Re: Transport for Wales passenger numbers soar as cancellations decline. Posted by grahame at 12:32, 17th October 2024 |
As does better timekeeping, which probably points to how Westbury's platform 4 would pay for itself. The 1980s hamstrung a double track railway with single track section through a station and for obvious reasons there can't be many other examples where that's been done anywhere else in the UK.
Mark
Mark
Malton springs to mind ... and there IS some logic in doing it to save on the cost of a footbridge with slopes, lift and second platform.
Re: Transport for Wales passenger numbers soar as cancellations decline. Posted by Mark A at 11:58, 17th October 2024 |
As does better timekeeping, which probably points to how Westbury's platform 4 would pay for itself. The 1980s hamstrung a double track railway with single track section through a station and for obvious reasons there can't be many other examples where that's been done anywhere else in the UK.
Mark
Re: Transport for Wales passenger numbers soar as cancellations decline. Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 11:51, 17th October 2024 |
Wow! So newer trains and fewer cancellations does actually attract more rail passengers! Who'd have thought it?
Transport for Wales passenger numbers soar as cancellations decline. Posted by johnneyw at 11:28, 17th October 2024 |
Wales online reports a significant quarterly rise in passenger figures which is being attributed, in part at least, to new trains, fewer cancellations and events at the Principality Stadium.
Article link below:
https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/transport-wales-passengers-soar-cancellations-30160880