Spartacus
Established Member
- Joined
- 25 Aug 2009
- Messages
- 3,182
7/10 score intially -reduced to 3 by the end. Too much time wasted in endlessly showing you the map , and hyping up the "value" of traffic - not surprised that the flow of several milk tankers a day , and some bundles of cloth compared to the operating costs and infrastructure caused the lines demise. Largest settlement of 2,000 in Lampeter and a trickle of visitors to the impressive remains at Strata Florida.
Annoying and superfluous "tooting" of trains in the narrative.
Apart from that - some very fine colour archive film.
A green desert of territory - as far as population density is concerned. A billion or so to restore ? ....
I know the route very well having family along it and it's very obvious that restoration of a route that never operated at profit, through a sparsely populated area, with many population centres away from the line, already with pretty decent bus links that are no slower than a reopened line would be, serve the towns themselves, not a remote station, and require no significant infrastructure investment, which is very windy and slow, and would be very hard to make any better, is a complete basketcase. It's just crayoning in because some people would rather not go by rail via England or take the bus.
Ironically the bypass isn't quite the impediment it first looks, there is JUST room for a line, though a handful of houses very close might have to go, but not one thing about the line is a good case for reopening other than most of the formation still existing.
I'm actually quite glad people are seeing the folly of rebuilding it, too often when I've criticised the plans people don't really get just how bad a case for reopening it has.