyairey Месяц назад

      @@barrieshepherd7694 The Class 700s have cameras watching all the doors. I don't see drivers being removed from the checking that the doors are clear before the train moves off.

  • @andrewfrance1047
    @andrewfrance1047 Месяц назад +2

    City Thameslink is so much better now than it used to be. When London Bridge Station was rebuilt Thameslink got its own dedicated track through London Bridge. I worked in the building above the station and commuted home through London Bridge but it was always quicker for me to walk to Cannon St or even the mile to London Bridge rather than endure the two stop journey from City Thameslink.

  • @ajons190
    @ajons190 Месяц назад +2

    Absolutely agree that Ludgate Hill would have been a better name, but probably spooked by the entrance near the viaduct. Effectively it is one station from a rail point of view, but two stations from the street. Something that is also true of some Lizzy Line stations with their long platforms.

  • @LiftFan
    @LiftFan 27 дней назад +1

    I'd say Manchester Oxford Road or Deansgate are in that same boat for delays, alongside Piccadilly P13/14. Two track railway with multiple operators all trying to squeeze into that one section with knock on effects which can be caused by anything wrong in Edinburgh, Holyhead or Norwich (and anywhere in between).

  • @MrSmith1984
    @MrSmith1984 25 дней назад +2

    Its rather clear that a 2nd Thameslink Programme is needed, one that would upgrade the core from 2-Track to 4 Track and add additional dedicated tracks on the ECML, MML, Brighton Main Line & various other lines, all reserved for Thameslink.
    Sure it would cost an absolute fortune, but it would be cheaper than doing it later down the line...

  • @Adhrit_Gupta
    @Adhrit_Gupta Месяц назад +38

    Jago and Geoff posting at the same time… Something is up

    • @PassiveAgressive319
      @PassiveAgressive319 Месяц назад +2

      What…? Definately watching that next

    • @ste2442
      @ste2442 Месяц назад +1

      A glitch in the railway matrix

    • @JagoHazzard
      @JagoHazzard  Месяц назад +7

      A good time for all is what’s up!

  • @roderickmain9697
    @roderickmain9697 Месяц назад +15

    I wondered why they didnt call it "Snow Hill" since its virtually on the site of the original Snow Hill station. I'd accept Ludgate Hill because it has entrances to/from said hill. Even "The City" might not be so bad but "City Thameslink" is halfway between being a vague destination and an advertisement. The name is irritating. As is frequently the case these days, we find recycled infrastructure being pushed beyond its capacity.

    • @kbtred51
      @kbtred51 Месяц назад +1

      Jago error. It is NOT. Ludgate Hill station was between Ludgate and Blackfriars. City Thameslink replaces StPauls TL AND Holborn Viaduct. St Pauls OSI is a trek, better to change at Farringdon to use the Lizzy for most, or BlackFriars for Bank.
      Snow Hill station was renamed Holborn Viaduct (Low Level). The GNR goods ramp entrance is still there at street level and the platform is before the sidings, it is the new London Museum site.

    • @roderickmain9697
      @roderickmain9697 Месяц назад +1

      @@kbtred51 Its on the road called Ludgate Hill, which I think is what Jago was referring to. I think you could probably make a case for it actually being redundant as a station given the close proximity of the new Blackfriars but I suppose they were trying to keep the commuters that used the former Holborn Viaduct happy.

    • @nathanw9770
      @nathanw9770 Месяц назад

      It's to not confuse it with Birmingham Snow Hill

    • @josephcoen665
      @josephcoen665 Месяц назад

      ​@@kbtred51Blackfriars for Bank.... You sure?

  • @user-kr5vm8nk1d
    @user-kr5vm8nk1d 8 дней назад

    I travel to City Thameslink from the Cambridge line. 4 journeys this week - 3 had delays. Also learned recently that they can do bi-directional running on the opposite platform (I got to the station at the same time as the paramedics hoofing it down to the emergency on my platform).

  • @yatsumleung8618
    @yatsumleung8618 27 дней назад +1

    As a tourist I traveled on the Tube and decided to change and Farringdon and exit at City Thameslink. I was charged £7 for like 3 stops despite being within Zone 1.
    Never again.

  • @fabe61
    @fabe61 28 дней назад +1

    It's very nice to finally understand the rhyme and reason behind delays and cancellations! I live in Zone 4 along the Thameslink service to Stevenage and it's the only train in a reasonable walking distance as the tubestops around me are 30ish minutes walk away. It's great for getting to Finsbury Park quickly but I've always wondered why there are quite so many cancellations and early terminations on the line. It's been better recently, but any upset to the wider TFL system (like the strikes we had earlier in the year/last year) caused massive issues. Stopped using the Thameslink trains for a few months because it was less reliable than the busses in rush hour!

  • @jamesgilbart2672
    @jamesgilbart2672 Месяц назад +4

    Interesting video! Thameslink and The Elizabeth Line are London's equivalent of the Paris RER. Both routes have proven extremely useful and well-used. Maybe in the distant future, when the government purse strings are loosened, Crossrail 2 will be added to these through-London routes.

  • @caleballen4721
    @caleballen4721 Месяц назад +1

    I'd love a City vs city video! It's a fascinating place and its history (especially its relations to the rest of London and to the Crown) is particularly hard to find!

  • @georgepitchley3946
    @georgepitchley3946 Месяц назад +1

    A vide on the history of the Smithfield sidings would be good, considering live cattle used to be brought there by train in the early days.

    • @JagoHazzard
      @JagoHazzard  Месяц назад

      It’s one that’s on my list for sure. I love those tank engines the Great Western Railway built for the service.

  • @ayecarambapoker
    @ayecarambapoker Месяц назад +4

    The city question leaves most stumped
    London itself is not actually a city in the official sense of having been granted a Royal Charter but rather an amalgamation of London boroughs (sometimes called London regions) with the entire area designated as Greater London
    But within Greater London lies 2 official cites - the City of London and the City of Westminster, no other London borough holds city status
    It's often a pub quiz question - which are England's largest and smallest cities by population? To which the answers would be Birmingham for largest and the City of London for smallest

  • @Clivestravelandtrains
    @Clivestravelandtrains Месяц назад +1

    Thanks. As a mere provincial I enjoy these films even though they make me dizzy through lack of understanding the geography!

  • @stephenhardy312
    @stephenhardy312 24 дня назад +1

    The 'Small C City', as you describe it, is misleading. It is a county and region, comprising two 'cities': The City of London,the 'square mile' and the City of Westminster adjoining it, at Temple Bar. The London County was created in 1889, before which areas were identified by their county, such as 'Westminster, Middlesex'.
    Hope this helps.

  • @rich_rich90
    @rich_rich90 Месяц назад +2

    The problem is the Thameslink route is way too complicated with way too many destinations, with way too much reliance on 2 ancient tracks

    • @teran1237
      @teran1237 Месяц назад

      in France we call Thameslink "RER C" ;)

  • @richardekers3025
    @richardekers3025 Месяц назад +5

    Jago's Ludgate Hill! As long as we all use that name from now on they will have to rename it won't they? And you could re-rename it Snow Hill each year for the one day in the winter when it snows in London, and attract tourists from around the world for the occasion.

  • @theundeniablegem
    @theundeniablegem Месяц назад +2

    if Crossrail 2 ever gets off the ground, I like to think that this video will be brought forth as a reason arguing its case for construction.

  • @DEFarnes
    @DEFarnes Месяц назад +2

    @03:52 Which is why I find Canary Wharf DLR, Canary Wharf Jubilee Line and Canary Wharf Elizabeth Line SO INFURIATING! Name them three different things and have the OSIs but there are NOT THE SAME STATION!!!!!!!! PLEASE DO THIS KHAN!

  • @Trek001
    @Trek001 Месяц назад +1

    Fun fact - although never built, St Pauls Thameslink was built with a corridor leading to the site of Ludgate Hill tube station. It is known by the station staff as the "LUL corridor"

  • @EdBowsher1
    @EdBowsher1 Месяц назад +2

    The design and ambience of CIty Thameslink is lovely but Jago is right, services are very unpredictable if you want to get beyond St Pancras. Very frustrating!

  • @pauljmccluskey5532
    @pauljmccluskey5532 Месяц назад +2

    19:23 Hi Jago, I used to work very close to there and do remember when Holborn Viaduct was on the cusp of being closed down, and remember all the works that were going on, causing much chaos around Ludgate Circus.

  • @Flange-lw9sp
    @Flange-lw9sp Месяц назад +2

    I assume the Central Line runs right underneath this Station. I wonder if there have ever been discussions to add a stop and make it another official interchange station. The CL interchanges with every other North/south line except Thameslink, so this would seem a logical step?

  • @dodgydruid
    @dodgydruid Месяц назад +1

    I remember me father working on the London Bridge timings of Thameslinks and the inherent pathing problems that abounded as trying to insert 4 trains per hour into a rush hour block to block scenario was terrible and all it took was for a train at New Cross to bugger up and it was red lights all up and down and this fed back into Thameslink services and one stopped train could cripple everything because there simply does not exist extra pathing through the bottleneck of London Bridge. One of the small saving graces was they pathed Orpington to Charing X/Cannon St services to call at Lewisham and they stopped the through Bromley North to Charing X services which gave them a tiny extra window to play with, things improved with the doubling of the St John's flydown and the Bermondsey flyunder with the extra space created when the HS1 services took over some of the heavy lifting to the Kent services. They chose me old man because he was working the "widowmaker" panel at London Bridge plats 1-6 and he was familiar with the Loughborough Junc workings and by some dint of magic he did make it all work no doubt cursed by many a driver but BR gave him a nice bonus for pulling the turnip out their trousers so to speak.

  • @incognito9292
    @incognito9292 Месяц назад +7

    The shabbiest London terminus station I've ever used would be Fenchurch Street

    • @-Osiris-
      @-Osiris- Месяц назад +3

      Sounds like you've never used Moorgate

    • @uk-martin4905
      @uk-martin4905 Месяц назад

      I thought it was quite attractive when I used it in 1985.

  • @jakecoare
    @jakecoare Месяц назад

    Hi Jacob I found your documentary video so amazing and insightful, as a huge lover of the London Underground, trains and railways I always learn something new and amazing in your incredible and well explained videos , thank you for your amazing content

  • @CJonestheSteam72
    @CJonestheSteam72 Месяц назад +7

    I've spent many an unhappy trip through CT

  • @IamTheHolypumpkin
    @IamTheHolypumpkin Месяц назад +1

    My suggestion as a non Londoner, to increase capacity in the Thameslink core would be to extend the northern city line to Cannon Street Station. Either create a Cannon Street lower level Station, or more optimal build a new station like Blackfrires across the entire River Thames. Looking at a Topological map, it should be possible to but a ramp as steep as from Blackfrires to City Thameslink between the existing bridge and the Cannon Street (Street). Optionally, you could build a Cannon Street lower level and do a submerged tunnel (so very shallow)to the southern banks of the Thames and than rise to the viaduct to London Bridge Station as well as to the Southeastern Main Line with another connecting viaduct to Elefant and Castle (this would definitely require demolish of existing buildings).
    If you feel exceptionally fancy you could add a wye in the tunnel to connect Fenchurch Street Station with both Moorgate and Cannon Street Station.
    A possible intermediate station could be Bank. If underground it could connect to both Bank and Cannon St, making Bank, Monument even more complicated as a Bank, Monument, Cannon Street complex.
    The District and Circle line platforms almost certainly would have to be rebuild below the new second core.

    • @norbitonflyer5625
      @norbitonflyer5625 Месяц назад

      You can't extend the Northern City Line - there is too much in the way - the Metropolitan Line in front, the Bank of England above, the Northern Line below. Likewise extending beyond Cannon Street could only be done by demolishing the Manskion House and the Bank of England.

  • @peterharris3563
    @peterharris3563 Месяц назад +3

    The Thameslink brand name may well be the brain child of Network South East, but the idea of reopening Snow Hill Tunnel and running a cross London service through it belongs to the Greater London Council. The GLC also had the brilliant idea of building a huge interchange station at West Hampstead, linking the Chiltern, Midland & North London lines, together with the Met & Jubilee lines. This scheme was scuppered by Thatcher who hated the GLC even more than she hated BR. Perhaps this might be a good subject for a future video?

    • @pmayer9376
      @pmayer9376 Месяц назад

      Thanks for the reminder about the many GLC plans, and agree it is good idea for a future video. There was an article about them in Modern Railways in the 1980s. The one I remember related to the South London Line. They pointed out a problem was that it ran through but didn't stop at the most important place on the line (Brixton). So they would have added a platform on the SLL viaduct over the existing station, although it would have meant singling the track there.

  • @karlmachnow4961
    @karlmachnow4961 Месяц назад

    Another commenter already mentioned Munich's second tunnel, but last year they also started a new timetable in the one tunnel that exists. The Munich S-Bahn had the same problems as Thameslink, and it was improved by adding flexibility to the departure before entering the tunnel. Each train now has a 2-3 min long window to depart and travel through the tunnel. Now a train can depart "early" if the following train is late - for the passengers, a train travelling according to plan will enter the tunnel a few minutes late, but leave it on time.

  • @IndigoJo
    @IndigoJo Месяц назад +3

    The lines Thameslink operates on outside the core are in fact mostly run by the same company under different names. Southern and Great Northern are both part of the same franchise as Thameslink.

    • @HertsCommuter
      @HertsCommuter Месяц назад +1

      ....and because they don't employ enough drivers they rely on rest day working which, when it doesn't happen leads to cancellations, especially at weekends. Thus adding to the unreliability stats for, inter alia, City Thameslink.

  • @Skorpychan
    @Skorpychan Месяц назад +3

    Ohh, I knew that was familiar! London fur meets used to happen at the bar right next to it.
    I tried using it once, and was told that Thameslink only worked on weekdays.

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 Месяц назад +1

      I think Thameslink working on weekdays is somewhat optimistic.
      Much more reliable on Sundays.

    • @philroberts7238
      @philroberts7238 Месяц назад

      @@stephenlee5929 What's a fur meet?

    • @animal_tracks
      @animal_tracks Месяц назад

      I was wondering when I'd see furries here! (There's also at least one fox sneaking around.)
      The station was served on Saturdays in the latter few years of furmeets in the area. I used City Thameslink a few times myself.
      PS @philroberts7238 A furmeet is a gathering of cartoon animal fans, some of whom wear elaborate animal costumes

    • @animal_tracks
      @animal_tracks Месяц назад

      I was wondering when I'd see furries here! (There's also at least one fox sneaking around.)
      The station was served on Saturdays in the latter few years of furmeets in the area. I used City Thameslink a few times myself.
      PS @philroberts7328 A furmeet is a gathering of cartoon animal fans, some of whom wear elaborate animal costumes

    • @phildaly3561
      @phildaly3561 Месяц назад +1

      LFM! That takes me back.

  • @peterdavy6110
    @peterdavy6110 Месяц назад +1

    The new station should have been named Holborn Viaduct!!

  • @loltangera
    @loltangera 28 дней назад +2

    It amuses me that the station name boards say "for St Paul's Cathedral" but there are no signs to point to the correct exit!

  • @tommym8trix
    @tommym8trix 18 дней назад +1

    Thameslink in general is a deranged wildcard, but also the best transport link in London...

  • @ClydebridgeStation
    @ClydebridgeStation Месяц назад +1

    Good video. One thing to mention, the way the concourse at City Thameslink was designed, allowed for a future extension of the Jubilee Line, to provide interchange. That was if the line had been extended beyond Charing Cross. The provision could still be used, if a proposed westward extension of the DLR, beyond Bank, to Charing Cross former Jubilee Line platforms, ever gets built. And I agree, Ludgate Hill would've been a much better name. After all, up here in Fife, Dunfermline Town station was renamed Dunfermline City, so it can be done!

  • @isashax
    @isashax Месяц назад

    For a long long time (on my early trips to London), I had no idea about Thameslink and didn't get what City Thameslink was doing in the city. But I have used the line loads of times since then, especially for Gatwick. I am glad it exists!

  • @scottydude456
    @scottydude456 Месяц назад +3

    Somehow, Philadelphia did a better job at making their suburban routes thru-run under the city with a quad-tracked tunnel. If only SEPTA had more money to run frequent service

  • @JamesPetts
    @JamesPetts Месяц назад +2

    I agree with calling it "Ludgate Hill".

  • @akastewart
    @akastewart 17 дней назад

    It’s my go-to for pre-dawn runs to Gatwick, not least because it’s a small station, so you can be through the front doors and down onto the platform in 60 seconds or so. Plus, for the first couple of trains, the platforms are pretty empty, which is preferable if you’ve got hours of travel ahead of you. 👍

  • @Maltloaflegrande
    @Maltloaflegrande Месяц назад +2

    Always a fan of Holborn Viaduct and also the old Blackfriars with its three terminus platforms. Not particularly sad to hear that the shiny new replacement for HV is a bit of a turkey.

  • @Arghans
    @Arghans Месяц назад +1

    As someone who lives in the area I never use the station, opting to walk straight past and use Blackfriars which is always open. Operation at City is too limited would be better to shut it and Farringdon is often closed when it shouldn't be. Would be good if the rebuild of Blackfriars had provided better connectivity with the area; the downside being the busy road everyone has to get across.

  • @tw25rw
    @tw25rw Месяц назад

    I used to use Holborn Viaduct and remember catching the old slam door trains when there was just 1 platform left. My main memory is getting caught without a ticket though.
    I also often used the old Blackfriars, which I remember fondly and now miss.

  • @markcf83
    @markcf83 Месяц назад

    Recently I travelled from Sutton to Elstree. The train I was on was running on time as far as Blackfriars but from thereon was heavily delayed. This was on a Saturday morning.

  • @ancipital
    @ancipital Месяц назад +1

    Used to use this every day when I worked in London, every day it used to be problematic and being that I used to use southeastern as well, it was a double whammy! Every morning and evening was checking live running and working out where I needed to make changes to get in on time or get home at a reasonable hour because trains I used did not stop at every station. So frustrating to get to the station to find that every train was cancelled or delayed or terminated early. it was like a running battle with the train companies. Even now with the work journeys I have to do once every 2 months invariably trains are delayed or cancelled so for those people using it every day......

  • @ricktownend9144
    @ricktownend9144 Месяц назад +3

    I do think that Thameslink should have stuck to serving the Brighton line in the south (plus the Sutton-Wimbledon loop). The problems caused for passengers by delays are exacerbated by the wretched half-hourly services which are the bugbear of south London's rail services in general: better to have fewer destinations each served more frequently. That's why the tube is so successful - if services are frequent, no one minds changing trains to get to the individual station you want.

    • @wiredwomble7958
      @wiredwomble7958 Месяц назад

      I still do not see the reason for the Cambridge/Peterborough services being all pushed through the core (even though it benefits me). I much preferred the service into Kings Cross and just as easy to walk to St Pancras. But I think they wanted to reduce congestion and free up slots at Kings Cross for LNER etc. All that has happened is the congestion moves to the core and if the ECML is blocked it can easily back up into the core even though there are only 6 ECML routed trains through the core per hour.

  • @lechiffre1914
    @lechiffre1914 Месяц назад +1

    It should be renamed Holborn Viaduct, the station it replaced.

  • @jackmellor5536
    @jackmellor5536 Месяц назад +1

    Cannon Street used to be closed on Sundays but not anymore

  • @whophd
    @whophd 3 дня назад

    I’d love a video about the big-C city, because it was constituted so long ago, it predates companies (and the monarchy I think?) It has this remarkable pre-eminance that had to be folded in to every legal structure that exists today.

  • @wickiezulu
    @wickiezulu Месяц назад +1

    Even though the following is a blessing in disguise due to the absence of a Piccadilly (see GNP&BR 1903/1905 proposals), Fleet/Jubilee or DLR stop at nearby Ludgate Circus prior to the Elizabeth line at Farringdon, they should have looked at resitting the Central Line stop at either St Paul's or Chancery Lane to City Thameslink just south of Snow Hill (Holborn Viaduct Low Level).

  • @teecefamilykent
    @teecefamilykent Месяц назад

    Brilliant video sir, iirc ticket wise from South of the river City Thameslink counts as a London terminal, Farringdon and St Pancras have be to the named station.

  • @dougmorris2134
    @dougmorris2134 Месяц назад +2

    Hello Jago, that was a very congested tale (every two minutes!). City Thameslink is a definite candidate for some ‘widened lines’ - oh if only it were possible.
    Best wishes from a bit of Oxfordshire now completely devoid of any lines.

  • @gregkiteos1936
    @gregkiteos1936 Месяц назад +1

    Interesting point you make about City Thameslink and St Paul's stations being quite a distance apart from each other. I've always wondered why the Central line decided to call its new station Bethnal Green, despite it being quite far away from the former GER/LNER station of the same name. Maybe that could be the subject for a future video?

  • @trentr9762
    @trentr9762 Месяц назад

    Used to go to an event every three weeks back when it was based at the fleet place entrance to the station, always found it easier to just walk up from St Paul's, was often quicker then the interchange at Farringdon. I did go down into the station once, was odd to find it pretty much abandoned given its locatation in the centre of London next to one of the world's most well known attractions.

  • @aaronhurst4379
    @aaronhurst4379 19 дней назад

    Thank you so much for representing my pain as a former commuter who frequently got home later than I should have, from this damn station

  • @AuraDoesThings
    @AuraDoesThings Месяц назад

    This has reminded me of something; back during the brief time I had to commute into London, despite City Thameslink being basically next door to where I was working, it was almost always quicker for me to get off at Blackfriars and walk there instead.

    • @kbtred51
      @kbtred51 Месяц назад

      There was a dwell pause in quieter times to recover between South and North timetables.

    • @AuraDoesThings
      @AuraDoesThings Месяц назад

      @@kbtred51 Doesn't exactly help when you're travelling at peak hours.

  • @StevensPaul
    @StevensPaul Месяц назад +1

    "Confusion and Delay?" "Its our specility" ~City Thameslink

  • @electro_sykes
    @electro_sykes 25 дней назад +2

    This all sums up exactly why we need cross rail 2

  • @StarwingUK
    @StarwingUK Месяц назад +1

    I have a soft spot for City Thameslink, delays be damned. it's the most 90's station I know of, and is still very much Network Southeast styled.

  • @mistertom2385
    @mistertom2385 Месяц назад +2

    No station could ever be worse than the train station in my hometown of Billingham in the North East of England. It's an absolute abomination, and the old station there (which was demolished decades before I was born) looked so much nicer too!

  • @Shantara11
    @Shantara11 Месяц назад +2

    8:20 “Dry falling fire main manual air release valve located behind”. The sign makes as much sense as City Thameslink station name

    • @petermichaelgreen
      @petermichaelgreen Месяц назад +2

      In fire riser terminology a "dry riser" is one that is dry when not in use and is supplied with water (or foam mixture) by the fire brigade, while a "wet riser" is one that has permanent water supply.
      I would assume that "dry falling fire main" is the equivilent of a dry riser for a location below street level.
      Not sure why it needs a manual air release valve though, maybe they were having trouble with air getting trapped in the system.
      Plans normally only tell you approximately where something is, so a sign telling you which panel to pull off if you need to access something is useful.

    • @terrymoore9388
      @terrymoore9388 Месяц назад +2

      That's for the London Fire Brigade

  • @clivecoles1288
    @clivecoles1288 Месяц назад

    Several years ago I was on a southbound 319 that had stopped at a red signal just outside the station on an incline. When the go signal was shown the train it was rush hour and pretty full could not get up the incline it had to refereeing City Thameslink station this gave it a run at the incline and we made it to Blackfriars and then home to sunny Croydon all good fun.

  • @martinrobertson2667
    @martinrobertson2667 11 дней назад

    For fare purposes City Thameslink is a London terminus when coming from the South, but not when coming from the North!
    So a single ticket from Welwyn Garden City to kings cross ( london terminals ) is £14.50, but for City Thameslink you need a London Thameslink ticket at £15.50

  • @sbv-zs7wz
    @sbv-zs7wz Месяц назад +2

    A friend who drives Thameslink trains says they have a graffiti problem at the station because people constantly paint a 'S' on the 'Pant Down' sign :)

    • @kbtred51
      @kbtred51 Месяц назад

      Good try but it is Pan Down/Up

    • @sbv-zs7wz
      @sbv-zs7wz Месяц назад

      @@kbtred51 lol he said T and S