miklcct
On Moderation
From a quote in London Rail related to Paddington station (emphasis added by me),
So there was a period of 80 years when disabled people could not allow use the tube, all started from the 1913 design error, and they will now take centuries and billions of pounds to rectify.
I would like to understand why was the original 1913 design ever approved right at the beginning, given that older station used lifts as the mean to access the platforms? Century-old stations already had lift access and level boarding which comply with today's accessibility standard.
Back in 1913,
Its the fact Paddington tube station has escalators! AND emergency stairs! Oh but it’s got those even now, what’s the game eh? Back in 1913 this was the start of what one could plausibly describe as several negatives for the tube system. One of those alas resulted in a mortarium that banned disabled people from using the tube and that was because they couldn’t use escalators. This restriction was finally lifted in 1993 (Hansard).
A guy known as Bumper Harris was reputedly employed a couple of years earlier used to ease people’s fears of the brand new (and then experimental) escalators at Earl’s Court. (A station that has doubtless retained its lifts whilst having escalators as an add-on – and that should have been the model to follow and not Paddington’s). Whether ‘Bumper Harris’ happened isn’t for certain – however the modus at the time would have been to allay abled people’s fears of using something other than the lifts. And not in a million years to promote any idea that disabled people could use the tube! Bumper Harris did in fact exist but uncertainty on the story leaves one with just an idea of what actually went on. Whether Bumper Harris had indeed demonstrated that these new escalators could be used with ease, the ensuing construction of numerous escalator banks across the tube system soon caused London Underground to place limits on who could thus access the tube system.
Indemnity forms for which the blind, ‘invalids in chairs’ and others for example were issued forcing people to sign these in order to even use the London underground. These forms essentially signed away any rights should they use the tube and some mishap of some sort should occur. The London Passenger Transport Board was quite resolute there should be no easy means by which disabled people could use the tube.
So there was a period of 80 years when disabled people could not allow use the tube, all started from the 1913 design error, and they will now take centuries and billions of pounds to rectify.
I would like to understand why was the original 1913 design ever approved right at the beginning, given that older station used lifts as the mean to access the platforms? Century-old stations already had lift access and level boarding which comply with today's accessibility standard.
Back in 1913,
- how did disabled people travel on public transport in general?
- why didn't such poor design result in a lawsuit stopping the construction of such new design, forcing the continuation of the old way of using lifts to access stations?