Woolwich Station: A Pain in the Arsenal
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- Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
- A particularly challenging station on the Elizabeth Line.
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"obviously a lot of what went on there was secret, at least until it hit the enemy in the face" is a killer line, 'azzard
I'm sure they wont tell.
And literally a killer for the enemy too!
Capital 'E' @@richardwatts2095
You mean 'live to tell' @@RichardFraser-y9t
It killed my keyboard with the tea I spat over it (note to self: do not drink anything during a jago video until the closing pun at the end).
I was the on-site desgner during the construction of this station, I'm over the moon this has made it into Jago's channel! I think Berkeley homes actually paid for and built the station box and platforms, including the large circular central columns. Crossrail only came in for the interior fit-out (walls, slabs) and the above ground bits. The entire station was designed by hand, old school style, with pencil and paper - the design ran to about 12,000 pages of hand calculations. Regarding the singular entrance - comprehensive passenger modelling was done and it was found to be sufficient, there is a fire escape staircase opening up to the Windsor Square (though it wasn't called that at the time), towards the Tesco's.
“You are the second entrance to my overcrowded station.” Flippin’ Hell Jago. 😂
Reminds me of a Harry Enfield joke. "Is the train in Paddington Station?". "Ouch,no that's Colchester " !
😂😂😂😂😂
@@simonwinter8839 Both educatitive and informatative.
@@jvgreendarmok Not funny ?!!
@@simonwinter8839 The characters in the sketch don't notice the comedy value, they think they're being educational.
I'm not entirely sure I'm happy being your 2nd entrance, but thanx.
How high up is it?
Well aimed, you must have rifled through the archives to take this series of shots. Bang on!
And didn't he just barrel through
his script. I was worried for a while that Jago had gone off at half cock but - no - his aim was true.
Even more impressively in this over-sensitive age, despite the contentious subject matter, no-one was triggered.
Can Jago repeat this tour de force? We shell just have to wait and sight.
@@thomasm1964 He was certainly on target with this one.
@@SynchroScore Certainly wasn't firing blanks.
Once again a presentation of the highest calibre.
Wonder if he shoots with a Canon?
The title is the signature Jago the Journalist Wit 🔥
This by 💯
My grandmother was a munitionette at Woolwich Arsenal during WW1. She was waiting for the tram at Eltham Church to go to work when Silvertown Arsenal (on the north side of the Thames) went up! She said she never saw anything like it before or since!
Your Grandmother was a war heroine. Let us never forget any of them.
@@simonwinter8839 Thanks for that Simon.
I read about that cataclysmic event in a large hardback book of great disasters that had been brought out,when stopping in the local WH Smith's books department around my 12th birthday. Others included were the R101,the Great London Smog,the Coconut Grove nightclub fire,with a chapter on each and somewhere upwards of a dozen in total. I should have piped up and asked my parents to buy me it.
My Grandmother also. My Grandfather was an 'inspector armaments, royal woolwich arsenal' according to my fathers birth certificate.
Dad did his apprenticeship in the foundry there. And me? 2 weeks work experience in the packaging department! (which is more interesting than it sounds).
Nan & Grandad lived off Middle Park Avenue.
@@noggin73 I used to live at Tarnwood Park, next to the Tarn on Court Rd!
7:00 A special mention for the arty shot 👏
I'm a long time fan of the independent cinematographer Mr. Arty Shot. His work does not get nearly as much appreciation as it deserves. Well done Mr. Hazzard for featuring his footage in your work.
That's actually pretty interesting - When you mentioned the platform level pillar Colours of the Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers, that probably ties in to why Arsenal FC often rotate their Away Kit colours between Yellow and Blue.
Yup, red and white are one standard and blue and yellow are the other. This year is a flipped away shirt with it being yellow and blue, as someone who owns one I can say it's bloody loud and the pattern leads people who see you to start suffering with motion sickness.
@@darthwiizius Same. It's so bright, it almost glows in the dark!
I believe the works team started off under the name Dial Square before becoming known as Woolwich Arsenal.
I'm surprised that Jago didn't manage to mention that some trains from Woolwich Arsenal to London Bridge also go to Cannon Street!! 😁
Boom!
Great video. TFL really need to add a second exit to the other end of the station where they're planning to build a tower block. Over time it will save them a lot more money (and stress!)
There’s already an emergency exit there and cross rail works still on the surface. Would really reduce the crowds and give west Thamesmead something approaching a station
Lucky, they got that station. A massive bonus for the area. Definitely love the ferry.
When it's running of course
It's completely changed travel in this area. Never seen any major issues myself though I understand if it does go down it's bad.
In didn't expect a video on such a new station at Woolwich to be so interesting but it was fascinating, ferry-nough. many thanks... loved the "arty shot" 🙂
During the London Olympics in 2012 all shooting events took place at the Royal Arsenal.
No they didn’t, they took part in the army barracks which is not in the royal arsenal totally separate places
Woolwich Common not the Royal Arsenal. Nearly a mile away.
Woolwich
Woolwich Dockyard
Woolwich Arsenal
North Woolwich
My gran lived in Abbey Wood, she preferred the 177 bus rather taking the train.
Used the Elizabeth line once, so much better than the old services but the Thameslink service from StP is also excellent tbf
Thames Clipper Woolwich
Woolwich Foot Tunnel
Woolwich Ferry
I don't think Woolwich is accessible enough.😆
The private narrow gauge railway servicing the Woolwich Arsenal was one of the most extensive in the country. It would provide an interesting study of ‘rail transport’ on its own.
A triple first for me a week ago: I did the whole Superloop (including the 244 bus which nobody mentions but is a vital link between Woolwich & Thamesmead); I used Woolwich Elizabeth Line station; and I went on the Woolwich ferry, which I agree everyone should try- it's great!
Memories of taking school trips to see the Docklands by train to North Woolwich back in the late 70s and early 80s. I think the kids enjoyed crossing on the ferry, but they enjoyed running through the tunnel screaming on the way back more. Splendid acoustics.
It's interesting that you mentioned Superloop since SL2 and SL3 are far from each other and we all know why. It's the same reason why Woolwich is a last second decision. Poor river crossing options in East London. The ferry is nice though but only if it works.
Though I'm not averse to the standard design for the core XR stations, Woolwich is easily my favourite of the new stations, and I do kind of wish we got some variation in station design like Woolwich. Love little flourishes of the regimental colours at platform level.
It's probably worth adding that, in addition to the shared Regimental Colours, both the RA and the RE have the motto "UBIQUE" in lieu of Battle Honours. In each Regiment, this is translated as "Everywhere" - and the meaning for the other Regiment is generally held to be "All Over the Place..."
Will never forget the Woolwich ferry doing donuts during the pandemic
and its free and always will be,i think when it was built it was so charter,that send it was going to be free for always.
@richardeyers322 Free until it's completely withdrawn. When you're 67 you can be as cynical as me !! And no I don't vote Tory !!
@@simonwinter8839 not that far behind
@richardeyers322 Which reminds me .l was chatting this rather gorgeous 20 year old the other day and I asked her if she'd like to make an old man happy ?
And she bought me a copy of the Daily mail !!
They should really change the name of the stations as Woolwich Station is more Woolwich Arsenal than the Woolwich Arsenal station... and the Woolwich Arsenal station is in the middle of Woolwich.
It is a tradition of the English language to have descriptive location names backwards.
Don't get me started on Clapham Junction !!
Willesden Junction is worse. That's Harlesden
My own family have a lot of links to Woolwich, Shooters Hill and Greenwich, my great grandfather Cecil Watson after being invalidated as an officer off a Dreadnought battleship took up station at Greenwich West nick and left the police service with zero arrests on his record but also incredibly low crime rate on his "patch" as he invariably sorted out the domestics, kept the local kids under control and it was quite a calm zone he patrolled daily starting from his nick, wandering down to the Prince of Orange pub where he would have his pre-lunch "livener" or two, then up to Point Hill to get his lunch from his missus and a scolding for smelling of the devils brew then he would wander over Blackheath down into the village mumping free beers and teas along the way, then down to the Royal Standard pub for a ready check to ensure no one had stolen that pub... Onwards he would wander down to Shooters Hill then aim towards Woolwich ensuring no public house larceny of had occurred, then parallel to the Thames towards Charlton by this time quite wobbly to sign off about 6 in the evening to go home and dinner and another telling off about the devils brew etc etc. Can you imagine that sort of policing today? His legacy does live on as NO pubs or cafes have been stolen in the following years so he did something right heheheh :P I don't go back to south London because its changed so horribly to my mind, remembering the days of jumping on the 124 bus at Grove Park to wander down to Woolwich indoor market to buy my Dr Martens and flight jackets, going there with me mum for Xmas shopping or later me being a long range sniper at Woolwich barracks, was a nice place now all glass and stuck up their own bums pretty much :( My father worked the Woolwich signal boxes in the sixties when he was relief at Charlton/Charlton Lane Crossing.
Most of the nicks he'd have known are closed now.
Eltham, Shooters hill, Woolwich, Westcombe hill, Royal hill all sold off for housing
Plumsted & an operational base are all that's left until you hit the big one in Lewisham
in a hundred years this will be a tale from the tube for the future's equivalant of jago
Your point about not building a station - an asset thats going to be used pretty much from now to forever - on the cheap is ALWAYS a bad idea (that costs more in future) but at least they got the Station. 11 M journeys is all the proof needed that it was necessary and vitally so for the area. Take note TfL Planners currently swerving Crossrail 2 plans away from Earlsfield/Tooting having stations on the mad premise that they don't need them because of existing stations - all of which have a hard time coping with post-pandemic traffic as is.
And this is why the HS2 station for Euston still needs to be built in full!
Great video. Being a Gooner, it was nice to learn a little bit about Woolwich. Thank you 😎
Arsenal - the original MK Dons...
Thanks!
And thank you!
There was an extensive tram car network,in and about Woolwich,that had interesting track layouts,and routings! Jago,the surface lines had quite a history too! Mayhaps,a video on them??? Thank you 😇😊! Happy Easter 🐣 😊!!
It would be great to see a video on the Royal Arsenal railway system, standard and narrow gauge.
Woolwich Elizabeth Line station and Woolwich Arsenal station are quite close to each other and serve Woolwich Town Centre. Maybe Woolwich on the Elizabeth Line should have been called Woolwich Central.
Amazing that anyone actively considered residential Abbey Wood more important a station site than the busy market town of Woolwich. Did the Crossrail promoters not consider putting down their crayons and going out to actually look at the area they proppsed serving?
Planning needs to be more than a frustratingly amusing oxymoron.
Abbey Wood is almost as busy as Woolwich. It actually might be even more busy than Woolwich
@@Gfynbcyiokbg8710That'd certainly be a seriously big change over the years since I left SE18. even now though, Woolwich seems a far more significant transport hub and shopping area.
Of interest, where would you put 'the centre' of Abbey Wood? Years back, it was the shopping area twixt level crossing and bus (ex-tram) depot ..... both now long gone.
I'm afraid their crayon may have been stuck up the second entrance !!😊😊😊😊
Excellent video as usual. I must say TfL did something right, building one central platform. I hate when you have to climb stairs and cross bridges to change directions, as it can often mean missing a train (of course sometimes it's necessary but when it's only 2 lines - one for each direction, I think a central or island platform is best).
For stations with lots of connections, sure, but those platforms can get crowded, and at least one side doesn't end in a precipitous fall onto the tracks.
I’ve followed your channel for a number of years now and I love watching your style evolve. This one I really enjoyed you hiring a photographer to accompany your videography. Can’t wait to see what you and Arty Shot produce for upcoming station videos
I didn't realise that Berkeley in London is pronounced differently from Berkeley in Wollongong and Berkeley in the San Francisco Bay Area. I learn more than just about British transport from this channel. 🙂
My biggest concern was indeed noted: it does not have direct connections to either the DLR or National Rail stations, which would help with crowding (not capacity, but crowding). If they end up having to retrofit a second exit, I can only hope they pony up the money to maybe do something about the first issue too.
Thanks for showing three of the buildings I worked in.They were part of the British Library.
My farther was in The Royal Artillery based at Woolwich Arsenal during WW2 before going to N E India to fight the Japanese when they were trying to take over the jewel in the crown of the British Empire. A good and somewhat witty video Jago.
Excellent. Thank you. Loved the last line 😂
Wonderful history lesson, please do Reading station
Well worthwhile. It feels like a different planet, let alone station compared to the old one. It is an epic transformation, but I think it cost something like £600m, so I guess that it ought to have been.
nb. I believe Reading holds the record for the greatest number of times that an application for city status has been turned down.
Agreed, Reading has a long and interesting history and it’s recent development as the terminus for the Elizabeth line makes it an distant outlier for London commuting.
@@TheOracle65 It's long been a commuter town for London. There are a lot of direct Intercity trains from Reading to Paddington, the fastest of which, operated by GWR, takes just 23 minutes, whilst the Elizabeth line trains take around 54 minutes. Thus it was generally faster from Reading to London than significantly closer towns like Maidenhead.
Of course the Elizabeth line gets you into the centre of London or Docklands, but even then it's usually quicker to change at Paddington than take the Elizabeth line the whole way.
The erstwhile Reading General? There were two others, one closed, leaving today's three active stations including 'Reading' in their names, which doesn't count Earley, or Tilehust which still claim to be not-suburbs of the not-a-city, or Calcot which also denies it's position and doesn't even warrant a station, but DOES count Reading Green Park, opened last year on the Basingstoke line
This major rail junction is one of few places where the discering gricer can nerd out on four regular flavours of traction (25kvac OHLE, 750vdc 3rd rail, diesel-electric and diesel hydraulic), with the odd fleeting visit from steam
@@TheEulerID Yes totally agree with what you said and have experienced journeys to/from/through Reading regularly from the West Country where I live now. I was born and raised in Reading and my dad worked there for BR. My comment on the Elizebeth Line was that it extended a traditionally London-centric commuter network to Reading, but yes it is quicker by GWR into Paddington for sure!
Your video is the chocolate egg to my boring Easter Sunday 🐣
I live in Charlton and more often than not get the bus to Woolwich to get the Elizabeth line (or bus to North Greenwich to get Jubilee line) rather than get the more expensive, slower and slightly dilapidated option of Sourheastern trains. The fact that they are all slow stopping trains that only go to London Bridge (as appose to Charing Cross) is also a factor. If TfL were allowed to take over the Southeastern metro services and have them as part of the Overground network, with the service improvements this would see, I’m sure more people would be willing to use that and this would take some of the pressure off the Elizabeth line.
Excellent point.
TfL won’t restore Charing Cross services though if they took over which is annoying
@@JayJay-nc7pr you’re right probably not. I know people say, just change at London Bridge, but it adds up to 10 mins to the journey by the time you’ve got of the train gone up and down the escalators, walked through the station and waited for next train. At least if it was overground the service would be cheaper and the stations manned.
Woolwich station has a ventilation shaft & emergency exit at the back that could be converted into an interchange to buses to Thamesmead.
Woolwich had an enormous arsenal.Quite a cheeky statement and I wouldnt want to be behind that... at the bottom of the piles. you might say. Yes, I might actually say they've shot themselves in the foot - although they wouldnt have wanted it to be a flash in the pan. You do wonder if they had underwear made from ovine products that that might have been where they got their Wool itch. (bummer)
Nice work Jago.
It was ridiculous that Woolwich wasn't in the plans for Crossrail from the start, and that it needed developers and a broke council to cough up to get a relatively basic structure added.
Too late to change, but the 2 main stations in Woolwich have misleading names. Woolwich on the Elizabeth line is the one serving the Arsenal area so ideally would be "Woolwich Arsenal", whereas the existing station should be "Woolwich Central" as it serves the town centre!
This is a gems episode. So many great lines. Most excellent, sir. Most excellent.
fascinating! can tfl really have imagined a London council had any money to give?! i’d love to know more about that part
Nice to see a piece of creative camera work by reknowned locomotive photographer Arty Shot.
Back in 95, for Thamesmead the housing association I fired a blank charge from one of the many many cannons they dug up over the years with many in pristine condition so being someone who was able to fire cannon they arranged for a small charge and I using some of the powder set up a quill and sadly it made quite a damp bang rather than what everyone expected but not allowed to put in a tamper or ball meant it was more a fizz than anything.
These old canons that get dug up in places like this are only there because they were dumped when something went wrong in the casting - thus making them unusable or unsafe to use. So I certainly wouldn't want to put anything in them that might go bang!
@@paulhaynes8045More of a damp squib,eh ? !!😊😊😊
You are my Lee and Enfield to my kybher pass. That they wanderlust
Nice video. My late father was a dyed in the wool Arsenal supporter. 👍👍👍⭐️⭐️⭐️ from 🇦🇺
love how you per video come out with wacky endings such as ''you are the 2nd entrance to me overcrowded station''
Can someone explain why they didn't opt for the Bond Street approach and just build the Elizabeth Line station directly underneath the Woolwich Arsenal DLR platform?
My friends father was a paint technologist at the Arsenal - interesting job
My grandfather was seconded from the Royal Engineers to the Woolwich Arsenal in 1917, and stayed there until he retired in 1961.
And there is a railway connection - before he joined up in 1914, he worked for the North Staffordshire Railway.
any colour as long as bronze green ?
@@highpath4776 I seem to remember (and it was a LONG time ago) he was testing paint for tanks at the time -jeez this was over 50 years ago!!
Yes, definitely will need a second exit in due course. When I visited WA on the opening day of the linenAbbey Wood to Paddington, on exiting into the lovely grassy square, a jazz band were playing Take The A Train. Perfect , ( although the Elizabeth Line doesn’t extend to Harlem via Sugar Hill, yet !)
"Arty shot" whilst pointed at the column with the Royal Artillery colours on it.
I see what you did there :P
Very interesting (as always). Thanks Jago.
Thanks
And thank you!
Interesting video, I might try the ferry one day.
The problem with building stations on the cheap is a recurring issue for a lot of modern stations in London. It's the same for North Greenwich and for Canada water, both of which are seeing or about to see huge amounts of residential and commercial development. Neither of those stations are able to cope with the capacity of crowds that they already have, let alone when they get an extra 5000 households...
Both North Greenwich and Canada Water were built like Canary Wharf with plans and footprints that can relatively easily be expanded, Canada Water has gained an additional entrance space and circulating space, and got its ticket hall expanded relatively recently as part of the ongoing developments in the area. I believe its the same for North Greenwich which has 3 potential entrances/exits and more potential circulating spaces.
That wasn't done for Woolwich given it was added so late - so any plan will have to be a work around, and then in 10 years (or so) no doubt they will announce a rebuild/refurb, like they have done for other stations like Farringdon, but it will always be a problematic station given how it was so late to the plan.
One would argue that it isn't in the best interests to have a sole station for Woolwich given the cost of realigning national rail lines and tunneling for other rail services, and just given that there will always need to be two seperate stations, I would say though BOTH stations need a lot of work to bring them up to the level that the area needs.
And I have long said that the DLR platforms need re aligning the other way to allow a potential link to Thamesmead and was surprised that didn't happen whilst they were building the Crossrail station..
I remember they had to put an extra escalator into North Greenwich just a year or so after it opened (it originally only had 3 escalators and a set of stairs). The only reason they haven’t rebuilt the inadequate bus station (they had plans to) is lack of funds.
@@a1white Yeah the bus station is a seperate issue. It was only ever meant to be a temporary one with 5 bays, until they built the Thames Gateway Transit project that got cancelled in 2009 after the cancellation of the Gateway Bridge, the orginal plan was to move the bus station and expand it to 14 as part of the BRT system which could have been converted into a tram system (think DLR lite) when funds allowed, of course that didn't happen.
Its part the same why/how they got 3 platforms for a proposed Jubilee line extension to Thamesmead which never got further than the platform on the original plan.
Lets hope more people will work from home😂....
Every should ride the ferry at least once so they can realise just how incredible it is that even in the *21st century* in the _capital_ of the United Kingdom people still have to rely on a muthaflippin boat to get across the river between north and south London.
"Cosmic", as Rodney Trotter would say.
07:00 I am one of those passengers. When visiting London from Australia, I had a day to kill before heading back to LHR for a 30hr torture flight home. Woolwich was just somewhere to catch the Elizabeth Line to. It was a great destination that I would never at visited otherwise. I even got to witness a lunchtime brawl at the Dial Arch and see some of London’s mop it up.
One thing I wish was that daylight reached platforms at at least one station because that would give it an open feel but anyway
The next stop Custom House and previous Abbey Wood are above ground on the Elizabeth line.
@@liquidatedrice5274 I know but I feel an underground station with a little daylight trickling through would be really nice
As you will understand from my comment on the stations considered for the HS2 terminal, railway networks should have grid structure to serve everybody, and be a part of a suite of modes providing access (connection) to work, goods and services.
London city airport will transition to be the hub for electric aviation in London. For aviation connections in London, the Elizabeth Line needs a station at London City Airport - it is just 200 metres from the terminal building which is far better than the Gatwick station and terminal buildings. There should be a tunnel from the LCA terminal to the Elizabeth Line. Could build two side platforms, or be more interventionist and build an island platform to use less land. While a little bit of land would be needed from the Tate and Lyle sugar factory, the new station would be a good base for a town CBD as there is nothing much nearby. The nearest Elizabeth Line station is 2km away. So a good place for a station on several levels.
I use the station a lot when traveling to and from City Airport - our offices are at Liverpool Street and that means changing at either Woolwich or Stratford because some genius didn’t put an Elizabeth Line stop at LCY.
So far, overcrowding has not been an issue and while I would like a direct connection to the DLR, the walk is not that bad.
All kinds of other routes you may find quicker:
1/ Either walk or get central line from Liverpool street to bank and get DLR straight to London city airport
2/ Get Elizabeth line to custom house and then the 474 bus to London city airport (8 minutes bus ride)
3 / Hammersmith & City line from Liverpool street to West Ham, then get DLR straight to London City Airport
@@zeddeka 1) Usually not keen on the walk to Bank, esp. with a suitcase; and the distances in the station are also considerable.
2) Not keen on the bus, either. But I will give it a go.
3) Sounds interesting; will try that next time.
It is just infuriating that you can see the airport from the Elizabeth line and they never bothered to consider a station there.
Any idea as to why a station wasn't built at the airport ?
Another excellent video - I have not yet ventured to Woolwich; I will have to one day.
Kindly don't confuse the Board of Ordnance with the Royal Engineers. The former was established at Monmouth at some time before the 15th Century, as an experimental operation in the dawn of explosives, probably using the resources of the Cistercian Tintern Abbey, and in particular the mills along the Anghidi river, and was the childhood home of Henry V. Under Elizabeth I it established one of the first hints towards the Industrial Revolution, standardising cannonry, which proved its worth as the ships which defeated the Armada could be rearmed easily. The dockyards needed artillery resources closer to hand, so Woolwich became the arsenal in the late 16th Century, but the creation of a permanent standing Army in the 17th century did not include the Ordnance. This only merged in 1855, when ships ceased to need loose cannon, and the Artillery and Engineers separated: the latter moved to Chatham the next year.
Dear Jago, it’s like you so very well proverbially put; the Woolwich municipality shot themselves in the foot. Or, as for military comparison, provided a too narrow cannon for the available ammunition. The single entrance and exit the Woolwich bottleneck. Cheerio
So it's a big improvement that could have done with being even bigger. I certainly appreciated it when I stayed with friends in Woolwich on a visit from Australia, but I guess I wasn't fighting rush hour crowds.
Another banger of a video!
Totally on target!
Good evening from mainland China
It would be impolite not to say good evening to you in return to you.
Actually took a ride on the Woolwich ferry for the first time on Tuesday
Great,isn't it !
@@simonwinter8839 Especially since its free!
@@steady_94 Yes ,not much for nothing in London. Except for my medical prescriptions and travel coz I'm old !!
@@simonwinter8839 I think its like that most places now 😄 But any reason to be out is a good one to me 😁
The same overcrowding of one entrance happened in Paris on Line 14 when they initially built one entrance only to Cour St-Emilion station (that district is an old wine freightyard converted into residential area in the 90s with lots of shops and a cinema complex as well as a park.
As the entrance was very crowded at rush hours and with the extensions of the line looming near (before extention to St Ouen in 2020), they decided to convert the emergency exit into a true second entrance but it still required to rebuild the all emergency entrance into something bigger, add a big stair on the street and... rebuild an emergency exit somewhere else.
They did the same at Bercy and Olympiades stations (Bercy serves a train station that has ramped up in traffic since the last twenty years seconding Gare de Lyon and Gare d'Austerlitz from part of their own traffic so it needed a better connexion to the metro network, only Line 6 had a secondary entrance leading near the train station).
On the same line though, the station that experienced the worst overcrowding was Gare de Lyon with its only one island platform (built between RER tunnels and the RATP building underground facilities just under the road to save money), they had to separate ingress and egress flows on Morning rush hours with agents leading the way and queue ribbons.One extremity for egress and the other for ingress. It was a nightmare.
With all the extensions looming on the horizon they finally decided to add a few stairs on the platform. It began a few years ago adding a new stair and escalator to the bridge leading from the RER ticket hall to the underside of the RATP office building. It is only for exiting the platform. More recently they added THREE sets of narrow stair and an escalator beside those to help coping with egress. They also replaced the only fully glassed semi circular hydraulic piston lift that was unreliable and very slow by two standard lifts facing eachother. (the only other hydrolic semi circular lift is at Madeleine station on the side of the access well for those who want to see that, at the condition they didn't replace it with another lift...)
Of course, there is much less space on the platform than before but rebuilding the entire station elsewhere or much deeper would be impractical, Bercy station is much too close to it and there already is a ramp between the two station as it is. The thing is to maximize egress speed. Trains are really frequent on that line so you don't need a lot of space to wait for one anyway.
But it might not be enough for the million passengers projected to take the line next year when all the trains will be in service to bring the line up to full capacity...
Great post, thank you. Yet I believe your last line is rather optimistic, as « full capacity » in terms of passengers will be attained in a few short months. The Olympics are upon us. The whole network will be sorely tested. The change in tone of the RATP website from «we’re fine, it’ll be grand » to « here’s a real-time map of stations where you’ll need over 15 mn to get from the entrance to the actual platform » tells of the impending nightmare.
At this point, April 2024, this line 14 is closed on evenings and weekends for construction.
I would strongly advise anyone coming to Paris for the Olympics to stay within walking / biking distance of the sites they have tickets for.
We are not ready.
My late Grandfather worked at Woolwich Arsenal as a Chemist from about 1917 to his retirement. There used to be a museum on-site but I believe it’s now closed unless someone knows different.
So did mine, although not as a chemist (he had a degree in engineering). seconmded from the Royal Engineers in 1917, worked at the Arsenal until he retired in 1961. My grandmother also worked there - that's how they met in 1922.
This station is about a two minute walk from my flat.
I have learned which door is nearest to the escalator.
Happy Easter Jago.
Newer stations may have less material to cover but I love hearing about them. There's so much hype leading up to a project's opening but we rarely hear about the successes and failures of the project. The excitement just dies off and we start looking forward to the next thing without being happy with what we just got.
Excellent 👍
I suspect that Woolwich station will get an underground passageway to connect to Woolwich Arsenal station.
Arty shot! Love it.
I have often used the routes through Woolwich since I live in East Anglia, while my brother lives in Thamesmead. Often by car. Anathema to GLC. Last was via Thameslink to Blackfriars thence to Woolwich and Abbey Wood
A job at the Sun Newspaper is waiting for Jago. I was hoping this would be a video about the comical shortening of Woolwich Arsenal used on the DLR, always gives me a giggle.
A job at the Sun may be a response to one joke but all things considered Mr. Hazards's journalistic skills would probably exceed the intellect of your average Sun reader.Yes I know, I'm such a snob !!
Love the title. Greetings from Australia.
G'day,oh come on I'm trying !!
There is/was supposed to be a second entrance built at the other end of the platform for future use if it ever was to be over capacity
But if Greenwich gives planning permission for Armourers Court, as has been recommended by officers, surface access from the east end of the station will be permanently blocked off.
That’s why Dockyard is the strongest station in Woolwich.
It takes the strain from its sister’s workload
I was going to have a go on the Woolwich Ferry, but they wouldn't sell me a return ticket, so i took the bus.
The ferry is free. You can`t buy tickets!
@@iank-dz6ggWoosh! What's that? That's the sound of @General_Confusion shooting a Woolwich Ferry joke over your head.
@@DavidShepheard 🤫
@@General_Confusion actually you could make a living mugging tourists selling tickets at £3 telling them its free
@@DavidShepheardWhat makes the joke funnier than the buying a ticket bit is that he/she took the bus.Mind you we all know that London bus drivers can jump the Thames. I refer you to the number 78 that jumped Tower Bridge as it started to open in the 1950s.
Strictly, it was a late 're-addition'. The first versions of Crossrail we took to consultation in 2001 included a station, but when the SRA leadership changed the requirements of the project were tweaked to allow the option for freight through the Thames Tunnel which would have precluded a station. Given that the DLR extension to Woolwich was about to open it was decided not to include it in the scheme which went into the Crossrail Bill. The Royal Borough of Greenwich petitioned to put it back and the Commons Committee agreed.
I should also have mentioned that the reason why there isn’t a below ground connection to the other Woolwich stations, or indeed the south side of Plumstead Road, is that the Southern Outfall Sewer is in the way. We originally thought of having an entrance on the site of Woolwich market with a pedestrian subway, but it would have to go very deep to get under the sewer. The vertical alignment of Crossrail was raised when the station was deleted and the cost of putting it back down would have added much more to the deal that was done with RBG and Berkeley and wouldn’t have made it viable.
At 0'55 seconds into this video, we see the reflection of a man who could be doing the actual filming. Is this Jago Hazzard? He's the Banksy of You Tube Underground train videos after all, so this could be exciting.
I wondered initially if this was going to be about the lack of connectivity with Woolwich Arsenal/DLR. A lot of recent stations (and airports) seem to involve long walks, designers assume everyone is young. fit and no luggage! Canary Wharf is probably the worst (all 3 stations!) but Kings Cross and Tottenham Hale involve longer walks than before. I guess though that Woolwich doesn't really need to be an interchange as there are alternatives on all routes. Interesting how quickly it has been successful .
My local station
London is a rare example of induced demand on a rail transit network. Most cities around the globe know the highway version of this phenomenon.
I have a tenuous link to Woolwich Arsenal, in that my house which was built 1900/1901 was first occupied by a worker from Woolwich Arsenal. I think the houses were actually built to house the Woolwich Arsenal workers. During WWII, five houses across the road were destroyed during the blitz and there was slight damage to this house.
It’s all about location, location, location
Sounds about right for transport planning these days. God forbid they plan ahead, or any councils actually pay what they promised to.
@4:29 the architects that designed the station are called Weston Williamson + partners (not Western) - it's the names of the 2 gentlemen that set the company up
He said Weston
Not in the transcript
A pain in the Arsenal indeed, dear Jago. As haemorroids are a pain in the neck!
'Tis perhaps fitting that Arsenal station has only one exit, for otherwise it becomes a colostomy, which ain't my bag... x
I was on the Woolwich ferry, years ago with my late father and younger brother, where we watched a rain shower follow us, across the Thames.
Useless television trivia : the Woolwich Ferry was used for a meeting scene between an arms dealer and acquaintance of one of the main characters of The Professionals, during an episode that used large parts of the then, near derelict Docklands.
If they added an exit/enterance hall to the front of the station, because there does appear to be room for it, they could expand the exit/ entrance capacity in an easy and practical manner. Wembley Central did that years ago, when it had a shopping arcade in front of it, and kept that design when they rebuilt, putting a large forecourt in front of it. They could definitely put in some more fire exits, which could be used for extra capacity, as also happens on match days and large concert days, at Wembley Central.
OBE for J-Haz!
3:42 Hong Kong MTR did this a default. In fact, the MTR owns the land and air rights within the immediate area and uses its stations as a driver of growth. Something TfL and all other transport executives need to be doing.
Came for the Woolwich station story, stayed for the arty shot.
You did pretty well, considering you didn't think there was much to say about this new station!