No, I'm saying that a line slightly more than twice the length would cost around 2 1/2 times as much (ie 25% more by unit rate) when allowing for inflation and other factors. Given the out turn cost of the Borders railway is over £400m at 2015 prices* and this railway couldn't possibly be built for another decade, 2% pa compound inflation seems reasonable.
Don't deceive yourself about the differences between this and the Borders railway. Much of this railway would be on a brand new alignment, as the old is under roads - as you say, much is within spitting distance of the A75, rather too close in fact. But you miss the point about accessibility. It's not how close to the nearest road that's the problem. It is how close to the nearest significant logistics railhead it is, and the nearest base of employment. A project like this will need several thousand people to build it, including hundreds of specialist engineers. You will need to feed, water and entertain this small army. Where is the capacity for this? More to the point where are they? There's not that many of these specialist people within 100 miles of the line, even if you took them all out of their existing jobs. So you will have to ship them in, and they will want paying extra - a lot extra - for that.
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*Please read my earlier posts. The figures you quote are 2012 budget at 2012 prices. Not 2015 project completion costs at 2015 prices.
There are so many holes in this its like Swiss cheese.
Why couldnt it be built for a decade ?
'Much of this railway would be on a brand new alignment'. Utter hogwash. the vast majority of it would be built on the old formation.
'As the old is under roads'
More hogwash. There are a few short sections of the A75, totalling no more than 2 miles built on the old route. A short section just east of CD on the Dalbeattie road (A745), a section at Cairntop, and another 2 tiny sections of 200 m each approx. at Shennanton and Benfield farms. You clearly have no local knowledge and are wildly exaggerating what you are looking at on Google maps.
While your inflation prediction is probably reasonable, neither you or I know the inflation rate for the next few years, so that makes your 'billion' speculative to say the least.
'3km viaduct'. There is a short section of missing embankment just west of the Cree, no more than 300 metres. so you've exaggerated that by a factor of 10.
And i'll repeat what things you continue to ignore because they don't suit your agenda.
1.No city bypass to temporarily realign/burrow through at massive cost. Less 'stations on a 65 mile route than on a 31 mile route, saving millions in station construction costs.
Lower land prices.
Less river crossings than the Borders route despite being much longer.
Even if the Borders line cost £400 million, that is still only £13 million per mile.
That still only makes this line £845 million at 2015 prices. And I repeat yet again the differing costs I mention in the above paragraph ensure that this line would cost less per mile. The only way it would cost a billion is if it wasnt built until the 2030s. This is 2016. You keep quoting 2012/2015 prices for the Borders line, so it is fair enough for me to quote current prices.
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You say doom and gloom, I say reality.
It's arguable that I'm better looking than Idris Elba. Unfortunately I don't live in that fantasy world...
Look at a map. Look at the position of the A75. Look at the 1856 survey of a route from Drummore. to CD.
NO fantasy.
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You say doom and gloom, I say reality.
It's arguable that I'm better looking than Idris Elba. Unfortunately I don't live in that fantasy world...
If a line is 1 1/2 miles shorter, the journey time is shorter .Fact.
If you don't have 4 major viaducts to maintain maintenance costs are less. Fact.
In you realty nothing would have ever been built, we'd all be on horses and carts because everything would have been too much of a risk.
Don't cross the road tomorrow. Far too risky.
No ambition.
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You say doom and gloom, I say reality.
It's arguable that I'm better looking than Idris Elba. Unfortunately I don't live in that fantasy world...
Reasons for avoiding the old route via Parton are numerous.
1 .Its 1 1/2 miles longer.
2.There is virtually no population, therefore no revenue earning potential on the old 23 1/2 mile section between Creetown and Castle Douglas.
3. 4 major bridges /viaducts on that section, 2x Water of Fleet *Little demolished) Stroan and Boat of Rhone (Ken) requiring replacement or upgrade.
4. Sections of embankment missing/eroded around Crossmichael, also low lying close to the Ken/Dee water/loch.
5 . Level (almost) crossing of the A75 Castle Douglas bypass.
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Edinburgh - Galashiels has had a long established half hourly bus service (not including the three/ hour via Peebles).
Whilst Stagecoach have turned a lot of interurban services in "rural" areas into decent coach services (including the X76 to Cumnock, the X74 to Dumfries), they've never managed to built Dumfries - Stranraer into a busy frequent service.
What does that tell us about this relatively unpopulated corner of the country?
...yet you seem fairly obsessed with mentioning the Tweedbank route at every opportunity, which is equally relevant/ irrelevant to a Dumfries - Stranraer line (depending on your viewpoint). Which way do you want it?
An improved Belfast - Heysham ferry could solve a lot of the "problems" that you are trying to "solve" (by taking a lot of lorries off the A75).
Forget about Beeching. It was fifty years ago. Some basket cases lines were kept open, some borderline cases were closed.
Water under the bridge now - you'd be starting from scratch using modern construction methods - misty eyed recollections about the good old days are irrelevant.
Saying "fact" a lot just makes you sound like David Brent. Opinion.
There are plenty of places where freight takes a longer route to get to its destination - which is why some uses the GSW and S&C to get from the Central Belt to Yorkshire/ beyond. Opinion.
As it's going to be waiting for a ferry etc, it's not like we are talking about excessively time critical stuff anyway - a diversion via Ayrshire isn't the end of the world. Opinion.
'misty eyed recollections about the good old days are irrelevant.'
I wasn't even born when the Beeching cuts happened , how can it be a recollection?
Freight formerly went via the Nith Valley and the S&C to keep it away from VWC services on the WCML, the extra distance is irrelevant in this case..
Re Kimarnock diversion,Would you drive 135 miles in your car to get.75 miles along the road,? Of course you wouldn't.
If the Belfast-Heysham ferry is the panacea to all the world's ills, why hasn't it been improved already ??
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Of course the same people can work on the project. But you need at least twice as many of them. And whilst Galashiels is 60miles from Dumfries (actually 67 by the fastest route), Stranraer is 125miles from Newcraighall. Neither are a reasonable commute, given the state of the roads on the way. Even so, I don't suppose either are particularly well stocked with civil, electrical and signalling engineers. They will come from The Central belt and much further afield.
The River Cree - I did look at a map, and I said embankment and viaduct. The tidal estuary is wide there - are you suggesting you
don't need 3km of embankment and viaduct to cross it? How else would you get across that, and the A75 and A714? How else would you protect the line from a 1 in 200 year flood event as per design codes for new railway civil engineering?
The cost for Borders at February 2015 prices is
at least £340m for the construction, plus your £60m for all the other costs (which I believe to be light as stated before). I don't have a source for £340m, but I do have a source for £330m, which was more than a year before the official project completion; the cost went up again I'm told.
https://www.networkrail.co.uk/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=30064794503
Let's be generous and say it stayed at £330m (it didn't) and your £60m is right (I have grave doubts) and add in the 2.5% RPI since Feb 2015 (ONS figures) and you have £400m.
The £294m is clearly 2012 prices, as per Transport Scotland project page.
http://www.transport.gov.scot/project/borders-railway
The Network Rail link is dead.
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You guess the route was built to a high standard - there are routes all over the country built to high standards which were closed after Beeching, many of these routes are now about ready to collapse in a heap.
Network Rail pulls out dozens of structures which were spectacularly built - there's the old bridge coming at for Ordsall Chord which won't need much cutting up to get it removed from site, as an example, it's just life expired.
What's worse is with an old, existing alignment with extant structures, you need civil engineering to come and assess the structure, work out loading capacities and life expectancies, and when structures need to be removed, it's more civil engineers on site to plan a demolition, work out the removal, remove the structure and materials from the site, and then rebuild the new structure.
The costs for that become biblical in quick time.
The survey work is bad too - you have to be absolutely certain you've found every drain, ditch, culvert and underpass, you have to be absolutely certain you know what's holding each retaining wall and embankment together, do the drawings (if they still exist) actually match what's on the ground or did the original engineers back fill with sand, ballast or rubble rather than the agreed fill stone fill ?
If you miss any one of those, you leave the route open to engineering, reliability and ultimately safety problems. If you miss drains, it can be the difference between the route flooding or not during stormy weather, if you don't check what the retaining walls are, can you be sure it's safe to run RA8 trains at 75mph, and so on.
There's also the issue with bridges and whether the structure is suitable for current rail and sleeper/bearer standards, whether you want to rebuild a structure for track purposes and so it goes on.
And there's always work to do - 50 years since Beeching closed such routes, many were run into the ground during WW2, some were bombed and most were never properly repaired and overhauled in the 1950s. They closed in a state that was close to that which would have forced the cessation of rail services in any case.
To get the railway back into the state it was when it closed will be expensive, to then bring it up to modern standards suitable for heavy freight traffic will be yet more expense. The costs are absolutely biblical and could easily spiral well out of control if anything untoward is found or any issues occur which fall outwith the control of the project management.
Undoubtedly true. But these engineering factors affect every railway built, and we are rebuilding them. There is nothing particularly unique to Galloway to suggest building a line here would cost more per mile than anywhere else as Bald rick is claiming. As I have said there are several factors here that show a line in this area would be cheaper to build per mile than elsewhere in the country.
Ps There was no Nazi bombs here....
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No chance of that on the former alignment. You would need many miles of totally new railway, including expensive tunnels to avoid lots of curved / steep sections. All adding many (£ billions) to the cost. The old line had many miles of gradients as steep as 1 in 60 to 1 in 75.
Look at the gradient profile of the line.