Quote:
Originally Posted by Crawford
You've never been on HSR, at least not in Europe or China. HSR stations are mostly new builds, and not in city centers.
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I'm sorry, but this is just not true. I have not been to China, but in the case of Europe HSR are definitely NOT mostly new builds. With a couple exceptions I have observed on Google Maps and in my travels (e.g. Rotterdam, Berlin, Vienna Hauptbanhoff, Roma Tiburtina, and Napoli Afragola [which has almost no ridership]), the vast majority of European stations are still historic central stations, and oftentimes terminus stations. Paris Gare du Noord, Amsterdam Centraal, Frankfurt Hbf, Antwerp, Roma Termini, the central stations in Florence and Naples, Hanover, Hamburg, Madrid, and Lyon ALL all served by HSR in city center locations and often historic structures.
In many cases, these stations have seen significant retrofits over the course of time, and several others have been almost completely transformed into modern stations. For example London Waterloo, St. Pancras, and the new Munich Hbf.
And let's not forget about
Stuttgart 21. This ambitious plan preserves the historic station building, while removing the terminus platforms and connecting train tracks (also a plan for urban infill) and turns it into a thru-station with underground platforms and connecting underground tunnels. Oh yeah, and the project is almost 10 years behind schedule and is potentially €10 billion over budget. So let's not try to pretend that the Europeans can't also botch a major infrastructure project.
And all the criticism that CHSR and Stuttgart 21 are getting is fair, and an opportunity to learn from our mistakes. But it is not a reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater.
A true HSR network takes GENERATIONS to build. It also begins with systems that have flaws. Trains in Europe have been slowly improved over generations, and older train systems had to be retrofitted so that modern HSR lines could seamlessly operate their trains right into the historic central stations. The Chunnel train operated on slow-speed commuter rail lines into Waterloo station for over a decade before the tunnel was built into St. Pancras in 2012. And it is only because of the success and slow modernization of the existing system that created a need for suburban stations like Roma Tiburtina to relive pressure from the central station.
Quote:
Originally Posted by edale
Don’t confuse high speed, intercity rail with urban rail transportation systems. Subways and light rail promote urbanism by encouraging transit oriented development. HSR functions more like an airport, with just 3 stops planned for the entire Bay Area and 2 in greater LA.
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This is true, but also relates to what I was saying above. The success of the European system has come from using the existing urban, intercity (and sometimes historic intracity infrastructure) to get the high speed trains right into and out of the historic central stations. The high speed lines don't stop at every commuter station like the local trains do, but they absolutely travel along the same corridors in and out of cities like Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Rome, Frankfurt, or Paris. Retrofitting the commuter systems in LA and SF to be compatible with has always been an obvious benefit of California's project.