Speaking of random...
Jan. 27th, 2005 02:22 pm...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.
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Date: 2005-01-28 07:55 pm (UTC)Yah, Guadalajara is light rail: http://www.urbanrail.net/am/guad/periferico-norte-1.jpg
Monumental: Valencia (under construction)
Assuming you mean the one in Venezuela, not the one in Spain, this one appears to be light rail: http://www.urbanrail.net/am/vale/valencia-ve-train2.jpg
http://www.urbanrail.net/am/guad/federalismo-1.jpg
I should disambiguate by saying Valencia (Spain), in my listing.
, Barcelona
La Paz: Mexico DF, Caracas
Bingo! Thanks!
Universidad: San Juan PR (under construction)
Excellent! In fact, it opens for non-revenue service tomorrow!
http://www.ati.gobierno.pr/ati_temp_opening.aspx
Central: Monterrey
The vehicles look like light rail.
Roosevelt: San Juan PR (under construction), Chicago
Yup. Oh, and this is fantastic, as it connects the two biggest groups.
Broadway: Vancouver, PATCO (Philadelphia/NJ)
BTW, I had no idea Cincinnati once tried building a subway.
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Date: 2005-01-29 04:37 am (UTC)Colbert: Marseille, Lille
République: Paris, Rennes
Gare du Nord: Brussels, Paris
Clemenceau: Brussels, Rennes
Temple: Paris, London
Ostbahnhof: Berlin, Munich
Rathaus: Hamburg, Nuremberg
Uhlandstrasse: Berlin, Hamburg
Universitetet: Copenhagen, Stockholm
University: Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Miami
City Hall: Philadelphia, Singapore (as EW13 NS25 City Hall), Seoul
Chinatown: Singapore (as NE4 Chinatown)
Park Street: Boston, Calcutta
Haymarket: Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Boston
Monument: London, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Royal Oak: Vancouver, Toronto
Airport: Hong Kong
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Date: 2005-02-02 01:44 am (UTC)Colbert: Marseille, Lille
Marseille's map claims that it's "Colbert Hôtel de la Région".
République: Paris, Rennes
Excellent!
Gare du Nord: Brussels, Paris
Alas, Gare du Nord appears to be on the (Premetro-tram) Green Line equivalent piece of the Brussels network: http://www.stib.irisnet.be/Graphic/newplanMetr.gif
Clemenceau: Brussels, Rennes
Fortunately, the previous one doesn't matter, because this one exists, so you can connect Paris, Rennes, and Brussels anyway. Parfait! :)
Temple: Paris, London
Connecting up the French into the largest group! Magnifique!
Ostbahnhof: Berlin, Munich
Berlin Ostbahnhof is S-Bahn. :(
Rathaus: Hamburg, Nuremberg
Sehr gut!
Uhlandstrasse: Berlin, Hamburg
I'm going to write it Uhlandstr., because it appears that way on the BVG'sS- und U-Bahnnetz and on the Umgebungsplan for Uhlandstraße from the HVV. (The Germans wish to make things difficult for me, clearly.)
Universitetet: Copenhagen, Stockholm
Copenhagen is being annoyingly inconsistent in their publications as to whether it sticks the "st." at the end of "Universitetet" (or many other stations), but I find they don't on their English language pamphlet (among other places), and I have no idea what "DR BYEN" means, so I'm going to declare victory here and match them. :)
University: Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Miami
University is proving to be a very useful station, in a number of languages...
City Hall: Philadelphia, Singapore (as EW13 NS25 City Hall), Seoul
Seoul! I had the other two, but Seoul! This opens up the possibility of connecting up Korean systems! :)
Chinatown: Singapore (as NE4 Chinatown)
Excellent! Yay, North-East Line!
Park Street: Boston, Calcutta
Yup, had it. I actually debated with myself because Boston Park Street is often written "Park St.", but then I found an image of a station sign that said "Park Street". (I could have just gone down to the station but looking on line is easier...)
Haymarket: Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Boston
Good, good...
Monument: London, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
....v'ry niice...
Royal Oak: Vancouver, Toronto
Perhaps you mean "Vancouver, London"? I see a "Royal York" in Toronto, but "Royal Oak" in both Vancouver and London. Maybe I just missed the one in Toronto?
Airport: Hong Kong
Can't believe I missed this one...
So, as I was saying to
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Date: 2005-02-02 05:44 am (UTC)Colbert, Gare du Nord, Ostbahnhof, Royal Oak -- mea culpa, I must have been moving too fast through the maps, discounting them once and then going back to check something and missing details on the second pass.
On the other hand, Berlin's S-Bahn system is basically heavy rail metro -- it's got long trains, third-rail equipment, all-segregated right-of-way and comparatively high frequencies on all the branches. Would you be willing to count it as a metro as well?
Re: Historical figures might be a good bet for station names in multiple systems
Date: 2005-02-02 09:24 pm (UTC)Not a problem. It's nice to have someone else who shares the same "interests" as I do. :)
Would you be willing to count it as a metro as well?
So, what I worry is that going down yet another road. If the S-Bahn is heavy rail metro, which it sort of is, how about SEPTA Regional Rail? Or Sydney CityRail? Or Johannesburg/Pretoria Metro? And so on...
I deleted all the people-mover links. Poof, no more Detroit or Jacksonville. :)
Oh, also, now all the city names link to maps or official sites. Haven't got a working site for Brasilia, Caracas, or any of the Russians yet.
Gotta check the Korean systems next.