74 years? Still quicker than most modern goverment projects....
@emjackson22892 жыл бұрын
74 yrs, slightly less than the time between today and the end of World War Two and yet Japan has the Shinkansen, we still don't have HS2.
@NickyMitchell852 жыл бұрын
@@emjackson2289 yes 🙌 I can agree with you on that one ☝️.
@Ozymandi_as2 жыл бұрын
@@emjackson2289 there's something to be said for losing a war. Post war Japan was given considerable assistance to rebuild, within certain constraints set by the allies, including strict limits on the size and capability of its defence establishment. Britain was heavily in debt, but still had significant obligations to maintain its military presence around the world and in Europe, not least because of the cold war. The next 30 years were dominated by divestment of colonial territories and industrial decline, with manufacturing of priducts like steel, ships and motor vehicles moving to Asia where labour was cheap. As the British economy faltered and shrank, both West Germany and Japan were able to focus on manufacturing and technology - which they had always been very good at - and so reap a very substantial peace dividend. Between 1939 and the mid 1980s, London's population fell by almost 2 million people. In the same period Tokyo's population grew by about 5 million, which was accompanied by an explosion of metro and urban rail services, the like if which London has seen in its Victorian heydey. The tube in London was in a fairly grim state by the 1980s, and as the City in particular began to thrive again, the costs of underinvestment became apparent. It's a lot better now than it was then. The Elizabeth Line shows up the 150 yr old technology of Victorian tube lines, but also demonstrated how expensive and difficult it can be to create new transport infrastructure in a mature and densely developed city.
@Ozymandi_as2 жыл бұрын
That's not really true, is it? Various ideas and suggestions were batted about for 50 years, during which planning and investment was somewhat derailed by two World Wars. Parliamentary approval was given in 1948, but that is only part of a more complex planning and approval process. Construction on the Victoria began in 1962, and the section through central London to Victoria was opened in 1968, just a few months later than planned. In its time it was a significant engineering achievement, and it now serves 200 million passengers a year, vs. a forecast of 85 million. And it's fast - a journey from Brixton to Kings Cross that would easily take an hour by car takes about 18 minutes on the train Government can be slow at times, but it is accountable to many different stakeholders, as well as the electorate. The private sector can move more quickly in many cases, there are clear benefits to market competition, and so forth; but it only has to return value to shareholders. There are some important things that the private sector cannot or will not do at all, certainly not without significant government involvement, and modern transport infrastructure falls into that category. Government must be accountable, and challenged to improve its efficiency, effectiveness and cost. However, many of the armchair critics don't really understand what it does.
@simonwinter88392 жыл бұрын
Yes,for example, the Government has just started a "stop the boats" campaign. It's been a really long time since slavery.
@DBIVUK2 жыл бұрын
Yes, there was a massive local campaign to get a station in Pimlico - people were still talking about it when I moved there or thereabouts in the mid-90s (when Pimlico was still the most recent tube station to be added to the network).
@GABESTA5352 жыл бұрын
The newest stations at that point would have been the stations on the Piccadilly Heathrow extension. Someone correct me if I'm wrong.
@hoagy_ytfc2 жыл бұрын
@@GABESTA535 You're right, Hatton Cross in 1975, and Heathrow stations at various times after that.
@simonwinter88392 жыл бұрын
I tried to exit Pimlico Station but was refused because I didn't have my passport with me !!
@franklingoodwin2 жыл бұрын
Kind of pointless station tbh. Sure it's good for people who live there but Victoria Station is just around the corner and is better served by tube lines. And You can get to Tate Britain from Vauxhall Train station which is pretty much the same walking distance from the gallery
@simonwinter88392 жыл бұрын
@@franklingoodwin If it is as pointless as you say TFL would have closed it by now.
@zetectic79682 жыл бұрын
For many years the Victoria line was the many entry to the Tube for me else it was Liverpool Street. Being a North Londoner I rarely had the need to go South of the river & the extension has eluded me, so it makes an interesting video. Youngsters can't really appreciate how modern the Victoria line was when it opened when there was still old carriages on other lines with 25w small globe bulbs that would dim, even more that the meagre light they emitted, or just go out on some sections of track. A journey could be more akin to a ride on the ghost train.
@ianmcclavin10 ай бұрын
Yes, some of the platforms at stations on older lines were quite dimly lit with bulbs, even busy ones like Camden Town.
@moraynichol2 жыл бұрын
The great Harry Beck produced what is my favourite journey planner which shows the Victoria Line in a straight diagonal line from Walthamstow Hoe Street to Victoria. London Underground rejected this design but it can be seen.
@roderickmain96972 жыл бұрын
Back at school we were told it was easier to put subsurface lines through the clays of north london than it was to put lines through a gravelly shingley ground in south London. But also, south London had many more commuter lines already and - well - it was the less affluent part of town. One could take exception to the latter view in that it would not have taken much to extend the Northern line to Sutton, Carshalton, Epsom which are fairly affluent. It would still seem there is a case to be made for extending from Brixton to Streatham and Croyden. There are videos around on what could have been with the Northern end of the northern line and on Metro-land. So its nice to get some perspective on what might have been/could still be in the south.
@brianfretwell38862 жыл бұрын
I remember a poster at Vauxhall station, when they were doing upgrade/maintenance work there, stating that they had to freeze the ground when tunneling as the river above made the shingle too unstable to work through without it being frozen.
@BassandoForte2 жыл бұрын
Blue has always represented modernity - It was the last colour Dye to be found and it was very expensive to make... 👍
@jerribee12 жыл бұрын
And it's the colour of electricity.
@andrewgwilliam48312 жыл бұрын
Same with LEDs!
@ricktownend91442 жыл бұрын
Maybe the Piccadilly (which parallels the Victoria line through central London) established blue as the SW-NE colour ...
@stanislavkostarnov21572 жыл бұрын
also by far the final color to be mastered on LEDs was similar to the Victoria Line Color
@georgeshas43472 жыл бұрын
Also in the 60s Chelsea FC had a trendy new blue strip
@daveetheridge2 жыл бұрын
If you live anywhere south of Brixton, you’d know how much carnage there is trying to get a bus outside of Brixton station to your final destination. There is desperate need for an extension south!
@eattherich92152 жыл бұрын
The buses are frequent though, well most of them.
@ianmcclavin10 ай бұрын
Herne Hill keeps cropping up as a possible extension destination, but so far Brixton remains the Southern terminus, as it has done since it reached there 53 years ago!!
@whyyoulidl2 жыл бұрын
Thx Jago, another fine instalment 🤙🏿 The other day, I rocked down to Electric Avenue, but then I took it lower (when I got the Vicky back north) 😆
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un2 жыл бұрын
I can't blame Brixton for opening so late. Trams are wonderful and they were clearly effective back then, so competing with them was a risk. Before our conflict with the US in the fifties, our Pyongyang was one of the only cities in Korea with a tram network (the other two were Seoul and Busan). But when the war destroyed our country, we had to rebuild it from scratch. On top of that, we built a metro system based off the famous Moscow Metro. The Metro's first line opened in 1973, before Seoul's did in 1974. And the new tram system first opened in 1989, using trams built in Czechoslovakia and now uses trams built in-house.
@lauraqueentint2 жыл бұрын
thank you great leader we look up to your example
@AnthonyHigham64140010802 жыл бұрын
Pimlico station opened just in time for me to start at the Pimlico school, then a brand new modern glass wonder, since demolished. I spent six years traveling back and forth from Clapham South via Stockwell. My white shirt collar would be black by the time I got home. The underground was filthy back then.
@eattherich92152 жыл бұрын
It's still pretty dirty and the tracks have to be picked and defluffed every night.
@jennyd2552 жыл бұрын
Good job that Pimlico got it's station properly named otherwise there could have been riots, as depicted in a certain Ealing comedy, which portrayed the pride of those living in Pimlico, for their locality, and they do have a point... I mean you do have to admit that somehow the title "Passport to an as yet unnamed station between Victoria and the Thames" wouldn't have had quite the same ring to it as "Passport to Pimlico". ;-)
@thomasburke26832 жыл бұрын
Jenny, "Passport to Pimlico", "Visa to Victoria". What's next?, "Banished to Brixton"?
@bruceperkins46012 жыл бұрын
@@thomasburke2683 You've got me going. 'Waltzing to Walthamstow'.
@simonwinter88392 жыл бұрын
Waltzing to Walthamstow? Not the word I'd have used !!
@bruceperkins46012 жыл бұрын
@@simonwinter8839 Quite right! So wading? wimping? Or worst of all, working
@simonwinter88392 жыл бұрын
@@bruceperkins4601 You're nearly there !!
@davidclare49832 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@NapoleonRook2 жыл бұрын
Well done for convering construction of Pimlico tube station, as you say that really was result of some great campaigning by local councillors of the time. As someone who grew up there I'm very grateful.
@captaincodpiece32632 жыл бұрын
I was using the Victoria line in 1969 as I still have a dated ticket, it has a magnetic backing strong enough it will stick to steel, like a fridge magnet. I probably started using the line in 1968, and recall Walthamstow Central underground station being built. I recall some local residents complaining they could hear trains running beneath their homes after the line opened.
@thomasburke26832 жыл бұрын
Ungrateful residents! They should have been thankful, not just for the melodic underground sounds, but also for the improvement to their travel options.
@shawnli47462 жыл бұрын
I used to go to uni where the central line was directly under one of the lecture halls. Their trains made a lot of noise
@eattherich92152 жыл бұрын
@@thomasburke2683: the wheel squeal that you can hear is deafening and teeth jangling. I now don't go to Walthamstow often but when I do, get the Overground from Liverpool Street.
@BulldogBill2 жыл бұрын
I was working for MDS Data Processing Ltd at their offices in Vauxhall Bridge Road when The `Victoria Line opened in 1968 and when Pimlico station opened it made getting around London to service computers a lot easier for me🙂 Strangely though I have never been to Brixton tube station🤔
@sylviaelse50862 жыл бұрын
I sometimes used the line to Brixton when I'd just missed the half-hourly service from Victoria to Herne Hill. Allowing for the extra transit time to Brixton and waiting for a bus from Brixton to Herne Hill, I'm not sure I often gained anything other than a bit (though not much) less boredom. From time to time there would be rumours of an extension of the Victoria line to Herne Hill, but it never happened, and I don't know how much substance there was to the rumours. I remember riding a BR train through Brixton, where it didn't stop on that occasion, and there was a policeman standing on the platform, because people could be seen on the road below throwing bottles and other things. (Brixton riot). This, of course, seriously dates me. Oh well.
@Simont6.02 жыл бұрын
On Somerleyton Rd Brixton opposite no85 is a TFL Electricity sub station...the tunnels for the Victoria Line extend from the station under this substation....I wonder if it was ever meant to go further south......
@maggiesamuels29372 жыл бұрын
The place where I live Brixton glad it got its tube station eventually. I didn't know it was that young aswell. Thank you for the information.
@englishciderlover73472 жыл бұрын
As well, not 'aswell'.
@maggiesamuels29372 жыл бұрын
@English Cider Lover ok who are you the spelling police? 🚨 I can write how I want SO! THERE! 🤪 . Go hide behind your keyboard and get a life. 🤣🤣🤣
@englishciderlover73472 жыл бұрын
@@maggiesamuels2937 Try aiming your guns at the 'teachers' who betrayed you by not doing their jobs properly. They were stealing a living. Maybe they're still stealing a living.
@CrabappleKing2 жыл бұрын
Now extend the line to Streatham and then Croydon! Connect South London!
@colbrazier2 жыл бұрын
Jago, thanks for another great video, this time on my home town. I hope you enjoyed your visit. Growing up there into my late teens, I could never understand why we never had a tube station. I remember getting out various maps of south London and planning my own tube line from central London to Brixton, then on to Croydon via Streatham and Norbury. Unfortunately, I could never get the backing😀
@simonwinter88392 жыл бұрын
I rode on the first train from Brixton. For some reason the first train started at half past three in the afternoon. When we got to Victoria most of us got out and crossed to the southbound platform just in time to hear the announcement that the train pulling in was the first train to Brixton. Happy days !!
@Clivestravelandtrains2 жыл бұрын
Is that because the Queen was opening it in the morning? She drove the first train.
@simonwinter88392 жыл бұрын
@@Clivestravelandtrains Not so.Her Majesty drove the first train when the Victoria line only went from Walthamstow Central to Victoria. She was not present at the Brixton extension.
@Clivestravelandtrains2 жыл бұрын
@@simonwinter8839 Thanks for clarifying that.
@simonwinter88392 жыл бұрын
@@Clivestravelandtrains To be honest nobody actually drives them,just two buttons on the sixty seven stock and away she goes !!
@chemicalbenzeneccl42 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this channel.
@bobbennett56512 жыл бұрын
Excellent research and photography as always
@SteveMikre442 жыл бұрын
Thank you Jago for another fun and informative Sunday episode...😊🇬🇧
@marcelwiszowaty17512 жыл бұрын
Smug comment here! I have commemorative opening day yellow tickets for *both* the original Victoria Line and the Brixton extension dut to the fact that my aunt used to work for London Transport. She had *connections*! 😎
@JagoHazzard2 жыл бұрын
Nice!
@chrisbailey19662 жыл бұрын
Used the tube from Euston to Brixton a few times to get to the Southeastern line to Beckenham Junction. Depending on timetables quicker than waiting at Victoria.
@brianfretwell38862 жыл бұрын
I'm sure I saw somewhere that the original plan when going to Croydon was more of a Crossrail size tunnel so all trains could use it. As for Brixton to Moorgate that would have been a slow route with trains turning to Loughborough Junction via the curve there now unused for passenger services and sown the Snow Hill tunnel and the Smithfield curve (no longer there) . Not I journey I would want everyday.
@katrinabryce2 жыл бұрын
Certainly that was covered on an earlier video in this channel. I think it was one of the episodes on the County of London Plan.
@highpath47762 жыл бұрын
One can see why Tram to Bank was quicker
@JonathanRockway2 жыл бұрын
"It took over 70 years to finish this piece of the puzzle." That's fast! We've been planning the Second Avenue Subway for over 100 years at this point, and it's still not done.
@customtransport27772 жыл бұрын
Great video! The Victoria Line is definitely one of my favourites 👍
@eattherich92152 жыл бұрын
The wheel squeal is deafening on some stretches of the route.
@Clivestravelandtrains2 жыл бұрын
I nearly fell off my chair when I saw night-time shots - I thought Jago never went out after it got dark! Nice film, thanks.
@iankemp11312 жыл бұрын
Hadn't realised that the planning of the Brixton extension came so late; full marks to LT for getting it decided and up and running so quickly. With its very useful interchanges at Vauxhall and Stockwell, and serving Brixton itself, it's hard to imagine life without it.
@allenwilliams13062 жыл бұрын
Once upon a time there were tram routes 16 and 18 that connected Purley with Westminster. However, they were replaced by bus route 109 in 1951, and that only provided such a connection until 1985, since when the route has been ever-progressively truncated. It is about time the Victoria Line was extended to replace the tram route, something that should have been done in 1951. It would extend along the line of the main London-Brighton Road from Brixton Station, with stations at Streatham Hill (Telford Avenue), Streatham, Streatham Common, Norbury, Thornton Heath Pond, West Croydon, Croydon High Street, South Croydon, Purley Oaks, and Purley Fountain. Ideally, it should go beyond there, with stops at Old Lodge Lane, and Coulsdon, then burrow deep under the North Downs with stations at Old Coulsdon and Coulsdon Common, to terminate at Caterham-on-the-Hill. There are existing surface lines, but they all criss-cross the area and fail to provide proper rail links along direct routes.
@ricktownend91442 жыл бұрын
Maybe also a station at Brixton Hill (Crown & Sceptre) where it would connect with all the buses going along the south circular road.
@dodgydruid2 жыл бұрын
Prior to its more recent changes, Brixton was south London's Ladbroke Grove the haunt of music hall singers and actors and some of those houses have stories to tell of out and out debauchery that took a lot to keep out of the newspapers. If Ladbroke Road was seen as trendy, Brixton was trendy AND very bohemian, anyone invited to a party with a Brixton address was assured of a pretty alcohol fuelled experience of a lifetime and also became the "go to" place for recreational ahem medical supplements ahem. But as the inner city lost its performance clientele to out of the way places with no snooping journalists, the area became very run down and immigrant folks desperate for a place to live were drawn to the area due to its cheap rents and landlords who didn't care too much about their tenants. Brixton like neighbouring Peckham flourished with the West Indian folks becoming a very vibrant part of south London that is resisting gentrification as much as they can.
@forecast_hinderer2 жыл бұрын
Sometimes the incidental occurrences you capture in your footage seem to indicate that with all the stress and strife many of us associate with a tube journey (usually because it’s a trip to or from work), you have a healthy benign outlook on life, that in turn helps me at least, see familiar sights in another light. Thanks 🙏
@PokhrajRoy.2 жыл бұрын
Jago, you’re such a wordsmith I love it. It’s not ‘puzzling’ to me at all 😂
@PopeLando2 жыл бұрын
The main problem with the Brixton extension is always having to take your passport to be checked when the train stops in the tunnel outside Pimlico.
@ianpatterson65522 жыл бұрын
Never leave us Mr Hazzard, you are a veritable fount of arcana.
@bishwatntl2 жыл бұрын
74 years - sounds like about the time it'll take to get new trains on the Bakerloo...
@eattherich92152 жыл бұрын
Or get the extension to Lewisham and maybe beyond.
@hublanderuk2 жыл бұрын
Nice to see the blue lights on the fin are still working after me and my dad fixed the section that stopped working about 15 years ago.
@amethyst70842 жыл бұрын
Thanks for creating and sharing this video, Jago. It's really hard to think of the southern section of the Victoria Line taking so long to come into being. I wonder why there has never been any thoughts on why the Victoria line could not go further southward, like they are planning for the Bakerloo Line.
@simonadams712 жыл бұрын
I think the overrun tunnels extend quite a way after Brixton, was this to do with a planned further extension that never happened?
@ttrjw2 жыл бұрын
Yes, they end at Somerleyton Road - you can see the electrical substation and escape point on streetview. Plans were to extend to Herne Hill for National Rail interchange and a loop was looked at in the 1990s. Abandoned as the business case didn't stack up.
@JagoHazzard2 жыл бұрын
Funny you should say that, I have a video coming up on this very subject.
@simonadams712 жыл бұрын
@@JagoHazzard Excellent, looking forward to it
@iankemp11312 жыл бұрын
@@ttrjw A pity as this would again have been a rather useful interchange into South London, especially for the Thameslink routes not going through Victoria. Interesting to speculate whether LT could have taken over one of the surface lines and provide a proper tube frequency service to South London.
@simonwinter88392 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure but I believe trains are stabled there overnight If I'm wrong no doubt someone will correct me.
@captaincatchy2 жыл бұрын
Very enjoyable as usual Jago. What about a video about East Brixton station?
@HuggyBob622 жыл бұрын
Congratulations! It took me a long time to work out what station TBC was but I remembered just before you gave the answer. (I keep meaning to have a tube map in front of me when I watch your videos, but never get around to it.)
@ESmith-ik8vu2 жыл бұрын
Very nice indeed to see Brixton today. I was there shortly after the riots in 1980, and it was like a war zone, the rozzers being twice the size of their City colleagues, not very friendly, and patrolling in twos and threes all over the place. Not one stone on top of another, and burnt-out car wrecks everywhere.
@hatjodelka2 жыл бұрын
If you ever get a chance, get inside the old tram building at Oval which is now the Italian church. I was invited to a Big Fat Italian Wedding there in the 90s and it is AMAZING inside. I certainly never knew about its previous life in public transport and never would have guessed.
@18robsmith2 жыл бұрын
Hmmmm...................... Was there a correlation between the break-up of The Beetles and the opening of the Victoria line to Brixton?
@thexalon2 жыл бұрын
5:46 I'm gonna walk down to Electric Avenue.
@neilmckie27682 жыл бұрын
Loved it when Pimlico opened - it meant avoiding the long trudge up to Victoria if you wanted to get a tube - another bonus was that it was a direct line to Highbury and Islington, great stuff for me and my mates who were ardent Arsenal supporters!!!
@tonys16362 жыл бұрын
That 67 stock caused a lot of tube strikes as ASLEF to which many of the drivers and guards then belonged did not want driver only operation. The NUR was still undecided and split over OMO (just as many bus crews were but they had to follow the TGWU guidance). Many guards did not want to retrain as drivers and becoming station staff would have meant a possible pay reduction. A compromise eventually reached by transfers to lines that still hsd guards retraining as drivers and retirement/natural wastage. A massive pay increase helped for OMO trained staff.
@MrSmith19842 жыл бұрын
Funny thing is however, Guards are actually needed a lot more on Tube Trains these days compared to the past. Especially considering the high levels of demand these days.
@Jimyjames732 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing Jago - Interesting for it to take that long!!! 🤔🚂🚂🚂
@mikeycon102 жыл бұрын
Another interesting vid thanks 🙏🏻 I heard that the reason there were/are more tube tunnel/tube lines north of the river is that the ground in south London was mostly clay and so harder to burrow through . Is there any truth in that or is it not the case? Thanks
@MrGreatplum2 жыл бұрын
My usual terminus into London is usually Victoria - I’ve never been south from there on the Victoria line though - I shall have to venture down the missing piece of the jigsaw at some point…
@AverytheCubanAmerican2 жыл бұрын
Technically, Brixton opened three years before The Beatles broke up since the breakup didn't officially happen until 1974. The story goes that three of them were ready to sign the papers...the only one who was nowhere to be seen was John (well Ringo wasn't there either but he was present via telephone). John said, "The stars weren't right" and refused to sign, purposefully delaying it. So where did John go? TO DISNEY WORLD! So an Apple lawyer flew down to Florida, went to the Disney's Polynesian Village resort where John was staying, and forced him to sign the papers on the spot that ended the iconic group on December 29, 1974. The room he stayed in still exists today as room 1601 of the Samoa longhouse, which you can actually book yourself! And that's not the only important historical event to happen at Disney World as Nixon's infamous "I'm not a crook" speech happened in 1973 (coincidentally the year before) at the nearby Contemporary resort next to Magic Kingdom!
@DavidShepheard9 ай бұрын
When I go to Brixton and see that big building on top of Brixton Station, with a large Sainsbury's next to it and London Overground sailing over the top, without an interchange, I get very frustrated. It would cost relatively little to build London Overground platforms and have them connect both to the existing National Rail station and the Underground station. I'm looking forward to someone deciding to do this and Sainsbury's getting knocked down to make way for it.
@teecefamilykent2 жыл бұрын
Brilliant video sir.
@BritishRacingGreen2 жыл бұрын
A nice treat for a Sunday afternoon.
@BritishRacingGreen2 жыл бұрын
@@seanbonella I know. It is also known as Ulster green.
@caileanshields45452 жыл бұрын
74 years? Why, that's positively sprightly compared to some other government projects (railway related or otherwise).
@georgepickering11242 жыл бұрын
At 0:40 you mentioned that the LC&DR terminus for the line from Brixton was Moorgate… I did not know that. However I am struggling to work out how the line got there. Could you enlighten me? Was it via the West London line and then Paddington?
@seamymc59452 жыл бұрын
According to Wikipedia it went via Loughborough Junction to Blackfriars and through the Snow Hill tunnel. There used to be a connection for trains from the south to turn east into Moorgate.
@msamour2 жыл бұрын
Hi Jago, here is a fun challenge for you. Find the most Western tube station then leave from there, then travel to the most Eastern tube station. Note how long it takes. Do a video about it. Then do the same thing from North to South (or vice versa, whichever your preference) then do another video about it. I'm curious to find out how long it takes. Especially for when I visit. I will be looking to make my North as quickly as humanly possible. I'll probably get lapidated if I remain in London. I'm way too chipper for you folks.
@Tevildo2 жыл бұрын
One minor problem - Chesham is both the northernmost and westernmost station.
@msamour2 жыл бұрын
@@Tevildo Well, where some see problems, others see opportunity. That means Jago would take off from the same spot twice then. See, problem solved. 😁
@hb13382 жыл бұрын
After you have been lapidated, we can reverse the process and you will then be delapidated.
@msamour2 жыл бұрын
@@hb1338 I was told when I visit the UK to not talk to Londoners and not make eye contact with them. If I want to have a nice chat with easy going people, I should visit the West country, which I will probably do after the Midlands.
@rml6952 жыл бұрын
The art on the walls is very interesting :)
@emjackson22892 жыл бұрын
Brixton was in South London, which in transport terms means it might as well have been Timbuktu, Tanganyika, Matebeland and other such places of that particular Era which gentlemen with beards and pipes muttered about.
@Gary05572 жыл бұрын
My Dad took me and my brother for a ride on the Vic line on its first day in September 68. On opening, it only ran from Walthamstow to Highbury & Islington.
@pjf_nn12 жыл бұрын
Electrifying!
@LudicrousPlatypus2 жыл бұрын
Brixton is such a cool place.
@sloanelouch3932 жыл бұрын
I remember going on the Vicky line when it opened. The only thing I can really remember is the Armrests !!! As they had a step in the design. So the hand was higher than the forearm , And as such more comfortable !! And indeed it is.
@ricktownend91442 жыл бұрын
I think the 'two-level arm-rest was so that the two people between which the arm-rest was sited could each get at least an elbow on to it.
@StLouis-yu9iz2 жыл бұрын
Great video as always! ❤
@totoro1232 жыл бұрын
You are the edgepice to our jigsaw
@cerneuffington26562 жыл бұрын
What happened when Pimlico Station was being built? Did trains terminate at Victoria, and was there a service from Brixton to Stockwell?
@fenlinescouser41052 жыл бұрын
74 years? Wow, it's quicker up north. The Liverpool loop only took 63.
@GeorgeChoy2 жыл бұрын
I saw this after arriving home from work, a great way to wind down.
@iangriffiths98402 жыл бұрын
A mere 74 years! Will HS2 be completed that quickly?
@highpath47762 жыл бұрын
The out card outro of these vids does feel like the rolling background of a Scooby Doo cartoon chase sequence.
@tavi95982 жыл бұрын
74 years? Not bad. At least they eventually got off their butts and did it. These days you're lucky if something the government has known to be needed for years ever gets greenlit; it's far easier to argue about it forever.
@PokhrajRoy.2 жыл бұрын
Quote of the Day: “What, do you think that London Transport was made of money?”
@Andrewjg_892 жыл бұрын
As the Victoria Line ends at Brixton from Walthamstow Central. I do think that it could of extend down to Croydon and to end at Croydon with a new Underground station built in Croydon town centre that would serve West Croydon and East Croydon stations. And to have interchange with the Tramlink and buses. Overall Brixton is a very busy area in South London with lots of things to look at and with lots old and new buildings. And maybe a new London Overground station could be built to connect with the Victoria Line and National Rail stations at Brixton as a interchange.
@mbrady23292 жыл бұрын
Deep level Tube lines have very limited capacity, due to the small loading gauge of the trains, and there's a fast Thameslink service into central London from East Croydon. But there's probably a strong argument for an extension of the Victoria line to Tulse Hill via Herne Hill, connecting with several of the surface level rail services which crisscross south London; were such an extension to be built, one would also hope that a second entrance to Brixton Tube station would be a part of the plans!
@memediatek2 жыл бұрын
@@memofromessex the north? so overground extension past Watford junction?
@Andrewjg_892 жыл бұрын
@@mbrady2329 True. London Overground could of extend to East Croydon with a new bay platform being built to serve the Class 378 trains coming from Dalston Junction and Highbury & Islington. Instead you have to change at Norwood Junction.
@Andrewjg_892 жыл бұрын
@@memediatek Lol imagine that. 😂
@DZrache2 жыл бұрын
It would be nice to have a tube station in more central Croydon, there's lot to see and do there as well. I hope Brixton stays interesting, but the market has become depressingly sparse in the past decade.
@marchampson0062 жыл бұрын
Strange when i left South London the Victoria line was under construction in the 60's and then came back 42 years or more for a visit and reunion i actually got off at Brixton station to go to one of Joanne Good's BBC Radio London O/B' in the market. i remember the last time previous was at the Orange Luxury Coach station in Brixton long gone by now. Happy days Marc In Bletchley G6XEG
@Gary05572 жыл бұрын
Living in a busy part of NE London, it's always irked me that the Vic Line was not extended north to terminate at Chingford.
@ricktownend91442 жыл бұрын
As the Victoria line is, for its north-eastern section, more of a peripheral route, perhaps it would be better if it was extended to say Woodford to connect with the Central Line. If Chingford is under-served by the Overground service to Liverpool Street, perhaps that should be brought up to tube-level frequencies - at least for the section from Chingford to Walthamstow, where it connects with the Victoria line.
@Gary05572 жыл бұрын
@@ricktownend9144 That was on the table at one time, but it was South Woodford they were proposing. Then commuters could have got the Central Line into the City, or the Vic through the West End. The London Overground from Chingford to Liverpool St is good, runs every 15 mins, but what irks me is a busy town like Chingford not being on the Underground, when there are places like Chesham and Amersham, much further out. that are.
@mbrady23292 жыл бұрын
@@ricktownend9144, there's an argument for reopening the Coppermill Curve, to allow through running from Chingford to Stratford via Walthamstow Central.
@ricktownend91442 жыл бұрын
@@mbrady2329 - agree - absolutely! or build an interchange station where the lines cross: good for the Lea Valley Waling Trail. But the service frequencies need bringing up to a 'tube train' level: waiting 15 minutes for a connection could get a bit cold ...
@kgbgb36632 жыл бұрын
@@mbrady2329 Wouldn't that have to be the Hall Farm Curve? CartoMetro shows that as being the name of the lifted north-east to south-east link that you'd need at the junction near Lee Valley Park. They show Coppermill Curve as the lifted north-east to north-west link, which would allow trains from Chingford to head towards Tottenham.
@highpath47762 жыл бұрын
"Small and Basic and proving inadequate" - Have you been talking to my therapist again ?
@PaddyWV2 жыл бұрын
Funny that whilst chucking money at the Elizabeth line, they didn't contenplate the "Croydon Connection" once again. Do they think giving them a Tram was enough? With plans to extend the Bakerloo services into the suburbs, is it only a matter of time?
@Eric_Hunt1942 жыл бұрын
Croydon is a bit like East Berlin... if there are ways for people to leave, everyone will leave.
@eattherich92152 жыл бұрын
The purple line is quite extensive. Nobody is going to consider extending the the Victoria line to Croydon, and the Tramlink is pretty much a local affair.
@rogerblackwood88152 жыл бұрын
I absolutely love your videos, they are informing and very entertaining! EG; the Beatles disbanding were not necessarily related to the line going ahead👍👍 I am going to Buenos Aires again next month on business, I tried the Subte (Spanish for tube) last time. It even uses the same type of map, so it's easy to find your way around! This was quite a surprise to some of the Argentinians I was visiting there! They also have "El tren del fin del mundo" in Ushuaia. It means the train at the end of the world, as Ushuaia is the southern most town in the world! The engineers there were happy to show me the trains that were manufactured in Sussex! Very enlightening indeed! The train is remarkably similar to the Romney Hythe and Dymchurch set up! Possibly slightly larger? Top marks for content and humour, if you would like any up to date photos etc of the system in Argentina then I would be more than happy👍👍
@TheMusicalElitist2 жыл бұрын
Actually The Beatles broke up officially in 1970. Thus, it was only 1 year after they broke up. Yes, I am that guy again.
@lordmuntague2 жыл бұрын
The Beatles break-up was of course due to worries about the loss of services over the Bootle Branch, which indeed happened in 1977 to cries from Yoko of "Told you so!"
@TheMusicalElitist2 жыл бұрын
@@lordmuntague 🙀🙀🙀🙀
@Inverse_to_ChaosАй бұрын
You should have mentioned the giant tube roundel above the entry door, shining down onto the ground (when the Sun is out).
@lordpitnolen21962 жыл бұрын
I like the Jigsaw poster. A simple explanation.
@highpath47762 жыл бұрын
never seen it before
@Dave_Sisson2 жыл бұрын
As a Melbourne boy who loves London and British culture in general, I associate those places with cultural references. So I first heard of Brixton in The Clash song 'Guns of Brixton' and I first knew of Pimlico as a briefly independent nation in the classic Ealing comedy 'Passport to Pimlico'.
@eattherich92152 жыл бұрын
Passport to Pimlico is an Ealing Studios classic.
@paulhollis88792 жыл бұрын
I, the Duke of Burgundy, welcome you to Pimlico…
@TheUluxian2 жыл бұрын
The Most Relaxing Voices Ever (in no particular order).. Morgan Freeman Sean Connery James Earl Jones Barry White Jago Hazzard
@AtheistOrphan2 жыл бұрын
I would like to add James Mason, Jeremy Irons and George Sanders to your list.
@hb13382 жыл бұрын
Wasn't Gabriel Woolf considered to be the man with the golden voice ?
@Weesperbuurt2 жыл бұрын
The like of foresight is staggering…there seems to be endless money for inadequate workarounds for one million problems in the UK however.
@mrkipling22012 жыл бұрын
Brilliant.
@highvoltageswitcher62562 жыл бұрын
👍Nice one Jago! Must take you ages to research this stuff. I am guessing here but is every minute of narration about an hour of overall work?
@JagoHazzard2 жыл бұрын
This one wasn’t quite so heavy - I was fortunate in that I’d done a lot of the research already for other videos.
@highvoltageswitcher62562 жыл бұрын
@@JagoHazzard Thanks for all the work you do on your channel. Looking at your YT subscriptions, likes and views this channel has really taken off in the last year or two. 👍🙏🙂
@michaeldonahoo4612 жыл бұрын
70 years to complete the puzzle. Does that make Brixton the Rubik's Cube of the Tube!
@droppedontheclimb70192 жыл бұрын
in Passport to Pimlico (1949), after Pimlico has declared that it's an independent duchy of Burgundy ("We've always been English, we'll always be English, and it's because we ARE English that we insist on our right to be Burgundians.") they stop an underground train and ask the people for passports. I'd always assumed it was the Victoria line, but that was because I watched the film before I really knew very much about the history of the Underground - it's clearly a Q stock train on the district line - kzbin.info/www/bejne/d3zVlGOkfqd7fNU&ab_channel=PaulThompson Which raises the question... which bit of Pimlico is it possibly going through? Presumably it's the bit from Westminster to Victoria, but it's a massive stretch!
@highpath47762 жыл бұрын
Indeed so. I suppose North Pimlico is possible.
@ActualDav2 жыл бұрын
If the Bakerloo line extension is built before 2100 it will be a miracle!
@kenmorris1002 жыл бұрын
Jego another example of the penny-pinching hand of the Treasury on transport projects which have cost the country much more as is the case with rebuilding of the underground circulation space and extra escalators at Victoria. You did not mention the lobbying that took place to have the extension beyond Brixton to Streatham. The result is the daily scrum outside Brixton Station for the buses going up the hill.
@mikedyble36482 жыл бұрын
I remember both the opening of the Victoria line and the Brixton extension, the thing that struck me at the time was the drop in temperature in the new bits
@iankemp11312 жыл бұрын
Not any longer though! In fact they often feel one of the hottest parts on the Underground (though opinion seems to be that the Central Line is even hotter).
@highpath47762 жыл бұрын
Off Topic but is the Elizabeth Line currently a victim of its own success , if reports on ITV London are to be belived. I understand there are some reliability issues on the rolling stock , which should be solved, and the May 2023 timetable change should increase the present somewhat cut back timetable, however the HS2/Elizabeth Line issues at Old Oak Common area which have stopped the Ealing Broadway etc Greenford Shuttle has probably made things no better for some west london commuters. There is no easy fix as Paddington itself cannot be relied on to have platform space spare for any regular timetable use, perhaps adding in the Bedwyn services as calling points of Ealing Broadway and Acton Main Line might help take some pressure off the Reading services. plus westbound curve to add a Reading-Heathrow direct train service should be considered again.
@cmw37372 жыл бұрын
Something's puzzling me now. How did the London and Chatham used to get from Brixton to Moorgate?
@bigaspidistra2 жыл бұрын
Snow Hill tunnel
@europacifictradersltd37172 жыл бұрын
hi jago i never did understand why the northern line did not get extended to brixton from the oval or stockwell
@gdclemo2 жыл бұрын
I suppose it would have created a short "spur" line, like the one to Mill Hill East, that would have either taken up trains that would have continued to Morden, or required its own shuttle service, and probably messed up the timetable a bit. That's just speculation on my part though.
@StevensPaul2 жыл бұрын
It's the thought that counts 👀😂......
@AnaruBickford2 жыл бұрын
Just realised.. The front of the tube train looks like Deadpool. Now you can't unsee it. 🙏
@984francis2 жыл бұрын
"Well....." If that wasn't there, I'd be most disappointed.
@highpath47762 жыл бұрын
Without trying to cross too far into Jay Foreman's unfinished London one is curious of the report of "travel in (to/from ?) the suburbs had peaked". While Hitler's V weapons had finished the main flattening of housing sites in London there was no manpower, or money, to significantly rebuild. The dispersal of population had started in the early 1950s with a mix of the five pound poms to the overseas dominions of the remnant of empire, two world wars had knocked out a substantial male generation/s of usefulness or presences, younger women had gone to the US when collected by their GI partners, and within the UK the rush was to light industry in the new towns deliberately away from easy commute to London and it was expected that population growth would be mostly in these areas, even Thamesmead would be as much the third line of invasion defence from tanks into London (why do you think it was built like that with easy machine gun lines over the A2 and the Thames). By the Mid 1950s it became noted that the population had gone too far down, invites to come and work in manual industries went out to the new commonwealth for folk to help the mother country, paid enough to live in the cheap Zone 2 housing even as Zone 3 areas were still being planned with fewer dwelling units, some bigger than the victorian terraces , others with space for garages and motor vehicle parking. London Transport's finances became challenged , mostly from the loss of the marginal fare journey that covered and exceeded fixed costs with an impact from the line extensions of the northern and the central. Finally was it not somewhere near Brixton that the M23 was supposed to join up with a widened South Circular Road ?