Brighton and its conurbation is a major population centre in its own right the reason that the XC was withdrawn is that nobody in their right mind wants to go up north.
I've been silently protesting for Liverpool's reintroduction to the XC timetable for a couple of years now. I mean seriously, Liverpool isn't some small seaside town. LM should come to some agreement with XC so that a new pattern appears:
BHM-LIV (LM) 1tph
BHM-MAN (LM) 1tph
BMH-BHM-LIV (XC) 1tp2h
BMH-BHM-MAN (XC) 1tp2h
BRI-BHM-LIV (XC) tp2h
BRI-BHM-MAN (XC) 1tp2h
So neither Liverpool nor Manchester lose their frequency between Birmingham, and Liverpudlians can finally travel direct to the South West and South Coast.
(I wish.)
Thats strange because according to the official figures Brighton Station has 8.9 million entries and exits per year and is Britains 21st busiest station, ahead of many small provincial cities.
I'm surprised that they did serve some of those stations...Manchester Airport has Northern and Transpennine...why would it have XC aswell?
My perception is, year on year, that Virgin and now CrossCountry have been gradually eating away at the extremities of their route network, so as to create a core set of routes with greater frequency and reliability. I'm thinking specifically of cities like Brighton that have lost XC coverage and presumably places like Glasgow that now have fewer direct trains than they once did.
Could anyone expand on this? Is there any way to compare today's XC timetable with that immediately before privatisation? Where has lost the most trains per day, and which routes (Scotland to the south west, perhaps) have been eaten away at each end the most?
Thanks