Hi John,rjhowie, Paul and everybody
Sorry to be a bit pedantic, but London Underground is part of Transport for London which is one of the subsidiary bodies of the Greater London Authority, the strategic level local authority for the whole of Greater London for which the executive is the Mayor of London (yes, Boris!)
Paul
I humbly stand corrected their Paul in stating in my earlier posting the words Council and Corporation. Actually, I felt that the statements were not correct but could not remember what the names of the London authority bodies where. It’s probably just that at the age of 69 and still working you find that the brain begins to crumble. I must retire before I turn into an old dithering, blithering idiot. Although, I think there are many who already believe I am that now.
~snip~ I can't think of any reasons why the UK takes more rail trips.
~snip~ Cheerio John
John, there is a simple reason why the British are turning to rail for their transport, that being punctuality and productivity. We are a nation of over 60 million people which may not sound that many to the larger geographic nations of the world. However, those 60 million people are somewhat crowded onto these comparatively small islands, which makes much of Britain rank among the most densely populated places in the world.
The foregoing therefore has turned Britain’s road network (especially its motorways) into a proverbial nightmare to travel on through congestion. If you take one of my regular journeys as an example, I often have to travel to London which is approximately 135 miles from my home town in Somerset. If I decide to travel by car, I would have to leave home at the latest by 5:30am in the morning for a 10am appointment, and with a good run get as far as Reading by 7am. With about 40 miles to go you would think there would be no problem.
NOT SO, even at that time in the morning congestion makes it a stop-go journey all the way to the junction with the M25, then clockwise around that and onto the M40/A40 all in the rush-hour as I would normally park at Perivale Underground station. There is extremely limited parking in central London and it can be up to £50 for all day parking, plus a congestion charge. So, Perivale is the best option or stations like it for me and hundreds of thousands of others daily unless you are a millionaire. You can then join the London Underground system which is often the quickest part of the journey, but by then it can be in the “lap of the gods” whether you will be on time for your 10 AM appointment/meeting.
Doing the same journey by rail, I can catch the 6:40am HST from my local station which gets me into London Paddington at 8:45am. From the platform it’s down the escalator and into the London Underground system. Then district line to Notting Hill gate, then Central Line to the Heart of central London which is where I normally need to attend, and usually guaranteeing my arrival by approximately 9:15am.
Commuting by road into the centre of any large British town or city is fraught with the same identical problems as the above in my experience. People can also work while travelling by rail and with most HST services now having Wi-Fi on-board business commuters can transfer documents to and from their office base. In my own above case travelling by rail can produce up to five hours of productive work as against over nine hours of un-productive downtime when travelling by road as you cannot do anything while driving with the exception of getting very frustrated, late, tired and fed up.
Hope this clarifies to our American, Canadian and Australian Trainzing colleagues why the British and European populations are so rapidly turning once again to rail travel as the premier source of transport for commuting and longer distance travel.
Bill