Ad blocker detected: Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker on our website.
I drove past here on Tuesday and Wednesday afternoon. On one of those days i saw someone wearing a cap standing on the walkway taking pictures. I thought, that is probably someone from S-A.
And here we are. Nice pics Scooter
ADELAIDE SINGAPORE LONDON BERLIN AMSTERDAM PARIS TOKYO AUCKLAND DOHA DUBLIN HONG KONG BANGKOK REYKJAVIK ROME MADRID BUDAPEST COPENHAGEN ZURICH BRUSSELS VIENNA PRAGUE STOCKHOLM LUXEMBOURG BRATISLAVA NASSAU DUBAI BAHRAIN KUALA LUMPUR HELSINKI GENEVA
I never realized there was a walkway underneath the intersection!
And therin lies part of the problem with out train system. In other states there are well signposted directions to trains/stations etc. Here we almost try to hide how to get to a station...around a corner or 2, through a hedge, behind a fence, and you might stumble across it... Out of sight out of mind as they say.
This "industrial-mesh-outer prison fence" look seems very popular with the DPTI for all the new/rebuilt railway stations. I suppose this is the reality of building open air train stations in suburban Adelaide. It is just a pity that we can't have something more "aesthetic" (which of course would also have to be "vandal resistant" or easily cleaned/repainted)
As with most of these new train/tram stations, they dont seem to get that Adelaide in winter can be very windy and cold. There does not seem to be enough protection from wind/driving rain.
claybro wrote:As with most of these new train/tram stations, they dont seem to get that Adelaide in winter can be very windy and cold. There does not seem to be enough protection from wind/driving rain.
I noticed a number of wind shield panels along the platforms and the entire length is roofed. Short of fully enclosing it, there's not much more that they can do. By way of comparison, the main tram/train interchange in the area I lived in Stockholm had a fairly similar level of shelter in a place with obviously far worse winters. So my advice would be to dress warmer or suck it up.
Easter 2013 - the Emerson Crossing is closed to allow the installation of new rails. Here are a couple of pictures taken at 9pm on Friday night.
On the up (left-hand) track, a group of workers are putting in place some robust reinforcing where the line crosses an underground pipe.
Bill.
[Shuz] wrote:Emerson really should have been grade seperated.
The main traffic flow is already grade separated. Is the flow capacity on Cross Road at Emerson really worse than at Cumberland Park where Goodwood Road traffic dominates the cycle time?
Of all the grade separations that Adelaide would benefit from, I wouldn't rank it in the top twenty. In fact considering what needs to be done on South Road, make that the top forty... or probably top fifty.
Admittedly I wouldn't rank Goodwood Junction in the top fifty either. The disruption it causes greatly outweighs the benefits, and the same would be true of grade separating Cross Road.
Just build it wrote:Bye Union Hall. I'll see you in another life, when we are both cats.