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Monday, September 03, 2012

Two heritage train trips on the Underground this month

Once the Olympics are out of the way, for tube heritage fans, there will be two opportunities to sate your hunger this month - one this coming weekend and another very different event at the end of the month.

Firstly, this weekend there will be one of the occasional outings for the restored
1938 tube train in all its art-deco glory, and 1980s adverts. The outing is part of the Amersham Heritage Open Day, in addition to the vintage tube train, there are trips on an old Routemaster bus and on an early Met Line electric locomotive.

Trips on the tube train start from £10, and on the Met Line locomotive at £5 each. The bus will be free.

Book tickets online here or by phone at 020 7565 7298.

The other event later this month is a sad farewell to the oldest trains still running on the Underground - the venerable Met Line trains which have been slowly replaced over the past year with the swanky new air conditioned models.

Two things are happening.

It is likely -- but not officially confirmed yet -- that the very last trip by the last remaining train as a passenger service will be on Wednesday 26 September.

However, there will then be a last grand send off on the following Saturday (29th Sept) and the last remaining train will run along the entire length of the Metropolitan Line, calling at every single station served by the trains.

As with the Victoria Line farewell tour, the train will have a commemorative banner on the front of the train to mark the special trip.

As that is an all-day event, tickets are a more pricey £40 each, with the funds going to charity. Of course, you don't have to pay to stand on sidelines and wave goodbye to the old train as it passes.

Tickets for the farewell tour go on sale later today - 020 7565 7298

More details here.

Labels: , ,



; Posted by IanVisits Monday, September 03, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
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Friday, August 31, 2012

While I'm away .... guest blogger

Those of you who follow me on Twitter, may have seen that I'll be off on holiday to Bali & Bangkok for two weeks! Even though there will be internet where I'm staying, I  don't exactly relish the idea of blogging about the Tube while I'm lying on a sun lounger. It'd hardly be authentic too!

However,  rather than leaving a gap, I've lined up a great guest blogger for you.

Ianvisits chatting to  Museum Depot Volunteer John
Ian (on the left) chatting to London Transport Museum Volunteer John

Many of you might know IanVisits and in fact he's kindly agreed to step in for me before when I've been on holiday. Ian's a perfect choice to "babysit" the blog, as he knows more about the London Underground than I do. He's been commenting & sending me stuff to blog for many years now. As well as blogging himself, he runs a ridiculously comprehensive events calendar packed with interesting things to do in London (no idea how he finds out about good events so quickly!).

He's blogged and photographed some wonderful Tube related tours - including West Ashfield, Brunel's Thames Tunnel walk and a visit to the disused platforms at Charing Cross on 1938 Tube stock. I first met Ian at launch of London Transport Museum's Art of the Poster exhibition four years ago. 

I'll still be popping in from time to time and if you want see what I'm up to in Bali, I'll be tweeting and adding photos to my Flickr stream.

In the meantime please welcome Ian (he's IanVisits on Twitter) and I'll be back in two weeks.


; Posted by Unknown Friday, August 31, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/while-im-away-guest-blogger.html

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Farringdon Tube Mice Attacks

I always thought that London Underground mice were harmless.  It appears that's wrong.  Staff at Farringdon Tube have a sign at the station entrance warning travellers to tuck their trousers into their socks to avoid being attacked by vermin there.


Thanks to both  @parksidemalvern & @magslhalliday for telling me about this.  ITV also sent along someone to the station to film the sign, although appear not to have spoken to anyone about it while there.

Not sure what you're supposed to do if you're wearing a skirt or shorts! Keep a look out for the little creatures and make a run for it.

Update: Good news (or bad news - if you like the thought of dangerous mice) I've just received the following from TfL "Please note. The writing on this whiteboard was not an official TfL message and has since been removed. We are not aware of any problems with mice so do not believe this was written by station staff."


You might also like
Guess Where Tube 13 - Tube Mouse 
Mice on the Tube
TfL & RMT take note - NYC Subway staff run "Rate My Rat" photo contest 


; Posted by Unknown Tuesday, August 28, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/farringdon-tube-mice-attacks.html

Friday, August 24, 2012

Tube Tent goes Travelling (Kid's version available too)

Those who remember my post about the
London Underground Tube Tent, may like to see that the Northern Line tent has been touring around the country.  Naturally it used the London Underground itself for part of the journey.


OK it didn't!  Those of you who know your Tube stations very well may detect that this was shot on the disused section of the Jubilee Line at Charing Cross, where a number of ads & publicity pictures are filmed.

However, The Monster Factory, the tent's manufacturers, have been taking the Tube tent on tour. It's been at V with One Direction, with Butlers in the Buff in Bristol and in a forest in China.

If that two thousand quid price tag is still out of your budget, you'll be pleased to hear that kids can enjoy camping or playing in a Tube tent at the much more affordable price of £59.99


The kid's Tube tent also comes complete with its very own ticket office and tunnel.  Adults might just be able to crouch into it as the ticket office section is 100cm high. Although fitting into the train would be more of a challenge as that's only 46cm high and best left to the kids!

You might also like
London Underground Tube Tent
Yesterday's Tube carriage could become Tomorrow's office
Visiting Nabokov's Tube Carriage Offices 


; Posted by Unknown Friday, August 24, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/tube-tent-goes-travelling.html

Thursday, August 23, 2012

New Borehole air-conditioning at Tube stations

If you feel that Green Park and Oxford Circus London Underground stations are cooler than past summers, it's because they are both benefitting from new borehole air conditioning units.


Take a look just to left of the station entrance in the grass in the photo above and you'll see the circular plant room at Green Park.  The cooling is provided by groundwater drawn up from 80m-deep boreholes in the park. Morgan Sindall carried out the Green Park project, which also involved installation of eight air-handling units (AHUs as they are known in the trade) on the platforms.

Here comes the science bit from Engineering and Technology Magazine  "These are fed by cool water abstracted from two of the newly-drilled boreholes and piped to the station. The warmer return water is put back into the aquifer through two more boreholes at some distance from the abstraction points."

This was the first installation of this type on the London, although at Victoria there are two platforms are cooled by groundwater that would in any case have to be pumped out of the station.


@IanDeeley noticed some huge air conditoning units had recently been installed at Victoria Line platforms at Oxford Circus.  There are already air-cooling units in the ticket hall there and Birse Metro expanded the scheme with 14 AHUs in the platform areas.  Air-cooled water chillers are in the roof of a building next door.

London Underground has introduced air-conditioned Tube trains on its shallower sub-surface lines, but has always found it a challenge to cool the deep-level Tubes, which do not have much clearance between tunnel and the train.  The lack of space for air conditioning equipment inside or outside the trains, and for heat to escape is a long term problem for the system.

Back in 2003 when Ken Livingstone was mayor, he ran a competition with a £100,000 reward for anyone who could successfully cool the London Underground. At the time the reward went unclaimed, I wonder if anything like borehole air con had been suggested?

You might also like
Super hero uses elbows to cool Tube
First Air Conditioned Tube Train 
Six Million Tube cooling contract awarded
Notes from Cooling the Tube Talk


; Posted by Unknown Thursday, August 23, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/borehole-air-con-at-tube-stations.html

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Penguin Books for the Tube's 150th Anniversary

As many of the know, the London Underground will be 150 years old next year.  Both TfL and London Transport Museum will be running a number of activities to celebrate, including running a
steam locomotive on the Tube system.  Penguin Books are also releasing an interesting series of short paperbacks devoted to individual Tube lines.

Photo by Leon Daniels
Photo by Leon Daniels

One of my favourite authors, John Lanchester, has written  What We Talk About When We Talk About The Tube.  It offers his take on the District Line. Broadcaster & journalist Paul Morley will tackle the Bakerloo line with Earthbound. Each of the £5 line paperbacks will be published by Penguin Books next March.

Other books by Penguin for the 150th anniversary include a definitive history of the system, a book of poems and philosophical works taking the concept of transit as their starting point and Mark Ovenden is writing a book dedicated to the London Underground's iconic design from its maps to its posters.

Mike Brown, LU's managing director said: "We are really excited to be working with Penguin Books for this important anniversary, especially as it was a trip by rail that inspired the creation of Penguin Books and [because] both organisations share a history of using the same graphic designers."


I was lucky enough to attend the launch of London Underground map expert, Max Roberts' new labour of love Underground Maps Unravelled, a few weeks ago.  Max describes the book as an  "in-depth analysis of how schematic maps assist the user, when they fail, and the psychological theories that explain why. It asks whether traditional design techniques are suited to today’s complex networks, and explores what happens when the rules are broken. The result is an astonishing collection of maps for cities worldwide that challenge preconceptions about the nature of effective design."

Watch this space for my review of his book soon.

You might also like
How to create a Topographically Reasonable Tube Map
Railway Maps of the World - Mark Ovenden Guest Post
London Underground: Architecture, Design & History Book Review
Underground Overground : A Passenger's History of the Tube - Book Review


; Posted by Unknown Wednesday, August 22, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/penguin-books-tube-150th-anniversary.html

Monday, August 20, 2012

Security Screening at Tube Stations Reconsidered

The Guardian reported that new consideration is to be given to the introduction of airport-style mass security screening at mainline rail stations and across the London Underground.

You may remember that a few years ago plans to install airport-style x-ray machines in every Tube and mainline rail stations across the UK were ruled out. Not surprisingly this was because passengers might find the delays caused by this a tad inconvenient and it would lead to "passenger rebellion". A six month trial at five unspecified locations in 2008 found that airport-style checks would be impractical and antagonise the public.

Even back in 2005 in the immediate aftermath of the summer bombings of our transport system a  Transport for London spokesperson said "Body scanners are completely impractical on the London Underground. Heathrow handles 67.1 million passengers each year - London Underground carries 976 million.

"You can just imagine the delays if such technology was introduced on the Tube. We are constantly reviewing technology to see what could be potentially employed - but body scanners are not an option for us. Our stations just don't have room for them"


However, the Home Office has now launched a search for new and emerging technologies that are capable of "rapidly screening huge numbers of passengers and which could be used in major train and tube stations and across the tube network".

The brief for the rail and Tube screening technology is looking for something to detect explosives, guns and knives, being carried by people and in bags, but "would also need a capacity to spot chemical and biological materials. The screening equipment needs to be able to scan wheelchairs, prosthetics, crutches, pushchairs and bikes as well as people and their luggage".

It says that while the stations can be defined as "crowded places", there are locations where crowd movement is "semi-controlled", such as at ticket barriers, queues, at the top and bottom of escalators and at platforms, which could prove suitable screening points. The equipment may be fixed and built into the station furniture, or portable, to be used in different areas depending on passenger flow, threat level or intelligence."

Turnham Green Tube Scanner Knife Arch

There are a number of stations on the Tube network that have knife arch scanners and it will be interesting to see how & whether technologyhas moved on from 2005 and 2008 when these ideas were last mooted.  At the moment the hunt for the technology is "academic" and will start next month, with results due in March 2013.

Related posts
Knife Arch Scanner spotted on the Tube
Aldwych Tube in Mock Terrorist Attack Exercise
No X-Ray machines at London Underground Stations
Scanning machines introduced on Heathrow Express Stations at Paddington


; Posted by Unknown Monday, August 20, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/security-screening-tube-stations.html

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Olympic Legacy: Tube Photo of the Week

While much of London is still suffering from "NOlympics" depression, some bright spark at a London Overground station has some fun with the white boards.

Spotted by drippingfist



Those of you who watched the Olympic closing ceremony with have a certain amount of sympathy for the last line.

Not sure where this was taken, it looks a bit like the handiwork of Shoreditch High Street Station to me, However, other internet comments suggest it was at Hackney Wick. If you know, let us know!

You might also like
Station Whiteboard Message Wars
Angel Tube's Thoughts of the Day go Online
Tube staff direct commuters to new Banksy at Turnpike Lane
Tube Staff that make you smile  


; Posted by Unknown Wednesday, August 15, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/olympic-legacy-tube-photo-of-week.html

Friday, August 10, 2012

Piccadilly Circus Tube Olympic & Paralympic Poster Display

Rather than rush through Piccadilly Circus London Underground station you might want to spend a few minutes looking at a new display of posters there.  Art on the Underground have commissioned images by twelve of the UK’s leading artists to celebrate the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.


Apparently since 1912 each Olympic host city has commissioned posters to celebrate hosting the Games and since the first Paralympic games were held at Stoke Mandeville, posters have also been commissioned for the Paralympic games.

Art of the Underground said "These official posters are now themselves a special celebration of the meeting of art and sport over the last 100 years. The London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) has commissioned twelve of the UK’s leading artists to create images to celebrate London hosting the 2012 Games, six for the Olympic Games and six for the Paralympic Games."


"The artists were encouraged to celebrate the Games coming to London and to look at the values of the Olympic and Paralympic games. Each image is a distinct interpretation of either the Olympic or Paralympic Games by the individual artists and the diversity of the series demonstrates the extraordinary creative talent that exists within the UK".

The posters are from artists Martin Creed, Tracey Emin, (who is also penned the artwork for the current Tube map covers), Gary Hume, Sarah Morris, Bob and Roberta Smith, Anthea Hamilton, Howard Hodgkin, Chris Ofili, Bridget Riley, Rachel Whiteread, Fiona Banner and Michael Craig-Martin.

The images are also on display at Tate Britain during the summer as part of the London 2012 Festival and are available to buy as posters or limited edition prints.

You might also like
Tracey Emin designs Tube Map Cover for Olympic Games period
Photos from Mind the Map Exhibition at London Transport Museum
Olympic Tube Map Renames Stations with names of Sporting Celebrities


; Posted by Unknown Friday, August 10, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/piccadilly-circus-tube-olympic.html

Tuesday, August 07, 2012

Fox on Tube - Tube Photo of the Week

There's been some wildlife spotted on the Tube, rats & mice on the tracks & the odd  pigeon in carriages, but rarely are foxes seen on the London Underground. 

Photo by @stephen_ebert

@Stephen_ebert saw this bold creature on his Tube journey last night. @Harrie_Horn also spotted one, although her shot is blurrier and her camera makes it look as though it has demonic eyes!

A few years ago Kate Day spotted a fox on Tube escalator

Underground Urban Fox by Kate Arkless Gray

The little blighters are clearly getting even more confident and are travelling in carriages now!

Related post 
Fox on the Tube


; Posted by Unknown Tuesday, August 07, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/fox-on-tube-tube-photo-of-week.html

Bombardier Tube Ad

Has anyone seen ads for err... "brands" of trains before? I think this is the first ad I've seen on the London Underground for a train manufacturer.

Ad for Bombardier Trains

Bombardier are clearly so proud of their new "fast, efficient & eco friendly trains" that they're running advertisements for them on the system.

Perhaps a condition of getting the contract from TfL to supply the S Stock trains was to run ads putting across Bombardier's by-line of "the evolution of mobility".

Although it's not as if we have a choice of which trains we take when we're on the London Underground. But, maybe I'm wrong. Perhaps there are some people who wait around at platforms until a shiny new train comes along. If you've a bit of time to spare maybe it is worth getting on a nice air conditioned eco friendly train!

Related posts
First Air Conditioned Tube Train
Prince Charles Test Drives Tube Train
Air Conditioned Tubes on the way


; Posted by Unknown Tuesday, August 07, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/bombardier-tube-ad.html

Sunday, August 05, 2012

Magician on London Overground for Olympic Entertainment

If you see a suited person with TfL badge on your London Overground asking for your card, the chances are it's not your Oyster Card he's interested in.  Magician Danny Hall performing with Stage Up has been taken on to entertain passengers throughout the London Olympic Games.

Photo by @imckee

Up until August 11th 2012 he'll be on carriages and at at stations on the east end of the North London Line – Hackney Central, Homerton and Hackney Wick.

A spokesperson for London Overground said: "We’ve had great feedback from the passengers who are also Tweeting about it.”

Pick a card, any card, just not my Oyster Card

The Stage Up acts feature local, up-and-coming performers, who will play 30-minute acoustic slots on small areas of the platforms.

You might also like
Balloon Animals on the Tube
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; Posted by Unknown Sunday, August 05, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/magician-on-london-overground-for.html

Friday, August 03, 2012

Athlete carries his Olympic Gold Medal on the Tube

We're coming to the end of the first week of the Olympics & finally the Tube picture many of us have been waiting for.  Forget shots of overcrowded Tubes (although as yet it hasn't been worse than normal). Forget shots of tourists looking confused & herding round interchanges.  Forget the shot of the
Olympic torch being carried on the front of Tube train (although no one seemed to get that anyway).  It's the shot of an athlete carrying a Gold Medal on the London Undeground.

It's actually great to see athletes using the Tube in the first place, but to see one proudly posing with their medal was a delight.  I'm not sure who originally took this photo of Venezuelan fencing champion, Ruben Limardo but comedian Omid Djalili Tweeted it yesterday afternoon & it went around Twittersphere like wildfire.

A Tube commuter said to The Mirror: "It was just amazing. This guy came on the train with a gold medal round his neck. I asked him about it and he just shrugged and said ‘I’m a fencer from Venezuela.’ He posed for pictures and signed autographs and then got off. Absolutely surreal.”

You might also like
How's your Olympic Tube journey been so far?
Olympic Torch to travel by Tube
Will TfL's 'keep away' Olympics message leave a transport legacy?
Olympic Queuing Rehearsals at London Stations
Boris makes Olympic Tube announcements
TfL Publish Tube & Train Stations to avoid during Olympic Games  


; Posted by Unknown Friday, August 03, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/08/olympic-gold-medal-on-tube.html

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

How's your Olympic Tube journey been so far?

Yesterday was the first working day of the Olympics and it appears that
TfL's "keep away" messages may have had some effect. The London Underground was not as overcrowded and packed as many of us thought it might be.  Although people (including myself) were Tweeting that the system was quiet and the "hot spots" weren't hot, TfL's official figures are that Tube journeys were up 4% on Monday 30th July.  Not a huge figure!

Holborn Hotspot
This is a picture I took of Holborn on the Central Line yesterday as I was heading East towards Stratford at about 9.40am.  As you can see it's hardly the "exceptionally busy" that TfL were predicting.

Although we shouldn't be too complacent or speak too soon as each day will be different.  London's transport commissioner, Peter Hendy, said: "Public transport in general, and the Jubilee line in particular, will be exceptionally busy today as spectators make their way to events at key Olympic venues across the capital.

"We are very grateful to customers for following our advice to avoid London Bridge station and for major businesses who are enabling their staff to work flexibly during the Games.

"Our advice to all users of the transport network continues to be to plan ahead, avoid hotspot areas, and leave plenty of time for your journey."

At time of writing the Central Line, one of the main routes into the Olympic Park at Stratford, is suspended from Liverpool Street, due to reports of a fire at Leyton. So if you're making your way to the Games there this morning best use the District or Jubilee Line instead.

Meanwhile, Downing Street, Tweeted a blurry picture of David Cameron travelling on the Tube yesterday to watch the Tom Daley & Peter Waterford  in the diving finals.

Cameron has been keen to stress how he wanted to use public transport during the Games rather than the special "Games Lanes" branded 'Zil lanes'  reserved for VIPs travelling to venues by car.

He told Sky News : “I’ve just actually come on the Tube myself to see what the traffic situation is like, not too bad, the Bakerloo line is going all right There are lots of challenges, we’ve got to overcome them one by one. I think everything at the moment is looking good.

How was your journey into and from work yesterday?

Related posts
Will TfL's 'keep away' Olympics message leave a transport legacy?
Olympic Queuing Rehearsals at London Stations
Boris makes Olympic Tube announcements
TfL Publish Tube & Train Stations to avoid during Olympic Games
£2.5 million to show Tube Staff Olympic Park
30 minute wait for Tube trains during 2012 Olympics
Olympics chiefs say avoid Tube
Can the Tube cope with the Olympics? 


; Posted by Unknown Tuesday, July 31, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/07/hows-olympic-tube-journey.html

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Olympics Poster Parade at London Transport Museum

There's a new poster display at the London Transport Museum, in celebration of the Olympics. Unusually for London Transport, who normally had a rich heritage in commissioning poster artwork for events in London, only one poster was actually commissioned by London Transport during London’s 1948 Olympics. Maybe as the UK was in the grip of postwar austerity at the time and there were strong arguments against spending funds on the event.

London Transport Olympics 1948 Poster from London Transport Museum

However posters have been used since the early 1900s to encourage travel to sporting events and activities. The display at the museum includes posters promoting football, The Boat Race, swimming, tennis and ‘bicyclism’ (perhaps that influenced the term Olympism used in 2012's Opening Ceremony last night). Works by Tom Eckersley, Herry Perry and Austin Cooper will be on display.


The poster display runs until 13th September at London Transport Museum.  Make sure you take in their excellent Mind The Map exhibtion when you are there.  Entry is free for children and tickets  for adults are £13.50 (£10.00 concessions) and tickets allow free entry for a whole year.  More details here

You might also like
Wembley Park Tube in the 1948 Olympics
Tracey Emin designs Tube Map Cover for Olympic Games period 
Photos from Mind the Map Exhibition at London Transport Museum


; Posted by Unknown Saturday, July 28, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/07/olympics-posters-at-london-transport.html

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Tube Star App - Connecting London Underground's Commuters

If you have an Android phone and would like test out a new Tube app, read on. 
Tube Star was developed by Neal Lathia of Cambridge University's Computer Lab and aims to merge your Tweets with TfL status updates.


"You can see the official Transport for London status of each Tube line (and any incidents reported at stations) and hear about fellow passengers' recent experiences."

Neal says "Each time you take the Tube, you can post short tweets about what is happening around you: any crowds, delays, disruptions, or even about that lovely person who just gave up their seat for someone in need. Download the app, log into it with your Twitter account and join the Tube Star community today!"


I'm going to give it a try as although I follow official Tweets from the each Tube Line I use on a regular basis, they're not always the most up to date. I find that my friends' Tweets or doing searches on Twitter around a particular line or station are often more accurate and they're certainly more entertaining!

Neal is interested in feedback on how the app works, and his contact details are on the Tube Star site.

You might also like
Guardian's audio app Streetstories features King's Cross Station
Tube App for Harry Potter's iPhone - iFloo
What's the best London Underground iPhone App?
Tube Exits or Mind the App 
Tube Refund apps for your iPhone 


; Posted by Unknown Wednesday, July 25, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/07/tube-star-app-connecting-london.html

Monday, July 23, 2012

London Underground Tube Tent

For those who love camping or want a Northern Line carriage all to themselves TfF that's Transport for Firebox has arranged for you to take the Tube to your next holiday or weekend break.  Graeme found this excellent London Underground Tube tent on
Firebox, which is topically described "Considering the imminent arrival of armies of hyper-active athletes, and rampaging hordes of tourists for a certain upcoming sporting event, it’s a great time to think about getting out of town."

The tent may not be the cheapest of camping options, at almost two grand, but it does sleep 16 people and can hold 72 people standing for parties, so if you all club together becomes more affordable.

Firebox have a video on the site on the tent being put together and apparently takes less time than it takes to get to Morden from High Barnet.

Features include
  • 7 zip-separated compartments
  • 2 side doors and a drivers door
  • Doors open, just like on the original
  • Fly sheet doors separate inner compartments 
For the "authentic commuter experience" you can "share your tent with 71 strangers".  It's also pointed out that "You can even get in through the drivers door! A rare treat."
 
You might also like
Yesterday's Tube carriage could become Tomorrow's office
Visiting Nabokov's Tube Carriage Offices 


; Posted by Unknown Monday, July 23, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/07/london-underground-tube-tent.html

Friday, July 20, 2012

Olympic Torch to travel by Tube

The Olympic Torch makes it way around London from Saturday 21st July carried by a variety of people and now it appears various modes of transport.  I'm keen to see two parts of the Olympic Relay, the one where Billy Mitchell carries the torch through Albert Square on EastEnders and the bit where the torch will be on the front of a London Underground train.

Billy Mitchell on the Tube

The Olympic torch will be attached to a Tube train and travel on an overground section of the system. Tube bosses are keeping the line used a secret as they are worried it will be swarmed by “torch tourists” and cause overcrowding on that line.

However, the Jubilee Line has been ruled out even though it is the main route to Games venues. LBC report that the torch will also have a ride on an open top bus driven by transport commissioner Peter Hendy. Apparently Boris really wanted to drive the bus, but he doesn't have a bus driving licence.

Londonist has full details of where to watch the Torch Relay. If you manage to see the Torch on the Tube, send us a picture. I'll be sticking to watching Billy run through the streets of Walford.

You might also like
Will TfL's 'keep away' Olympics message leave a transport legacy?
TfL boss takes to Twitter for Olympic Question Time #AskPeter
TfL Publish Tube & Train Stations to avoid during Olympic Games 
London's Transport & the 1948 London Olympics    


; Posted by Unknown Friday, July 20, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/07/olympic-torch-to-travel-by-tube.html

Thursday, July 19, 2012

TfL deny "driverless Tube" trials

A number of publications reported about a leaked document which claims TfL are testing driverless trains on the Jubilee Line in overnight trials.  The Evening Standard was one & said "Two Jubilee trains will be converted and run between Stratford and Waterloo stations. Initial testing will take place at night without passengers. If successful, then driverless operation across the entire line, used by 650,000 passengers a day, could begin from 2015."  However TfL have denied that tests are taking place.

TfL denies driverless rain trials

With a slightly confused headline (rain trial???) the BBC spoke to Gareth Powell, London Underground's director of strategy, who said: "Given the technology now available it is very unlikely that London Underground will ever again buy a fleet of trains with conventional drivers' cabs. 


"Safety will always be our top priority and we have made no secret that from the 2020s new trains could operate on the Tube without the need for traditional drivers."

The document was leaked by the RMT whose leader Bob Crow said  "This is Boris Johnson's driverless and de-staffed plan for the future of the Tube and it is a lethal combination of cash-led cuts and ignorance that would leave Londoner's riding a daily death trap.  The proposals seek to rip up every safety rule in the book - having the trains run by remote control from signal boxes."
Unsurprisingly it wasn't long before he threatened strike action "RMT is demanding cast-iron assurances that this whole poisonous cocktail of proposals has been dumped for good and we will have no hesitation in taking the action required to stop this."

A number of Conservatives have been lobbying for driverless trains for some time and Tory Transport spokesman Richard Tracey called Bob Crow's comments an "alarmist rant", saying: "Driverless trains are a fact in 25 cities around the world and are perfectly safe

LU's Gareth Powell stressed that consultation with staff would always take place before driverless trains were introduced: "We will always consult with staff on any changes and, because of the timescales needed to develop and introduce new trains and to phase out older fleets, we will continue to need drivers well beyond the point when driverless operation could come into effect."

By the way, in case I've misunderstood the BBC's headline and they did mean "rain" -  if Tube drivers can do anything to put a halt to the rain I'd welcome these trials.

Related posts
Tube Driver saves fallen Child as Arguments for Driverless Trains continue
Tube MD hits back at Driverless Train Job Loss Figures
RMT in a stew over Driverless Tube Trains by 2021



; Posted by Unknown Thursday, July 19, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/07/tfl-deny-driverless-tube-trials.html

Monday, July 16, 2012

Tube Orchestra Challenge

Shaun Buswell has set himself a challenge.  He wants to form  an entire orchestra (30-100 people) made up of strangers that he's met for the first time on the London Underground. If this isn't hard enough, the musicians he invites to form the orchestra must be carrying their instrument (or part of it) when he meets them for the first time.  So if you're a musican on the Tube and Shaun comes across you he "has" to speak to you.

Jubilee Line Opening May 1979
String Quartet at the Jubilee Line Opening

The idea is that the orchestra will then perform at a London venue by 12th December 2012. Shaun must not know the musicians personally nor have met or communicated with them directly in person before (i.e they must be complete strangers to him).  I'm not sure where Shaun travels, but since he set the challenge last month he's  averaging at 2 musicians a day and it's building up momentum more and more with each passing month.

Shaun said on his
blog "What I'm not 100% about yet is

- who will conduct this orchestra

- where the show will be
- what date it will be on
- who will come and watch it

I am speaking to conductors at the moment, but nothing finalised, and we have a venue pencilled in for 12th December and I'm pretty certain it's the one I want to use. But others are still in the running and people offering alternative options. I can't tell you where we have pencilled in until we sign everything, but here's some facts (I like facts!):


1) It's a great Victorian theatre in central London, that still has all of its art deco features

2) Charlie Chaplin once played there
3) It closed as a theatre for many years, and was also a cinema for a long while.
4) It's 3 times as big as some of the venues I looked at!
5) It's lovely and I really like the people who run it. Very decent folk!
"

To find out more about Shaun's challenge, you can visit The Underground Challennge or follow him on Twitter @121212challenge or visit his Facebook Page.

I wish Shaun the best of luck & I'll be keeping an eye on his Twitter page to see how things develop.

You might also like:
What's going to happen to Tube Buskers?
Cally Road Tube Artist Inspires Song
Katherine Jenkins Busking on the Tube
Play Johnny Cash for Me - Tube buskers get more commercial  
Rihanna on the Tube 
 


; Posted by Unknown Monday, July 16, 2012 Permalink COMMENT HERE
http://london-underground.blogspot.com/2012/07/tube-orchestra-challenge.html
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