Thursday, 12 February 2026

Glasgow Metro - Part 3

S P T - Splendid Proposed Travel!

The SPT report is a little more practical, but still with a fair bit of tecnobabble.
The opening blurb (above) warns that any "Metro" plans will have to also involve the Bus Strategy and an Active Travel Strategy, the latter usually being a pompous way of saying "bicycle and walking".

So almost all of the Mott MacDonald pontificating and much of SPTs response is about travel on rails with no integrated consideration of transport via Mr Macadam's splendid road surface invention.

SPT puts forward four options which are summarised in "headline" boxes each accompanying a map.

You cannot really understand their words without a detailed look at the map, but here they come.

"A" is a 'do least' option but one which aims to make the best of what is currently provided.

In "B" we have trams plus the current network.

Same as "A" but different. The differences are too "technical" for a short blog and slightly too "technical" for fbb's elderly brain.

Which bring us to "C".
This is the "biggie" and almost certainly will never happen unless a giant Strathclyde" golden goose ...
... lays a very large clutch of golden eggs.

Keen readers might like to understand the map extracts that follow in some detail, starting with the "Legend”

Reading in no specific order, we will find tram routes (called LRT because it sounds more trendy) in PURPLE ...
... existing rail in BLACK, the underground (Subway) is BLUE , then we have existing rail that becomes Metro (black line plus ORANGE) with Metro extensions also in orange.

Then there are the coloured blobs.
The red, orange and yellow colours go some way to telling us what the proposals are designed to achieve.

So here goes with a few selected extracts from Plan C.

We start at Renfrew/Yoker out west on the Clyde,
We have a tram from a blank white space (It is greater Clydebank in Dunbartonshire, where be dragons, not Glasgow) which crosses the river and runs via the Airport.  The other tram runs from Glasgow to terminate at Baljaffray, west of Milngavie.

There is an interesting Metro "extension" on the southern bank of the Clyde where there is no existing railway.

Continuing south we see another "extension" in orange which follows a former railway branch from Paisley to Renfrew.
The branch runs from the existing line at Paisley Canal which is extended into dragon-land where be Kilmacolm, former rail terminus.
The tram, which doesn't make it to the city centre, also ends outside of the Glasgow area, presumably at Newton Mearns.

We have another tram line to East Kilbride ...
... supporting the existing train service, even when electrified.

To the north east we see two new projects. There is a tram to large areas of housing terminating at Cambuslang.
The Metro "extension" is on the former rail line to Kirkintilloch ...
... reopening a long-closed branch.

These are just the headlines of SPT's Plan "C" but, because the geographical SPT area does not match the wider "local" railway area, the picture is not complete.

Fortunately, we have an independently designed map which clarifies a full range of proposals. Because this map is drawn with a wider view than SPT, it does a batter job of informing those of us who are trying to understand.

More mapping magic tomorrow.

The Thomas Teaser

The single car diesel is Daisy. She has no direct equivalent in body style on the railways of the somewhat bigger island next to Sodor.
All Mero Cammell units were at least two cars.

Daisy has appeared in several forms over the years.

The diesel locomotive was called BoCo on Sodor and is loosely based on a BR Class 28 'MetroVic".
This 'Thomas' loco has also appeared in various forms.
The similar loco, from across the water on the big island, was of a Co-Bo wheel arrangement with one six wheel bogie and one of just four. It us difficult to spot this on a real loco, but an OO model shows this 'oddity' well.
fbb cannot tell if BoCo is correctly drawn.

Here is BoCo as introduced to viewers of the Thomas TV series.
Bill and Ben are copies of the Port of Par "twins" also available as OO models!
Delightful; a much more restful subject than Clyde Metro - at least fbb can understand the Thomas stories!

The low height is because of a very low bridge on the former Port sidings ...
... with just enough height for an open n wagon!

A better picture of one of these very unusual tank engines appears in the March Railway Modelleir ...
... together with a "lid off" view showing how they fit a motor and electronics in the boiler.

 Next Clyde Metro blog : Friday 13th Feb 

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