Seen Around

Saturday 31st January 2026

We’re at the end of January already. That means it’s time for another round up of unblogged curiosities observed on recent wanderings.

Bigging it up in Biggleswade

It had been a while since I’d passed through Biggleswade so when sampling new route X75 to Cambridge I was impressed to see the town’s new £2.3 million ‘Transport Interchange’, which opened in 2023, was in fine form including its five bus stops…

… each with a smart shelter complete with individual electronic real time departure sign, poster case and bright green bench style seat.

There’s also a large electronic departure sign as you exit from the adjacent railway station.

It’s all rather lovely, but you might be thinking it looks a little on the large size for a town the size of Biggleswade. And when you count up the number of bus departures at 27 across a 12 hour day (ie just a tad over two per hour) you realise that perhaps Central Bedfordshire Council may have gone somewhat over the top.

In fact the two journeys per hour both leave from the same stop rendering the other four smart new stops and shelters completely redundant. Shades of a Barry Docks Transport Interchange fiasco.

Meanwhile over in the station itself a new accessible footbridge was completed at the end of last year together with lifts to both platforms. It involves quite a trek from the ticket office…

… but is obviously a great improvement for those with accessibility needs than the fold footbridge, which is also still in use for those who want to minimise the walk but can still do stairs.

Inside the ticket office itself, there’s a rather nice old style window to buy tickets as well as a bookcase and three seats.

Sneak preview of Transport for Wales new livery

Members of the Omnibus Society who tuned into a recent online meeting of the South West and Wales branch were treated to an interesting update of developments from Transport for Wales and Powys County Council staff including a preview of a new TfW national livery which is now being applied to buses being refurbished as well as expected new deliveries in the coming months. These also gave the Powys logo and presumably in other parts of Wales others will have the local authority name that’s working with TfW

Powys has also launched a much improved website with a new “interactive map”, shown above. It’s to an “interesting” design which takes some getting used to, especially trying to following the coloured lines, but the good thing is all the route numbers have hyperlinks to the timetables. A great improvement on the paucity of information previously available.

Eastbourne’s bus network on display

I’ve previously highlighted East Sussex County Council’s good practice of displaying bus maps in large on street advert style cases at bus shelters and was impressed to see this multi coloured network map in Eastbourne on a recent visit. How great it would be if this kind of information provision became standard all over the country.

Hastings too

When I arrived at Hastings after my ride on the 99 I was pleased to see Southeastern proudly and prominently displaying a large network map and, even better…

… some lovely period photos from the past…

… of the station…

… and a rather nice replica lozenge style Southern station name logo.

DO NOT USE this map

That’s what I thought when I first saw this display at West Croydon bus station – ie TfL had realised its spider map was out of date so wanted to warn passengers not to use it. But then I noticed the next poster case was similarly treated…

… so it must be something to do with the glass in both being smashed, rather than the out of date info!

STP ticket buying woes

I’ve commented before about the crazy situation at St Pancras where there used to be two ticket offices side by side – one run by Thameslink and one by East Midlands Railway. Then the latter was changed into a Gail’s leaving just Thameslink which often has just one window open resulting in a tedious queue for passengers to endure. Meanwhile on the upper level by platforms 1-4, East Midlands Railway has its own desk where you can buy tickets but I reckon very few passengers realise that (despite a notice) and instead queue up on the ground floor.

Newcastle’s ticket office back where it belongs

Meanwhile up in Newcastle I was delighted to see LNER has reinstated its ticket office in a sensible location – ie just by the entrance to the station concourse, where passengers enter and expect to find it. Quite why it was banished to the far end of the concourse baffles me. That erstwhile location has now become a “Station management centre”.

It’s a pity the Gents toilets are still located in this far away location.

Don’t look in here

I was puzzled to find the end Coach M on an Azuma five coach train opposite the accessible toilet had been given the frosted screen treatment on a recent trip. Normally that’s only used on the doors marking the dividing point between First and Standard Class on Coach K/D on five coach trains.

Could this be the new official GBR uniform hat……?

…. probably not, as the yellow is too prominent, but the passenger was definitely on ‘brand’.

Keep apart

Hopefully Slough Borough Council will get round to taking down the Covid-19 posters at its bus shelters one day soon.

Go has gone in Sevenoaks

Go-bus does a good job in making the bus station in Sevenoaks branded in its colours, but it could do with a new ‘g’.

Thameslink graffiti update

Sad to report the out-of-control graffiti in Thameslink train toilets is now spreading not only to the exterior of its trains (above) but also to Southern trains too (below), which until now have escaped this disgraceful vandalism inflicted by criminal low lifes.

I feel sorry for the hard working cleaning staff at Three Bridges who are definitely doing their best to clean up the toilets as I’ve noticed a few trains in a graffiti free state, but sadly it doesn’t take long for the vandals to return and inflict more damage.

BTP, I’ve seen it, I’ve said it, now please sort it.

BREAKING NEWS…. after typing the foregoing earlier this week, I was on a Thameslink train the other day and BINGO – they’re obviously trying what looks like it might be a new grafitti resistant surface for the toilet walls…

… and doors.

I do hope it works and can be rolled out across the fleet as soon as possible.

Worst bus shelter of the month

This month’s award for the worst bus shelter I’ve come across in recent travels goes to this specimen at the popular stop outside Sainsbury’s on the eastern edge of Chichester.

West Sussex County Council has used £3,3 million of BSIP funds to install over 400 real time signs across its patch, but sadly not at this stop…

… nor is there any sign of any investment in a decent place to wait. With broken panels…

…in-growing foliage…

… and an inability to see what bus is coming while waiting inside due to the disgraceful condition. I understand Sainsbury’s is responsible for this bus shelter. It’s about time it did something about it. Can you imagine the supermarket tolerating this kind of presentation actually inside its store?

Halesworth roosting

I quite often see bright yellow markings on platforms extolling passengers “Do Not Stand Here” for some safety reason or another, which is often not explained, but passing through Halesworth station on the East Suffolk line this week I noticed a clear explanation of the reason not to stand there…

… but not markings on the actual surface – so be sure to always read the notices.

Luton needs a revamp

Passing through Luton railway station the other day made me realise what a sorry state it’s in. The ticket office and ticket machine area is very cramped…

… it’s a very small gateline for the size of station…

… and the retail unit has given up, the situation is so dire.

Down on the Thameslink platforms another retail unit closed…

… with no sign of the “essential maintenance” being carried out.

Stairs down to, and up from, the platforms look very uninviting…

… as does the one covered in waiting area with a bench style “seat” on the platform.

The only bright spot was the footbridge with its colourful artwork.

And good to know “Carlisle Support Services proudly supporting love Luton”.

I wonder if ‘Luton Support Services’ supports Carlisle?

Gatwick lines up information

Back at Gatwick Airport station (or is it just “Gatwick Station” – see above) there’s a nice clear brightly lit line diagram showing the various options for arriving passengers to travel onwards by train either to London or Reading or south to Brighton, Hove or Lewes and the south coast. I just wonder why the names of the rail companies have been left off. It would have been helpful to let passengers know which is the Gatwick Express as being the one to avoid by being the most expensive, and the least frequent.

Arnos Grove’s heritage

Another nice footbridge display can be found at Arnos Grove Underground station outlining its proud heritage.

Down at platform level, it’s one of the few stations on the Underground network with a “middle” track which can be accessed from either the northbound platforms 1 and 2 (photographed below)…

…or the southbound platforms 3 and 4. However I’m wrong to give them that directional description as I assumed the next southbound train would leave from 3 and 4 but when I arrived down there the departure sign was showing a departure to Rayners Lane in one minute from platform 1 so I hot footed it back up the stairs, over the footbridge and back down to platforms 1 and 2 and just caught an empty train which all the other passengers waiting on 3 and 4 had missed. I wonder if that was a rarity. I’ve never known that before, but am obviously not a frequent Arnos Grover.

And finally – GWR’s awful customer service continues

An update for those following my regular problems getting GWR to respond to Delay Repay claims in a straight forward manner……(skip to the end now, if you’re in a hurry) ….. readers may recall my unsuccessful claim for a 30+ minute delay on my journey to Castle Cary on 20 November and subsequent appeal and discussion with Customer Relations got nowhere leading me to send an email dated 18 December which met with an automatic response I could expect to hear back “as soon as we can … but it may be up to 4 weeks before you receive a full response from us”. Suffice to say four weeks passed and no response so I followed up with a further email on 18 January which elicited a response on 20 January from Jennifer Brindley, an “Executive Correspondence Manager”. Jennifer explained “I am currently reviewing your claim with our auditing team, who originally processed it, to understand why it was not handled as expected. While I do not yet have a full response to share, please be assured that I am actively looking into this and will contact you again as soon as I have further information.”

Two days later comes an email from GWR Delay Repay with a new reference number thanking me for my “delay repay claim which we received on Wed, 21 Jan 2026. We are sorry that you experienced a delay to your journey…..we have confirmed that the delay you experienced was between 30 – 59 minutes and that you are entitled to £15.62 in compensation.”

Not having heard any more from Jennifer I sent another email to her on Tuesday asking for an explanation of why my original claim was turned down and asked for a response by yesterday so I could include it in this blog update. Thankfully a response came at 12:19 yesterday as follows…

“Thank you for your email regarding your Delay Repay claim. Your claim has been approved following the review I completed, I am sorry I wasn’t able to let you know this before you received the confirmation.  We carry out audits on Delay Repay claims to ensure they are legitimate. While I appreciate that your claim was genuine, we do unfortunately receive fraudulent claims, and auditing remains an important measure in protecting revenue. As part of the auditing process any claims which appear to have inaccuracies are queried. 

“Your original claim, submitted under reference GWR XXX, was submitted with the following journey details: Leg 1 – 08:50 Hassocks to Farringdon arriving at 09:56; Leg 2 – 10:00 Farringdon to London Paddington; Leg 3 – 10:36 London Paddington to Castle Cary. The time required to connect at Farringdon for this journey is a minimum of 8 minutes and this journey does not allow that amount of time, this is why your claim was queried. 

“You appealed and this was received on 3 December, under reference GWR XXX, however no new information was provided in your appeal. Without this the appeal could not be considered. You were therefore asked to contact our Customer Support Team to discuss your claim. I am sorry that the Customer Support Team were unable to directly help you when you called on 9 December. As the Delay Repay team operates separately from our department, it was necessary to contact them regarding your case. Nevertheless, I’m sorry you were kept waiting while that call was made.

“Following the call, our Advisor should have logged the details of your conversation on our systems, your claim would have progressed at this point. Unfortunately the call was not logged, and I am sorry for the unnecessary delay this caused in processing your claim. We will be arranging appropriate coaching for the Advisor concerned to ensure this does not happen again.

“Your email of 18 December was escalated to me for review, as part of a smaller team it can take longer for us to respond. A reply was sent to you on 20 January, I am sorry that you were not contacted sooner and that I was unable to provide you with a full response at that time. As mentioned in my email, I was in the process of reviewing your claim and once that was complete a further response would be sent to you.  Thank you for taking the time to escalate this matter. If I can be of any assistance with your future claims please don’t hesitate to get in touch.” 

I have thanked Jennifer and also asked her to clarify why the National Rail Journey Planner (and the GWR Delay Repay default submission) shows the journey I made listed as per the three legs as above if it’s not valid for a Delay Repay claim if eight minutes isn’t allowed for a change of train at Farringdon and it’ll be interesting to see the response.

It does make me wonder whether GWR’s software has been updated to allow for journeys on the Elizabeth line. Although, I also had cause to submit a Delay Repay claim to Greater Anglia this week and noticed that company gives two options for Farringdon – either Farringdon Underground with the familiar ZFD three letter code also used by Thameslink…

… or something called Farringdon (Crossrail) with an FAC code. Nice to see a train company retaining that name for what most people have now adapted to call the Elizabeth line – a bit of an outlier.

More ramblings at the end of next month.

Roger French

Blogging timetable: 06:00 TThS

54 thoughts on “Seen Around

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  1. The weirdest misapplication of TfL advertising budget gets the Platinum Award from me. There is a video advertising “poster” which appears at two places, exhorting travellers to use “the 281 to Tolworth”  Those two places are: 1 New Malden High Street 2 Hurst Park Tesco, outside the TfL area. One is indeed lucky to get a 281 in Tolworth considering the numerous southbound curtailments at Surbiton.

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  2. Thanks Roger, I find “Seen Around” always makes good reading. And successfully extracting a response from GWR delay repay was encouraging!
    For what it’s worth, there is a typo in the first heading (“Bliggleswade”).

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  3. The BR hat is one of a range of similarly themed items sold by the Sock Council, a small independent firm from Newcastle which mainly specialises in football merchandise.

    Here is their full range of railway socks and hats:

    https://sockcouncil.com/product-tag/trains/

    Highly recommended for quality and service. Orders come with complimentary stickers.

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    1. One thought which has occurred to me – is the BR double-arrow logo a registered trademark? If so, merchandise producers would presumably need to obtain a licence to use it (hopefully this one has done so, if it is indeed needed)

      Malc M

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      1. Your initial thought is correct Malc, the logo is a registered trademark & is held by the secretary state for transport.

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  4. The accesible footbridge at Biggleswade was completed in December 2025 and only officially opened this month (16th Jan). Cheers, Rob.

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  5. The GWR journey planner is using the standard 3 minute (there are exceptions as we’ll see) Farringdon minimum connection combined with the 19 minute “fixed link” for the tube (not Lizzy Line) to Paddington at that time of day, arriving notionally 1018.

    In reality what you did was satisfy the 8 minute minimum connection time from Thameslink to Elizabeth Line and could have caught either the 1006 from Farringdon that arrives Paddington 1016, or the 1009 that arrives Paddington 1018.

    Information on minimum connection times and tube fixed links is available here FARRINGDON Departures – BR Times.

    Jan B

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    1. sounds like a race for the vloggers Farringdon thameslink to PAD P1 what is quicker crossrail or circle h and c when walking taken into account.

      JBC Prestatyn

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  6. Debut for UK’s first battery-only train confirmed

    The UK’s first battery-only powered train will enter service tomorrow, Saturday 31st January 2026.

    The Class 230 train has been undergoing trials for the past 22 months on the Greenford branch line.

    On Saturday, the battery-powered train will make its debut in passenger service when it operates the 05:30 from West Ealing to Greenford.

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    1. So the Class 230 has been operating, without passengers, as a trial for 22 months.

      Why, oh why, does a simple trial have to take SO LONG ?

      If this was the private sector, it wouldn’t ……………., Oh wait a minute, this WAS the private sector. Heaven help us when it’s all nationalised !!

      Petras409

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      1. see green signals vlog of Saturday. It is proving some quite new technology which includes safety and relaliability and I think a fairly small team . It might be six months before regular operation but there will be rollout to other branches if successful

        JBC Prestatyn

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        1. Thanks for heads up JBC. I’ve just viewed the video & fully understand why the testing took as long as it did. There have been too many times when new technology or systems have been introduced prematurely only to result in dissatisfaction all round. The train deserves to succeed not only on this branch line but hopefully, others around the country where electrification of lines cannot be financially justified.

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  7. I had forgotten the X75 to Cambridge, maybe Huntingdon Biggleswade for a marketed Blue Arrow joint Service especially if those 31 loadings continue

    JBC Prestatyn

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  8. ipswich’s ticket office has been banished from the booking hall to a building at the far ( tunnel) end of the station.

    KCC

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    1. Yes, the banishment of the Ipswich ticket office to the far end of the station annoys me as well. Presumably it was done to make way for “retail opportunities”.

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  9. There are similar posters to those at Arnos Grove at a number of Tube stations. It’s a shame that TfL seems unwilling to publicise the even longer heritage of London’s buses – nearly two centuries. There does seem to be a climate of benign neglect of the bus network at the moment.

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    1. They could put them in all the spare poster hoardings at bus stops they now have since they seem largely to have given up on spider maps.

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  10. I believe Central Beds were future proofing the ‘interchange’ because I believe there is a lot of political will to lose the bus station in the town centre and to replace them with on street stops in bays. The kind of bays that will be filled with selfishly parked cars at every opportunity.

    The station would therefore be the only place to terminate and layover.

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    1. Probably a sensible move in the long run, but most passengers will still be boarding in the town centre and doing away with the bus station is a typical retrograde step.

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    2. Doing away with bus stations does seem a retrograde step and local councils can be accused of “green washing” when stating they’d like to promote sustainable transport then remove bus stations which are a good focal point for local transport and then sell them for housing or some over use. Aldershot and now Folkestone are prime example of this misguided policy.

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      1. Not to mention Birmingham, Bournemouth, Salisbury, Southampton, Lymington, Plymouth, Stratford-on-Avon, Kettering, and arguably Swindon.

        Ian McNeil

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        1. Birmingham never had an all-services bus station as ‘a focal point for local transport’ so arguably doesn’t belong in your list.

          The Bull Ring was (originally) a one-operator station, that operator being BMMO (Midland Red). It was only when NBC sold BMMO’s Birmingham & Black Country routes to WMPTE that a second operator started using the Bull Ring, and only after the 1980 express service deregulation that other NBC operators (Alder Valley, National Welsh, United Counties) arrived with services that weren’t joint with ‘the Red’.

          I spent a lot of time at the Bull Ring bus station as a young enthusiast and loved the place, but the truth is that it was cold, damp, full of diesel fumes and utterly unwelcoming. A larger version of Aylesbury bus station, in fact, but without an indoor waiting area.

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          1. In the case of Southampton and Bournemouth the bus stations were only used for “out of town” services. The Municipal routes had alternative focal points. In the case of Southampton this was some distance from the bus station (and separate coach station) and a fair hike from the railway station as well.

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            1. Anonymous at 5.06pm yesterday referred to bus stations “which are a good focal point for local transport”. I take that as a description rather than a definition and so I think it’s fair to include Birmingham, Bournemouth and Southampton as bus stations because they were termini for bus services albeit not necessarily the most local ones.

              The comparison of the Bull Ring with Aylesbury is spot on!

              Ian McNeil

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      2. Regarding Folkestone, sadly the bus station has been in a poor condition for some time, and after an incident with a Dart SLF that went through a barrier and killed an older man a couple of years back, it was clear that the layout of the bus station nowadays no longer was safe or suitable for modern usage.

        The significant amount of Government money to allow a regeneration of parts of the town centre – long needed – is allowing amendments to road layouts and a new set of bus stops along Middleburg Square, complete with new shelters and, apparently, real time info. Broadly the road layout in Folkestone town centre until now has still been geared towards linking the port and the M20 – when the port closed thirty years ago – so these changes are very much for the better.

        All it needs now is for Stagecoach to stop cutting services at every opportunity!

        (Adam, Hythe)

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  11. My only railway experience this month was very good.

    I was able to purchase a ticket at a staffed ticket office. The three car 170 was on time, was clean and wasn’t overcrowded. My 15 minutes journey cost just £5 – cheaper than the two buses alternative which would have been £6. My only question was why the train didn’t call at Langwith Whaley Thorns?

    Richard Warwick

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    1. My only question was why the train didn’t call at Langwith Whaley Thorns?

      Apparently Langwith Whaley Thorns only has a two-hourly service nowadays, with alternate trains skipping the station; trains that stop at Langwith skip Whitwell instead. I suspect it’s a combination of the historic poor punctuality on the route and low usage at those two stations making them an easy option to skip.

      The Robin Hood line has unfortunately struggled with punctuality since one track between Hucknall and Bulwell was taken for the NET tram in 2004, giving the RHL a long single-track section between Bulwell and Kirkby-in-Ashfield.

      I hadn’t noticed until I just checked the current timetable that the entire RHL has dropped down to hourly with peak extras from the basic half-hourly (Nottingham-Mansfield W., hourly through to Worksop) it used to be before Covid, but on the old timetable Bulwell and Newstead also alternated stops.

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    1. The thing i dislike about the Powys map, it’s schematic map rather than a geographical map, i prefer geographical maps when it comes to bus maps.

      SM

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  12. The new TfW for buds kind of reminds me of the old Bws Gwynedd livery from back in the day, were buses from all depots in Gwynedd had a Red at the front with Gold/Orange sash but operators own livery, this was because Gwynedd had the old Red Rover ticket which was valid on all operators in the Gwynedd timetable books.

    SM

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    1. The Gwynedd Red Rover ticket was good value. I used it a couple of times during the early 1990s for day trips from Caernarfon to Aberystwyth and Caernarfon to Wrexham/Wrecsam (via Dolgellau), both well beyond the Gwynedd boundary but the ticket was valid throughout (unless my memory is failing me!)

      I have a feeling the red front was mandated on services which were tendered by Gwynedd bit, on commercial services, not all buses had the red front and gold sash.

      Malc M

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      1. I have a feeling the red front was mandated on services which were tendered by Gwynedd bit

        That’s right, yes.

        I too have fond memories of journeys using the Red Rover ticket, although not so fond memories of being squeezed into Crosville Wales’ “little dragon” minibuses!

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  13. Very many thanks – I always enjoy ‘Seen Around’. ‘thanks also for the reviews of maps at bus-stops etc.. It is good to see the large areas available at bus-shelters used so that passengers – and sometimes several at once – can get useful information and publicity.

    The new on-line maps from Powys are good, but they do show the thinness of the network. It made me do a quick spreadsheet listing the towns of Powys and how quickly one could get around them (I took journey-times from Google Maps). There is just one journey where public transport is quiecker than car – predictably, by train between Newtown and Welshpool, and the T6 bus is commendably speedy between Brecon and Ystradgynlais, but generally public tranport times are not going to attract many car drivers. Typically, places which you could drive to for a morning or afternoon visit become a whole day, and towns further apart may be impractical even for a whole day.

    I do like that the Powys map shows ‘regular routes’ as solid, and others as broken lines – but ‘regular’ means minimum every 2 hours! The diagramatic form conveys at first an imporession of being like the London Underground map, but I don’t supoose there are any Powys routes where you would just go to the bus stop and wait …

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  14. Definitely looks as though the journey planner hasn’t been updated for the Elizabeth line

    If you’re changing to a timetabled service then the JP logic is to allow the minimum connection time, then look for the next train. It would then do the same at Paddington.

    The underground (and other similar links) are just treated as taking a fixed time regardless of when trains are scheduled. This is why the timings are often somewhat generous as they allow for worst case scenarios.

    I’m guessing GWR customer services don’t understand that subtle but important difference!

    Surfblue

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  15. Congratulations on getting your Delay Repay claim accepted. I do wonder, though, how many people would just give up given the complexity and opaqueness (is that a word?) of the system. It seems that many customer service departments are designed largely to deter people from getting satisfaction.

    John

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  16. The contrast between Luton (Midland Road) and Luton Airport Parkway only a mile up the Midland Main Line is remarkable. Just as well I live closer to the latter.

    If memory serves Luton station was twice proposed for a complete rebuild in the last 30 years (late 1990s and shortly before the pandemic). As things stand the station building will remain in its decades-long sorry state for the foreseeable, though construction of a new accessible footbridge at the country end (platform extensions were strengthened last year) may commence this February.

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  17. I like the Eastbourne bus shelter map display which I see includes the four main operators details.

    As you suggest Roger, it would be good to see this initiative replicated around the U.K.

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  18. Unlike you Roger I am a frequent ‘Arnos Grover’. Your experience is far from rare. In fact any of the three through lines can, and are, used for turn backs often without any notification to Westbound passengers. One of a number of annoying operational quirks that are at best baffling but mostly annoying for regular and occasional users alike.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. John Cook, I’ve actually witnessed a mutiny at Arnos Grove in the chaos of every service being turned back to London with passengers putting their feet in the doors refusing a train to go until the signal was cleared at the other end to head for cockfosters

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  19. The frosted windows fitted to the doors on LNER Azuma coaches M and E now avoid those sitting in the single seats having a view of the toilet interior each time someone enters or exits – many fail to close it when leaving.

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  20. My GWR train from Bristol was recently terminated at Westbury, due to a shortage of train crew. The next available train ran to identical timings throughout, one hour later. GWR are refusing to pay a 60 minute delay repay and have awarded the lower 59 minute delay, as the second train arrived at my destination one minute early. I would presume that the cancelled train, one hour earlier, would have also arrived one minute early, confirming my 60 minute delay. I have appealed it and referred it to customer services, twice, and each time they insist that is only a 59 minute delay. I have asked them to escalate this to a staff member able to achieve a common sense resolution. GWR are just awful, as mid journey cancellations at Westbury, due to staff shortage, are a regular feature at weekends!

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    1. Unless I am mistaken, Delay Repay is based on the advertised arrival time rather than anything you might want to presume. On the face of it, based on what you have said, GWR’s position that the delay was 59 minutes would appear correct (even if it is just 1 minute short of reaching a higher level of compensation).

      Malc M

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  21. Come on Roger, 4 mins interchange at Farringdon is not really on, and can’t be relied upon. I would not take tight times like that whatever NRE system says anyway, when it is not cross platfom

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