Peter Sarf
Established Member
Presumably because the trains they replaced had toilets?
The 456s ae a bit of a distraction in this thread. The 456s were oriiginally destined for South West division of the Southern region (i.e. Waterloo) but probably only to work with 455s which have no loos and themselves replaced 4-SUBs that had no loo. The 456s were delivered circe 1992 instead to the South Central division of the Southern region and worked with 455s there as well as on thier own in groups of 1, 2, 3 or 4 units !. This was to finish off the last of the 4-EPBs (that also never had loos). The 455s are similar units to 456s but 4 coaches long NO loo but have/had inter-unit gangway connections. The 456s are 2 coaches long but had NO inter-unit connections but had a loo instead at the start. I can only imagine the operators view was that 455s should get loos eventually. Nowadays the 456s have the loo locked out/removed AND the 455s have had their inter unit gangway connections removed on Southern TOC (fomerly South Central division of Southern region) not sure if the inter-unit gangways work on SW out of Waterloo. My view is that the loos on 456s ended up as a mistake - thats even if I would prefer a loo.
Why could the loos not be replaced someone asked ?. My guesses are the units were only two coaches long so an accessible loo would have taken up too many seats. Its worse on a single car class 153 btw so I reckon they will lose their loos even if they get formed back into 2 car units. Historically the routes the 456s have worked and will work never had loos anyway so its lack of progress really rather than a backward step.
A point I made earlier is what is best ?. Wheelchair accessible loos on trains OR subsidised taxis for wheelchair users. It depends on how many wheelchair users would potentially use either solution. I know I would prefer a taxi to a train. So what is the answer.
I would like to see things made as easy as possible for everybody. BUT I accept that transport has to maintain the mobility of the majority of the wealth creators for the country. I have more than once missed a train as it was so overcrowded I could not get on. Therefore I fear schemes that reduce the capacity of the service even further are never going to show disabled people in a good light. If we don't keep the majority of people moving then we will lose tax revenue to pay for the support for the less fortunate. Don't forget nothing is free in life (but I try my best).
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