Bottom line, if you want a shower you got to pay the piper. It would be pretty embarrassing to be led back to your coach wearing a towel.
The showers, as I understand it, were on the west side of the Great Hall and down one level. The new Metropolitan Lounge is to be on east side (actually southeast corner) of the Great Hall.Pay for showers are an option that should be explored. It was mentioned within this forum or somewhere online that showers in Union Station Chicago may have been shutdown do to security issues. I'd have to re-watch my video. But area were showers used to be - might be where they are planning on relocating Metropolitan Lounge.
I saw that CUS shower area, but so long ago, fuzzy memory -The showers, as I understand it, were on the west side of the Great Hall and down one level. The new Metropolitan Lounge is to be on east side (actually southeast corner) of the Great Hall.Pay for showers are an option that should be explored. It was mentioned within this forum or somewhere online that showers in Union Station Chicago may have been shutdown do to security issues. I'd have to re-watch my video. But area were showers used to be - might be where they are planning on relocating Metropolitan Lounge.
I don't believe anyone suggested that the showers would be free.I saw that CUS shower area, but so long ago, fuzzy memory -
I think that some train stations in Europe have pay-access showers available even now. USA truck-stops - sure. Far East stations -- likely.
On-train showers available for free for coach passengers on the train? Nowhere nohow.
Right. On-train and free, never. Pay shower on-train, probably also not .I don't believe anyone suggested that the showers would be free.I saw that CUS shower area, but so long ago, fuzzy memory -
I think that some train stations in Europe have pay-access showers available even now. USA truck-stops - sure. Far East stations -- likely.
On-train showers available for free for coach passengers on the train? Nowhere nohow.
I was thinking of using a small area of downstairs cafe table to be shower room as the shower room can be monitored by cafe attendant for use. Keycard sold by attendant that would open shower room door then once inside room, card would activate water for a certain period. Towels and soap provided at time of purchase.Just kidding
<edit> doing some really rough math here, say we replace 2 Superliner coach seats with a pay shower, say $10 for a 10-15 minute shower time -- would need 40-50 users on an end-to-end western LD train run to break even, dunno the cost for more water on board.
Could that be a revenue booster? No idea.
Neither the food, nor use of the shower is free.The value of a sleeping car is well worth it; on most routes. Great free food, plus free showers!
Enjoy!
Personally I'd think that clean homeless people would be a substantial improvement over dirty homeless people, but maybe that's just me. Over in Japan they have showers at the airport with a subsidized cost of around $5 per person per use. They are also extremely clean by American standards because they pay someone to tidy up after every use. By Japanese thinking fewer stinky passengers is a benefit to everyone involved. Not sure why Americans prefer stinky passengers instead.I wonder if these showers attracted the homeless, and such tends to also bring other problems in with them.I'd be curious to hear how the only way to resolve the "safety" issue was to remove the showers permanently. Were people sniffing bath salts? Were they fashioning shivs out of soap holders? Were they pulling pipes out of the walls? Inquiring minds want to know.
I hope you're not assuming that every last seat is sold in every coach, because that is almost never the case in my experience.doing some really rough math here, say we replace 2 Superliner coach seats with a pay shower, say $10 for a 10-15 minute shower time -- would need 40-50 users on an end-to-end western LD train run to break even, dunno the cost for more water on board. Could that be a revenue booster? No idea.
Sounds like something that's at least worth a try.I was thinking of using a small area of downstairs cafe table to be shower room as the shower room can be monitored by cafe attendant for use. Keycard sold by attendant that would open shower room door then once inside room, card would activate water for a certain period. Towels and soap provided at time of purchase. Two timers - Room time fixed. No extensions. (15 minutes to wash and dry?) Shower time - less than room time would be fixed but could be suspended so that you can wet yourself, suspend it, then restart to rinse. Same total time but longer in-shower time. (4 minutes of water?)
Presumably the money comes from a loan based on expected revenue from charging for showers. Obviously Amtrak would have to advertise it regularly and the staff would have to go along with it. I've never quite understood why the staff can't be bothered to clean the coach toilets regularly, but presumably that's something that management needs to address.Good idea except where does the money come from for the conversions? And the Cafe LSAs don't want to clean the Bathrooms that are there now. They keep them locked, usually have a Homemade "Out of Order" Sign on the door!
Although clearly some people would take advantage of the amenity, I'm just not convinced pay-showers for coach passengers would be all that popular or widely used. Only western long distance trains have routes covering more than one night, and even then only a small fraction of the passengers are actually on board for that long; Most people are traveling shorter distances between intermediate points. Further, how dirty do you really get sitting around all day in a coach seat? While a shower might be nice, its not going to hurt anyone to miss one night. I absolutely support added on board amenities (even for a fee), but it needs to be something that will produce revenue and which the passengers want and are willing to pay for (no "nickel and dime" charges, such as the airline model).Right. On-train and free, never. Pay shower on-train, probably also not .I don't believe anyone suggested that the showers would be free.I saw that CUS shower area, but so long ago, fuzzy memory -
I think that some train stations in Europe have pay-access showers available even now. USA truck-stops - sure. Far East stations -- likely.
On-train showers available for free for coach passengers on the train? Nowhere nohow.
I'm imagining a Mica-manager in Congress saying "that shower is half the space of a roomette, it should get at least half the revenue that a roomette does! And what's this with free toilets in coach, huh? Toilets should be a revenue center too, people should pay at least a few dollars to use the restroom, "
Just kidding
<edit> doing some really rough math here, say we replace 2 Superliner coach seats with a pay shower, say $10 for a 10-15 minute shower time -- would need 40-50 users on an end-to-end western LD train run to break even, dunno the cost for more water on board.
Could that be a revenue booster? No idea.
Good idea except where does the money come from for the conversions?
And the Cafe LSAs don't want to clean the Bathrooms that are there now. They keep them locked, usually have a Homemade "Out of Order" Sign on the door!
Wouldn't it feel sort of weird to go to the lounge (cafe) car to use the shower, while everyone else is in their eating, drinking, and socializing?"The shower can be monitored by café car attendant" ??
Maybe this would be possible, but I suspect it would be impractical for the café attendant to close the service counter so he can clean the shower. That would often be necessary.
Tom
Texas Eagle, CHI-LAX or LAX-CHI?Most of the the two-night Amtrak trips, and *all* of the three-night Amtrak trips, require changing trains.
But there used to be pay toilets in bus and train stations and airports here!( most were 10 cents)For that matter, US passengers would rebel over the $2 WC charge. At least that's still free on European trains.
And How many would crawl under the door.?But there used to be pay toilets in bus and train stations and airports here!( most were 10 cents)For that matter, US passengers would rebel over the $2 WC charge. At least that's still free on European trains.
More likely it's bottled water.For $12 they must use Champagne instead of water! Yikes!
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