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Double decker records instagram
Double decker records instagram






double decker records instagram

Contrary to popular belief, cyclists can cross the Thames at the Dartford Crossing today - they just can't cycle anywhere in the tunnels or on the bridge. A replacement service was brought in, a transfer vehicle - a Land Rover - with a rear cycle rack. In fact, by April 1964, the service had been reduced to just a single bus, as the rest were no longer required.īy 1965, the Dartford Tunnel Cycle Service was removed completely, for two reasons: the safety concerns that had niggled the buses from the start, and the lack of use, which meant the service was costing significantly more to run than it was making. In reality, there was nothing like 230 cyclists wanting to cross the river every hour. By our calculations, that's capacity for 230 bicycles an hour in each direction under the Thames. Photo: Simon Leatherdale via creative commonsįour buses ran at a time, with the fifth waiting in reserve, offering a service every six minutes between 6am and 10pm daily. Heading towards the northbound tunnels from the south side of the river in 2006.

#DOUBLE DECKER RECORDS INSTAGRAM DRIVER#

Those staircases, built into the side of the buses, had no doors to prevent passengers from tumbling down the stairs and off the vehicle while it was in motion, and though there aren't any records of this actually happening, it wouldn't have ended well, especially as the bus driver wouldn't have been allowed to stop in the tunnel if an incident did occur. Instead, special platforms were built at each entrance to the tunnel - something like a mounting block used by horse riders, we imagine - to help cyclists onto the staircase which started a few feet above the ground.Īccording to the National Archives, concerns about the safety of the buses were raised before they were even put into action. well, pretty much every other bus in the history of buses, passengers couldn't access the bus from the ground. The lower tier of these double deckers was given over to cycle racks, with space for 23 bikes per bus, while the upper deck was fitted out with seating for 33 passengers. Handily, these were made just down the road, at the Ford Dagenham plant. Two years before the tunnel was due to open, London Transport, responsible for the crossing at the time, commissioned five specially designed double decker buses, to convey cyclists and their bikes from one side to the other. At the time, there was only one tunnel - the second was added in 1980, and the neighbouring bridge didn't open until 1991 - so initially, traffic ran in both directions in a single shaft. But it was still thought that the subaquatic journey was too dangerous to be done on a pushbike. When the Dartford Tunnel opened in November 1963, joining Kent to Essex via a road beneath the river, traffic volumes were significantly lower than they are today.








Double decker records instagram