Suppose HS2 was cancelled
Discussion
Its apparently on budget. However government changing their mind at Euston means £105m spent on design is wasted. How you spend £105m on design is beyond me!
Of course if we decided what we were going t do and did it projects like this would be a lot cheaper and arrive a lot quicker. I understand one big issue with HS2 and its cost is the guarantees contractors have to give. Means its all titanium plated!
Of course if we decided what we were going t do and did it projects like this would be a lot cheaper and arrive a lot quicker. I understand one big issue with HS2 and its cost is the guarantees contractors have to give. Means its all titanium plated!
Chrisgr31 said:
Its apparently on budget. However government changing their mind at Euston means £105m spent on design is wasted. How you spend £105m on design is beyond me!
Of course if we decided what we were going t do and did it projects like this would be a lot cheaper and arrive a lot quicker. I understand one big issue with HS2 and its cost is the guarantees contractors have to give. Means its all titanium plated!
Staying on budget with a £5.5bn contingency shouldn't be that hard, although I think they have used something like 25% of that already though.Of course if we decided what we were going t do and did it projects like this would be a lot cheaper and arrive a lot quicker. I understand one big issue with HS2 and its cost is the guarantees contractors have to give. Means its all titanium plated!
You would have to assume that the goal is to use 99.9% of the contingency. That way everyone is happy - Government get to claim 'under budget' and everyone else has a nice Christmas.
I live in Manchester and work a lot in London - I wish they would scrap it.
The West coast main line isn't even run properly so what hope has this of making a difference?
In my view they should give tax breaks to spread companies round the country a bit more and push fast internet everywhere so people can work from home. I don't get the fascination with everyone being in the office and the commuting just creates pollution and clogs the country up.
The West coast main line isn't even run properly so what hope has this of making a difference?
In my view they should give tax breaks to spread companies round the country a bit more and push fast internet everywhere so people can work from home. I don't get the fascination with everyone being in the office and the commuting just creates pollution and clogs the country up.
NorthDave said:
I live in Manchester and work a lot in London - I wish they would scrap it.
The West coast main line isn't even run properly so what hope has this of making a difference?
In my view they should give tax breaks to spread companies round the country a bit more and push fast internet everywhere so people can work from home. I don't get the fascination with everyone being in the office and the commuting just creates pollution and clogs the country up.
I’m guessing you don’t own any business properties currently sat at low occupancy and not returning on your investment….The West coast main line isn't even run properly so what hope has this of making a difference?
In my view they should give tax breaks to spread companies round the country a bit more and push fast internet everywhere so people can work from home. I don't get the fascination with everyone being in the office and the commuting just creates pollution and clogs the country up.
pablo said:
NorthDave said:
I live in Manchester and work a lot in London - I wish they would scrap it.
The West coast main line isn't even run properly so what hope has this of making a difference?
In my view they should give tax breaks to spread companies round the country a bit more and push fast internet everywhere so people can work from home. I don't get the fascination with everyone being in the office and the commuting just creates pollution and clogs the country up.
I’m guessing you don’t own any business properties currently sat at low occupancy and not returning on your investment….The West coast main line isn't even run properly so what hope has this of making a difference?
In my view they should give tax breaks to spread companies round the country a bit more and push fast internet everywhere so people can work from home. I don't get the fascination with everyone being in the office and the commuting just creates pollution and clogs the country up.
A colleague told me last week that her Mcr - London train takes only 2hr 5mins - I thought it was way longer than that. Made me wonder about the fundamental business case.
Workers are certainly returning to the office in big numbers Tues-Thurs. Seems like the 3-day office week is becoming the new norm.
Bonefish Blues said:
pablo said:
NorthDave said:
I live in Manchester and work a lot in London - I wish they would scrap it.
The West coast main line isn't even run properly so what hope has this of making a difference?
In my view they should give tax breaks to spread companies round the country a bit more and push fast internet everywhere so people can work from home. I don't get the fascination with everyone being in the office and the commuting just creates pollution and clogs the country up.
I’m guessing you don’t own any business properties currently sat at low occupancy and not returning on your investment….The West coast main line isn't even run properly so what hope has this of making a difference?
In my view they should give tax breaks to spread companies round the country a bit more and push fast internet everywhere so people can work from home. I don't get the fascination with everyone being in the office and the commuting just creates pollution and clogs the country up.
A colleague told me last week that her Mcr - London train takes only 2hr 5mins - I thought it was way longer than that. Made me wonder about the fundamental business case.
Workers are certainly returning to the office in big numbers Tues-Thurs. Seems like the 3-day office week is becoming the new norm.
NorthDave said:
I don't get the fascination with everyone being in the office and the commuting just creates pollution and clogs the country up.
If people are using electrified rail the pollution is much reduced and they aren’t clogging up the country.Of course whether one needs to be in the office or not is very dependent on your job. In mine it’s handy being amongst colleagues to have an idea what deals they are. It’s almost essential for graduates and apprentices to be in earshot of qualified staff.
bigpriest said:
The media are fixated on HS2 being some attempt at a speed record between major cities.
Indeed, I don't know where the issue has come from - whether it's just the media or whether the marketing emphasised it too much - but everyone seems fixated on the chance of saving 15 minutes off a journey from Birmingham to London when that's just a side-effect of having a new purpose-built line. Chrisgr31 said:
Its apparently on budget. However government changing their mind at Euston means £105m spent on design is wasted. How you spend £105m on design is beyond me!
Well......... changing the Archtiect and Lead Engineer 5 years into the design phase didn't help........you can't do that and not incur significant costs, as the new consultants have to still re-design the design, redo calcs, documentations, BIM models, and drgs etc.,etc.And now, deleting one platform from the design means a significant proportion of that design first started in way back 2012 (that 10 years ago) can now no longer be used, and so its start all over again.........
droopsnoot said:
bigpriest said:
The media are fixated on HS2 being some attempt at a speed record between major cities.
Indeed, I don't know where the issue has come from - whether it's just the media or whether the marketing emphasised it too much - but everyone seems fixated on the chance of saving 15 minutes off a journey from Birmingham to London when that's just a side-effect of having a new purpose-built line. Gassing Station | Boats, Planes & Trains | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff