Randomness (
randomness) wrote2005-01-27 02:22 pm
Speaking of random...
...I've been working on a list of stations which share the same names in different metro/subway systems. It's tedious work finding them. I figured I'd see if anyone else on the net shared one of my quirky interests and could help out.
The Mornington Crescent intersystem quick reference, a work in progress.
Feel free to pass this to anyone you think interested in transit systems or Mornington Crescent.
The Mornington Crescent intersystem quick reference, a work in progress.
Feel free to pass this to anyone you think interested in transit systems or Mornington Crescent.
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Kew Gardens: London, New York
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Similarly, "Kew Gardens" is actually "Kew Gardens Union Turnpike" in Queens, and thus doesn't exactly match "Kew Gardens" in London.
I know you're thinking the strict version of the intersystem rules is an unnecessary restriction on play, but those are the house rules we play with... :)
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Not per se, but exact spelling counts, which is why "Central" and "Centraal Station" aren't matches. (Well, actually, they wouldn't match even if spelling didn't matter because "Central" isn't "Central Station".
I know, it's quirky. :)
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Chicago's CTA system shares the following names with Boston's MBTA:
Central
Davis
Chinatown
Washington's Metro and Atlanta's MARTA share a Medical Center stop
St. Louis's Metrolink and the CTA share a Grand stop
This site can be of further help
Cool thought. I love subways and public transportation, too.
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Leaves them separate, alas. Otherwise, "Airport" would connect nicely to "Aeropuerto". And there are a lot of stations in the former Soviet Union that would work for each other, because their pre-1991 names are the same, but not after the station names got changed into the local languages.
Hmmm. I think I need to handle station name changes.
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Also, Boston and Sydney share two stops: "Museum" and "St Marys".
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The Gold Line is light rail, right? Opens up that whole urban light rail question.
Also, Boston and Sydney share two stops: "Museum" and "St Marys".
Sydney is one of those weird grey areas, because in a way Sydney doesn't really have a subway system, just a commuter rail system that has a few stations underground in the center city...because then, what do you do about SEPTA Regional Rail, or various German S-Bahn systems.
Decisions, decisions...
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Main Street becomes a very popular roadway. As does Zhongshan Lu. :)
To tie the two threads together,
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Thanks for the suggestion! Which systems are you thinking of? I want to include Wuppertal, just because it's really cool.
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German precision. Feh.
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Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Paris has Franklin D. Roosevelt as a station name. Chicago has Roosevelt and Roosevelt/State. NYC has Roosevelt Island and Jackson Heights/Roosevelt Avenue.
Another tack: There is a Canal station in Madrid, a Canal St station in NYC. Canal Station would have been the terminus of the Cincinnati subway if completed. North Station in Boston is at the intersection of Canal and Causeway.
There is also an Opera station in Cairo. Vienna's is Volksoper.
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Paris has Franklin D. Roosevelt as a station name. Chicago has Roosevelt and Roosevelt/State. NYC has Roosevelt Island and Jackson Heights/Roosevelt Avenue.
Another tack: There is a Canal station in Madrid, a Canal St station in NYC. Canal Station would have been the terminus of the Cincinnati subway if completed. North Station in Boston is at the intersection of Canal and Causeway.
Yah, strictly speaking none of these are matches.
There is also an Opera station in Cairo. Vienna's is Volksoper.
I had my hopes up with this one, because connecting in Cairo would be great. However, Cairo's station is "Gezira (Opera)".
BTW, I'm trying not to be discouraging, because it's great to have all the feedback. I may not be succeeding. :)
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
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Still might be worth doing, though.
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Brighton Beach
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Did the listing come from Métro?
Re: Brighton Beach
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Sydney's I can say for fairly sure, as I used it pretty regularly when I was there.
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Ahhh, takes me back to the day when Downtown Crossing was called Washington. Okay, no it doesn't, because I haven't lived here that long. But last I noticed, there was still a sign on one of the platforms that said "Washington" if you know where to look.
I'd say it's a cheat because (a) it's not called Washington any more, and (b) the full name was "Washington Street," but the note on Times Square says the one in NYC counts because even though its full name is "42nd St Times Square" there's a platform sign that just says "Times Square." So if they still haven't taken down the sign...
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I've found that in general older stations have the shortest possible name; new stations tend to end up with the names of both cross-streets, or the full neighborhood name, or what have you. (Ultimate example: the Washington Metro's "U Street/African American Civil War Memorial/Cardozo" station.) Interesting trend -- perhaps the brevity was most useful when everybody took the subway, while long names make it easier for subway newbies to find the stations today?
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UH-Downtown
Preston
Main Street Square
Bell
Downtown Transit Center
McGowen
Ensemble/HCC
Wheeler
Museum District
Hermann Park/Rice U
Memorial Hermann Hospital/Houston Zoo
Dryden/TMC
TMC Transit Center
Smith Lands
Reliant Park
Fannin South
In order from north to south. Yes, Houston's light rail is one-dimensional.
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Great minds, and all that... :)
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I think there was either a video or a book about a similar attempt to do a complete circuit of the New York City Subway. I can't remember what it's called but I imagine it's google-able.
Subwayland by Randy Kennedy, which is a non-fiction book about the NY City subway system.
Yeah, I think I just saw that over the weekend in a bookstore in the Village! Looks interesting.
I am a fan of public transportation.
I see a million ways for my hometown's T to improve.
Seriously...at least a million.