Whoopsadaisy!
Yesterday’s blog [fbb Has Tried But Is He Right? (2)] was published in the afternoon due to gross incompetence on fbb’s part. For some weird and unfathomable reason the old man failed to press the “go” button before beddybyes on Wednesday.
The blog is reprinted below, after today’s offering.
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It Might Have Been Called Townshend!
Ironically, Syd never set foot in Australia, his underlings having planted the flag near where distinctive bit of ironwork, illustrated above upper left, stands guardian over the famous harbour.
Sydney has a significant suburban rail network, too extensive a map to fit on a legible blog page, so an extract will have to suffice. So here is a map of the central area.
… including a dreaded “Westfield”. The orange T is for T rains and the blue B is for B uses with a bus station as part of the complex.
All is tastefully hidden away from public gaze but well signposted from the street.
The bus station has 17 stands, A to Q. Of the total, the final five are for arrival only. But it is big and busy. The “Junction” was planned to be a junction but then the scheme was cut back and the station opened in 1979 as a terminus.
… although the stops have a flavour of proper stations.
Again the L network map is a bit too big to squeeze in a blog post, so an extract is shown below.
The L1 zooms off westbound to a terminus at Dulwich Hill. Typically the L1 runs every ten minutes …
… made connection with a suburban line …
… via a quaint, and probably old, wooden station. Now, via a posh new footbridge and lifts …
… you can join Sydney’s very new M etro.
Only one line of a proposed more extensive network is open. The history of this one line is convoluted and mired in politics; with cancellations, reinstatements and more cancellations.
The first section opened in 2018 from Tallawong (what a glorious Oz name and a stuning station!) …
The line is fully automatic with platform doors, of course.
Ticket “gates” …
… and machines are standard.
The ambiance is very similar to London Overground with inward facing seats and oodles of standing room.
Frequency is every 4 mins at peak; every 10 mins off peak and Saturday daytime, evey 15 min evenings and Sundays. And, unlike most Metro systems worldwide, you can get a full PDF timetable.
Well done New South Wales Transport Authority!
It runs from the previous terminus at Chatswood, then under Sydney Harbour and on to Bankstown. Notice Canterbury and Dulwich Hill, even a station called Sydenham.
There is also a stop called Waterloo.
So here’s a thing.
Much of the route is on reconstituted rail line with newer underground sections. (See below)
Hmmm?
Back to the recent extension to Bankstown.
And How Much?
The Other Shiregreen Half?
As a minor aside, from September 1st, passengers from Bellhouse Road, used to flagging down a 76 to City will now need to understand that their bus is now a 75. Probably they will never notice.
So what has happened to the 76 (clockwise)?
Although the 76 is unchanged south of the city centre it has vanished from Shiregreen.
Here is the PTE’s explanation
Services 47, 48
From 01 September these services will be introduced, providing journeys between Shiregreen, Sheffield and Herdings in a circular loop.
Journeys operate every day of the week, and up to every 10 minutes (combined) on Monday to Saturday daytimes. These services partially replace services 75 and 76 in Shiregreen and services 1a and 11 in Gleadless Valley.
Here is the First’s explanation/
Services 47 and 48
These new services will operate from Shiregreen, serving Gregg House Rd, Hartley Brook Rd and Sicey Ave – via Firth Park, Firth Park Rd, Firvale, Burngreave, City Centre East Bank Rd, Newfield Green, Hemsworth and Herdings.
There is more obvious detail for routes to the south of the city.
At First glance, however, that looks like the western leg of the Shitegrenn circle, some of it unserved by the re-jigged 75.
Sensibly, fbb will quietly ignore the routes south of the city centre for his sanity and that of his readers. He will return to this change when he has recovered from the work on today’s and yesterday’s offering.
Does the timetable help? Not really!
First’s timetable is not much better. It has too much white space and therefore is more difficult to read, but …
But he did turn, hesitantly to the PTEs route and/or stop list, a weird mixture of both – that is not a complete list of either!
Likewise the new 47 uses Firth Park Road …
… rather than the old Shiregreen route via the Northern General Hospital.
Confusing, innit?
But, again according to the PTE, the 48 serves exactly the same roads in Shiregreen as the 47.
Cleverly (?) fbb has recreated the route in Shiregreen for his readers who have not yet lost the will to live.
This means that the original circular Shiregreen loop of fond memory and long long history no longer operates. There is no loop round the whole estate.
That will bring cheer and rejoicing to residents (NOT) who will have lost the opportunity of going “the long way round” (on the traditional loop) when the frequency is low, or, indeed, by just getting on the first bus that comes if it is raining or the shopping is burdensome.
This route is confirmed by the First Bus late-arrival map.
So fbb did get it right.
In the past, if course, the original 47 and 48 ran alternate ways round the estate “loop” and there will be many, many residents who will assume that the same will be happening from 1st September. First Bus even introduced its early reporting of the plans at “consultation” (snigger snigger) as “returning to the popular 47 and 48 routes of old” which it isn’t!
What Has Happened to the 76?
And this is exactly what fbb was expecting. But is it and does it?
Keen readers can pick out the 95/95a on the two maps quoted above and you would expect the new 76 and 76a will follow the same route via Rock Street and Hucklow Road just like the new 75 and 75a.
Oh no they don’t!
Instead of forking right on Hucklow Road like this outbound Stagecoach service 1 …
Next our errant 76s hangs a right …
There is no explanation on the PTE non-leaflet …
… but, helpfully (?), it does materialise on the route description list. Or is it a list of some stops in an arbitrary order?