Harringay online

Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

Is Harringay Green Lanes station on the Mayors £1.3tn London orbital railway wishlist?

Views: 1013

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Looks like it. But the real story is highly depressing:

"Predicting that London's geography would shift to the east as the population passes 11 million..."

 Talking of new transport links for Harringay, you've presumably seen this?

What's depressing about London growing, or that East London is on the up?

I immediately thought they would link it to Ally Pally, if so AllyPally would become quite a major station what with cross rail 2 ...

Doubt it - this orbital looks like an intensification of the existing tracks that go through Harringay Green Lanes. Harringay and Ally Pally are already linked via the existing north-south line with high-frequency lines. 

Perhaps Harringay & Harringay Green lanes will be joined up more, by moving Harringay Green lanes platforms a little to the west (between Wightman and Oakfield rd )

Ah right, thanks.
Because - for starters - London's already very crowded and congested; and more people leads to more demand for housing which puts more upwards pressure on house sale and rental prices and also leads to people looking more and more to build on brownfield and even green belt land...
To keep things in perspective almost 98% of land is not built on ( 5% urban but not built on) and more land is used as golf courses and for riding horses than human habitation.

We really need to make up our mind, do we want high immigration and a rich dynamic city or do we want a poorer less populated one and plan accordingly. Allowing really high London populations but hugely restrictive planning laws is a property class cruelty upon everyone else.

... And if the green belt is no go, then we need to seriously build high quickly.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-18623096

Note that the actual 2050 infrastructure proposals are on-line, on this page, including a specific transport document

The transport document includes an outline map of the rail line on page 90 (and it does look to be the GOBLIN line, maybe with a new/extended station at Harringay to link with the East Coast main line).

But - also very relevant to the area - it also talks on page 79 about an upgraded orbital ring road, between the inner ring road (where tunnels are proposed) and the North Circular, specifically:

we envisage a programme of enhancements – including flyunders and mini-tunnels – to tackle the worst of the congestion on the network...
This could include locations such as A2 Old Kent Road, 
A40 Acton, A503 Woodberry Down.

This idea was first floated a few months ago (see this post) - but it seems to be becoming more detailed and specific. 

Just noticed that the Greens are now starting to push back against the massive road building plans:

Green party politicians on the London Assembly said they would be unwilling to support the building of new roads and bridges and accused the Mayor of “pushing for the kind of road-building projects which belong back in the car-dominated 1960s.”

Assembly Member Darren Johnson said: “The Mayor is completely deluded if he thinks he will be able to create consensus around the hugely polluting, disruptive and expensive road-building schemes he is proposing.”

More roads breeds more cars, more trains breed more book reading.

Indeed.... on the trains side, someone has created a possible map for the new overground route: http://www.citymetric.com/politics/what-would-londons-new-orbital-r...

However, if you wanted an actual interchange with North/South trains (including Thameslink post-2018) then you would want a new 'Harringay' station where the overground crosses the East Coast line. Otherwise there would be a long walk from Harringay Green Lanes...

Last week I had to travel from Harringay Green Lanes to Finchley Road and Frognal for work on two mornings and it was completely jam packed. Even before the predicted population growth the need for improved east/west travel is already with us.

RSS

Advertising

© 2024   Created by Hugh.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service