Metra Electric Rider
Engineer
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2016
- Messages
- 2,230
So, as promised a while back, here's a brief synopsis of my London trip a few weeks back....
The Metra & CTA ride out to O'Hare was as expected, Metra, clean and pleasant, CTA, filthy and blech (cigarette butts, stale cigarette smoke scented seats, etc). I travelled with one friend and met our other travelling partner at the gate (also arrived by CTA, from other side of town).
Our flight out on a Friday was full of packer backers and jam packed. But otherwise fine Dreamliner flight - very smooth and comfortable plane, quieter than my last transatlantic flight from the before times.
Heathrow is truly a delight and most delightful airport (sarcasm meter's should be screaming) - O'Hare is generally nicer, hard as that is to imagine, at least compared to some of the terminals at Heathrow.
So we made our way to the mainline/TfL station (I can't remember if the tunnel also served the Piccadilly line or not - definitely Heathrow Express and Purple Trains). Station was clean and my gifted Oyster card easy to load. Then down down down the escalators to the platforms. A mainline train came through first followed by our train...
Heathrow Express - too lazy to photograph our train (and trying to get phone connected to local networks).
Boarded the Elizabeth Line to Paddington - immediately impressed with the smoothness and quiet of the ride - really impressive, nearly silent, fast acceleration, quiet and insanely smooth ride. Paddington transfer was rather a bother, one had to leave the fare control area and walk to the other side of the station and go outside and back through faregates. However, Paddington is a proper station with Victorian train sheds.
Doc Beeching was right; the future is automobiles - nobody takes the train in Britain anymore...
Off we went and then down we went into the bowels of the new station for the rest of our ride to Farringdon/Clerkenwell to our flat. The Paddington Elizabeth Line station is impressive - and being new, still has that new building smell (Low VOC of course...).
View down into Paddington Elizabeth line from escalators.
Once we settled in we took the tube back into the central part of the city and wandered around Regents Park, marveling at how a 150 year old mass transit system can be so clean - in comparison to Chicago anyway.
I won't bore you with the rest of the trip, but we did take the tube several times and even a Routemaster. One of my friends visited family and took a Thameslink train up to Cambridge - was pleasantly surprised at how easy it was.
I'll stick to transit related topics here other than a few tidbits. Shopping was great - the weak pound - thanks Liz - made shopping feel like USA prices and it was nice to be in stores that were well stocked and had merchandise that appealed to buy - the English are far better at retail presentation and the shopping experience is generally better from mid-market stores on up. And a lot of clothes, especially good menswear is better quality and more available than here. London is also jam packed - forgot how cities feel when not riddled with crime and filth - looking at you Chicago. Mostly good food - best was hip east London pub lunch and runner up was seafood on Marylebone High Street. Only did a couple museums - Tate Modern, Mail Rail (see more below) and the Museum of the Home. Another unique experience was attempting to buy tea at what we thought was a specialist tea shop - only to find out it was their HQ and they don't sell via retail outlets. However, we were invited in for tea and learned about the company and that there are in fact tea plantations in England and the USA.
Anywho, back to transit. My friends got dragged to a canal - to twist Colin from Foxes Afloat's expression - BOATS! Not quite the narrowboats they lived on, but there were some, and some widebeams, along with posh houseboats, along the Regents Canal.
Sharp bend in the canal at the bridge between Regents Park and Primrose Hill (more or less) - narrowboats swing on their axis to turn. And that is a Chinese restaurant in the background.
I also dragged my friends on Mail Rail - totally unique experience - although vaguely reminiscent of the Coal Mine at MSI (Museum of Science and Industry, but actually the real thing). Short ride in converted mail rail vehicles - lot of fun and not too long. Mail Rail was the Post Office subway - yes, really - built to reduce delivery times across central London. The system is still extent and is fairly large, but the ride was about half and hour - about the right length, but my friends enjoyed it to my surprise.
Boarding platform at Mail Rail
Not a great shot - but it does give a flavor of the ride.
View from front window of Routemaster (Red London double-decker bus) - they're on the wrong side of the street!!!
And now, some random transit shots!
Farringdon - our 'home' station - the other was Chancery Lane - just a deep level tube - this is quirkier.
View into Liverpool St Mainline platforms from above.
Early morning back to Heathrow via Purple Line - note the special moquette in purple. I got myself socks in one of the patterns at the TfL museum shop.
I'll add a few more photos from the Elizabeth Line stations in part II, probably tomorrow. We really didn't use transit much - I walked from Farringdon to Regents Park and back via Mayfair and Soho one day. Most of the time it was short sleeve weather in the sun with no rain.
The Metra & CTA ride out to O'Hare was as expected, Metra, clean and pleasant, CTA, filthy and blech (cigarette butts, stale cigarette smoke scented seats, etc). I travelled with one friend and met our other travelling partner at the gate (also arrived by CTA, from other side of town).
Our flight out on a Friday was full of packer backers and jam packed. But otherwise fine Dreamliner flight - very smooth and comfortable plane, quieter than my last transatlantic flight from the before times.
Heathrow is truly a delight and most delightful airport (sarcasm meter's should be screaming) - O'Hare is generally nicer, hard as that is to imagine, at least compared to some of the terminals at Heathrow.
So we made our way to the mainline/TfL station (I can't remember if the tunnel also served the Piccadilly line or not - definitely Heathrow Express and Purple Trains). Station was clean and my gifted Oyster card easy to load. Then down down down the escalators to the platforms. A mainline train came through first followed by our train...
Heathrow Express - too lazy to photograph our train (and trying to get phone connected to local networks).
Boarded the Elizabeth Line to Paddington - immediately impressed with the smoothness and quiet of the ride - really impressive, nearly silent, fast acceleration, quiet and insanely smooth ride. Paddington transfer was rather a bother, one had to leave the fare control area and walk to the other side of the station and go outside and back through faregates. However, Paddington is a proper station with Victorian train sheds.
Doc Beeching was right; the future is automobiles - nobody takes the train in Britain anymore...
Off we went and then down we went into the bowels of the new station for the rest of our ride to Farringdon/Clerkenwell to our flat. The Paddington Elizabeth Line station is impressive - and being new, still has that new building smell (Low VOC of course...).
View down into Paddington Elizabeth line from escalators.
Once we settled in we took the tube back into the central part of the city and wandered around Regents Park, marveling at how a 150 year old mass transit system can be so clean - in comparison to Chicago anyway.
I won't bore you with the rest of the trip, but we did take the tube several times and even a Routemaster. One of my friends visited family and took a Thameslink train up to Cambridge - was pleasantly surprised at how easy it was.
I'll stick to transit related topics here other than a few tidbits. Shopping was great - the weak pound - thanks Liz - made shopping feel like USA prices and it was nice to be in stores that were well stocked and had merchandise that appealed to buy - the English are far better at retail presentation and the shopping experience is generally better from mid-market stores on up. And a lot of clothes, especially good menswear is better quality and more available than here. London is also jam packed - forgot how cities feel when not riddled with crime and filth - looking at you Chicago. Mostly good food - best was hip east London pub lunch and runner up was seafood on Marylebone High Street. Only did a couple museums - Tate Modern, Mail Rail (see more below) and the Museum of the Home. Another unique experience was attempting to buy tea at what we thought was a specialist tea shop - only to find out it was their HQ and they don't sell via retail outlets. However, we were invited in for tea and learned about the company and that there are in fact tea plantations in England and the USA.
Anywho, back to transit. My friends got dragged to a canal - to twist Colin from Foxes Afloat's expression - BOATS! Not quite the narrowboats they lived on, but there were some, and some widebeams, along with posh houseboats, along the Regents Canal.
Sharp bend in the canal at the bridge between Regents Park and Primrose Hill (more or less) - narrowboats swing on their axis to turn. And that is a Chinese restaurant in the background.
I also dragged my friends on Mail Rail - totally unique experience - although vaguely reminiscent of the Coal Mine at MSI (Museum of Science and Industry, but actually the real thing). Short ride in converted mail rail vehicles - lot of fun and not too long. Mail Rail was the Post Office subway - yes, really - built to reduce delivery times across central London. The system is still extent and is fairly large, but the ride was about half and hour - about the right length, but my friends enjoyed it to my surprise.
Boarding platform at Mail Rail
Not a great shot - but it does give a flavor of the ride.
View from front window of Routemaster (Red London double-decker bus) - they're on the wrong side of the street!!!
And now, some random transit shots!
Farringdon - our 'home' station - the other was Chancery Lane - just a deep level tube - this is quirkier.
View into Liverpool St Mainline platforms from above.
Early morning back to Heathrow via Purple Line - note the special moquette in purple. I got myself socks in one of the patterns at the TfL museum shop.
I'll add a few more photos from the Elizabeth Line stations in part II, probably tomorrow. We really didn't use transit much - I walked from Farringdon to Regents Park and back via Mayfair and Soho one day. Most of the time it was short sleeve weather in the sun with no rain.