Pic of Rotterdam Metro train with 4 people with surfboards, at extension to the Beach at the Hoek of Holland

Monday’s Friday Reads – 24 April 2023

UK Orient Express dropped due to border hassles (RailTech)

ScotRail removing peak rail fares for six month trial (RailTechnology)

Rotterdam opens last extension of Line B, to the beach! (RailwayPro)

The $7BN plan to save New York’s hated Penn Station: Video (B1M)

North American parking reform is snowballing (CNU)

The derailment dangers of long freight trains (ProPublica)

Melbourne’s underground cultural icon is a car park: Video (JulianO’Shea)

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4 comments

  1. “Hoek van Holland Strand” – yes, well …
    The first time I went there, it was a proper international station, with rolling stock from: Dutch, German, Polish, Russian (USSR) etc. railways & some still-operating, but looking careworn… classic dark blue coaches, with brass lettering.
    { Yes: “Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits et de Grandes Expresse Europeans” } !! [ If I’ve spelt that correctly ]

  2. Does the proposed Scottish fare policy implement, in effect, a maximum cost per mile (capping a dynamic yield approach).

    Should that be a policy in fares reform/simplification, along with single leg pricing? And should cost per mile be “as the lines run” or “as the crows fly” (to compete with other modes–car/bus/plane, that sometimes can take a more direct route)

  3. Greg T.

    I remember the international flavour there too!

    However Hoek van Holland wasn’t just ‘Dutch, German, Polish, Russian…’ there was British too! Quite often a Class 77 would be found in charge of the international train we had boarded!

  4. I think you mean the Hoek van Holland Haven station, not Strand. The old Strand (=Beach) station was not more than a 2-platform terminus for local trains, while Haven (=Port) still had 6 platforms (3 overgrown) before it got rebuilt to be part of the Rotterdam metro in 2017-2019.

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