Man of Harveys
Well-known member
There is already a disused halt in Patcham. It used to be the next stop after Preston Park
Really? First I've heard of it and I'm a bit of an anorak when it comes to things like that. Interesting.
There is already a disused halt in Patcham. It used to be the next stop after Preston Park
It was illegal, therefore impossible, to build a halt at Waterhall then or ever as the length of open track was too short between two tunnels
Given the number of mobile homes that pitch up at Waterhall on a regular basis I think we would have been a joke club due to the number of home games postponed for health and safety issues outside the ground.
The other objection to any major development at Waterhall has always been the impact on the water table.
Obviously an academic question as we are nicely settled now, but had the Falmer proposals had issues preventing an application being viable, yet Waterhall had all its obstacles removed, I wonder whether the site would ever have been a similar success or not.
Would the transport have been any smoother ? Would the match day experience have been as good ? Would the site have been more convenient for some and not for others ?
I heard at the time that the the railway authorities would have considered building a halt. I don't know how true that was.
Also, if both sites had been regarded as locations that would have got the green light, and gone to a vote, I wonder how many folk would actually, with no benefit of hindsight, chosen Waterhall over Falmer.
Obviously, all the pondering is based on the question as being relevant after Archer etc had gone, as opposed to before.
Good grief! How OLD are YOU? I never realised that you spent most of the 1940s pondering the potential benefits of state-ownership of the Southern Railway, only to be surprised when things turned out differently.... things changed since the start. The railways were nationalised and became crappier. I did not expect that!
Good grief! How OLD are YOU? I never realised that you spent most of the 1940s pondering the potential benefits of state-ownership of the Southern Railway, only to be surprised when things turned out differently.