Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
What To Do With Hs2
Cancel it all now and cut our losses? Carry on to Birmingham only? Carry on to Manchester? Whatever we do its been a disgusting waste of money on a huge white elephant. Should have been cancelled years ago and the money spent on the northern railway system.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by dave50. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I just don't get this HS2 twaddle !!
You can currently get from Manchester Piccadilly to London Euston in just over 2 hours. How much time is this HS2 going to cut off this .... half an hour, maybe a bit more??
Is it worth the billions just to cut off a bit of time?? I think not .....
I'm sure the money could be better spent elsewhere on the rail network.
sadly this project has been infected by idiots saying it's all about the speed of getting from a to b it's not anything to do with that. It's about taking traffic off the existing facilities that were built over 100 years ago that take freight and passengers. The idea is to create a new passenger route to leave the old route for freight. The cost is less than one year of the NHS get on with it and do a proper job. It's cheap as chips compared to our annual WSS budget. Big spend yes but an investment in infrastructure to lastr a century and for much less than one year of WSS. Do try and learn what things are really about people.
// Is it worth the billions just to cut off a bit of time?? //
that's not what has been driving the HS2 project.
taking as a first step, the problem to be solved: capacity on the 3 major north-south railways from London is completely full; congestion is a daily issue, and any incident on them creates chaos that last for hours, or in some cases, days. (the "journey from hell" reported in MSM this week reulted from a 3 hour afternoon line closure for a track defect, delays and cancellations from the resultant congestion were still occurring lunchtime the following day). the traffic fall-off from Covid has largely recovered, especially in the leisure market. plus covid restrictions meant commuters could move and live further from their offices. now that attendance at offices is again gaining ground, there's more demand on longer distance trains when people do need to go into work.
so more capacity is needed. the last time capacity was required, the West Coast Main Line was upgraded. the upgrade took more than 10 years and at the end of that time the project still wasn't finished, but the money had all run out. nevertheless the upgrade that was completed was meant to future proof the route until 2028; in the event however, all of the extra capacity was used up by 2017. a further upgrade would probably take decades and because it would be work on an existing railway, the disruption would be extensive, with many journeys made by Bertie the replacement bus, and no possibility of moving freight from road to rail during that time.
Building new is far less disruptive, and if you're going to do that, you might as well build it the best you can. so build for the fastest trains available. it's the speed that everyone focuses on, but that's only a by-product of the need to solve the capcity problem. moving the fast trains to their own dedicated railway provides that much needed capacity for local, commuter and freight trains, and for future growth, which must come as the country pushes toward net zero.