Expanding Capacity for a Shorter Waiting Time
1. Come 2012, with the completion of the Jurong East Modification Project (JEMP), commuters will have a shorter wait for trains along the North-South and East-West Lines and a more comfortable ride during peak periods. JEMP is one of the broad range of initiatives announced under the Land Transport Review in January 2008 to promote public transport as a choice mode.
2. Currently, trains travelling to and from the Jurong East and Bukit Batok stations have to take turns arriving and departing from the shared middle platform at Jurong East station. This slows down the trains running through the Jurong East interchange station. JEMP, which entails adding a new track alignment and platform at the Jurong East interchange station for the North-South MRT Lines, will overcome this infrastructural constraint. As a result, trains can be put through Jurong East station at shorter intervals.
3. Concurrently, the Land Transport Authority (LTA) will also add another 17 trains to the North-South and East-West Lines by end 2012 to take full advantage of the shorter train intervals through Jurong East made possible by JEMP.
4. With the completion of the JEMP and the purchase of additional trains, the carrying capacity of the North-South and East-West Lines will increase. SMRT would be able to run additional train trips, particularly during peak periods, to shorten waiting times and reduce crowding on trains.
5. Mr Yam Ah Mee, LTA Chief Executive said, "MRT ridership has increased significantly over the last decade. JEMP is a timely initiative to meet our travel needs. With JEMP and the additional trains, commuters can look forward to shorter waiting times and a more comfortable journey."
6. Commuters can expect a shorter waiting time of around two minutes at stretches that experience heavy loading during the peak within peak periods, compared to the current 2.5 to 4.5 minutes at some stretches of the North-South and East-West Lines today. JEMP and the additional trains will boost passenger carrying capacity by 15% to ensure a more comfortable ride.
7. Civil works for JEMP are scheduled to begin in the first quarter of 2009. Measures will be put in place to minimise disruption to commuters using the Jurong East Station as well as residents in the vicinity. For instance, the new 2.5 km viaduct will incorporate precast concrete beams that would be cast off-site.
Enclosures
I definitely give a thumbs up for this. Its high time they did something about the 1 track for NSL at JE.
As a regular passenger,2012 seems like a long wait.
To see immediate improvement,why cant they just run a bus service parallel to present NS line?Start from Jurong East and end at CCK or Yew Tee.
If people alight at the new platform. Then how to go to the platform to wait for the west bound train?
Must take escalator down from the new platform and take it up to the old platform? =.=" Leddat very troublesome leh!
If not.. wait at the new platfom, and walk passed the train at the old middle platform? like that is hell in rush hour leh.. People squeezing sia~
It'll be good if there is Labeling for train like NS-A to the new platform.. NS-B old middle(more convinient for the people who are taking West bound.)
I am guessing both platforms (the current shared track) and the new platform will be utilised during peak hours. Treat it like any other existing terminus station like Pasir Ris.
I agree there will be a little problem happening say if a person transfers to another train during peak hours, because people will be wondering why there is a south-bound train at the new platform and possibly no train at the current middle platform for passengers transferring from west-bound train. Also, there is the problem of transfer westwards from the North South Line to Boon Lay (and Joo Koon) with the new platform, since many people work in Jurong.
During off-peak hours, the current middle platform will be used I believe. Let's see how this works out 4 years later.
I'm also a bit confused by the design.
Ok, for example, if i transfer to northbound from westbound, which side should i alight? or this information will be displayed on the LCD before arriving at JE?
It should be also indicated which platform the train will use for southbound trian, Jurong East South (the old platform) or the Jurong East North (the new one), so that people transfering to westbound may wait for the train going towards the old platform
another suggestion is to have a new route, using the new platform, for example, yew tee to clementi/buona vista/outram/raffles place/city hall/bugis, whichever has a turn back track (not sure if it's called "turn back" track, would like corrections from u)
eh do a Lo Wu (Hong Kong East Rail line) style, at the arrival (as in when you arrive from Shenzhen side) concourse, they will show the platform with the next train with an indicator.
oh my
I'm rather confused. How will passengers from NSL (from bkt batok) want to go to EWL (Boon Lay) ?
Originally posted by azharjj:oh my
I'm rather confused. How will passengers from NSL (from bkt batok) want to go to EWL (Boon Lay) ?
switch platform via common concourse
Theres sth else they can do, make a loop at the end of the platform. Then the trains dont have to reverse back out.
I think the best they can do is: to add a platform and track next to the eastbound. then there will be 2 tracks where you can alight at both sides (the eastbound will also have a platform on both sides like the southbound). Then they should let trains terminate and depart from the old platform (middle platform) and the northbound train going towards pasir ris during peak of peak should arrive on the new track and platform (Platform C). then passengers going towards pasir ris has a own platform, they can take the train which is coming first ( the train coming from boon lay or the train coming from bukit batok). the passengers from bukit batok where the train terminates at jurong east and go back to marina bay can use platform A to transfer to the train towards Pasir Ris and people going towards Boon Lay can use platform B to transfer to the train towards Boon lay like now. If they do like this only people in the train from Ang Mo Kio towards Pasir Ris, who are going towards Boon Lay has to go to another platform. (they will alight at platform C and then they have to go to platform B)
I made a drawing with paint, but I can't put it here:( so if you want that drawing i can mail it to you if you want to understand
I don't think it will work, with the new shopping centre built just beside.
Besides, there is a bus interchange there. How are they going to do it?
Just wait and see lor. What train they gonna buy anw/
Seems like construction are coming soon.
I just went there last week.. Nothing changed at all..?
Originally posted by brotherchen1982:Seems like construction are coming soon.
thanks for bumping this thread..
Originally posted by QX179R:thanks for bumping this thread..
lets bump bump bump more :P
do it only as and when its necessary to prevent expiry..
i almost forgotten this thread long ago alr..
One thing to do to existing facilities. Just a rough sketch and a small scenario.
Allowing track 1 to be both 'EWL EB' and 'NSL alighting' only. Track 2, middle track that is, to be 'NSL boarding and alighting' only. Track 3 to be 'EWL WB' only.
Taking zone A as platform 1, zone B as switch over from EWL EB to NSL, and zone C as platform 2.
Train numbers in this scenario starting with 0 are NSL trains. Starting with 1, EWL trains.
Train 001 pulls into zone A, alights passengers. 1.5 minutes behind train 002 pulls into zone C. Train 001 pulls out of zone A, goes into zone B, train 002 remains in zone C, picks up passengers and departs for Marina Bay, then train 001 pulls into zone C from B, and picks up passengers, then departs. Train 101 would pull into zone A as train 001 enter zone B. Train 101 picks up passengers, exits zone A into Clementi direction, 1.5 minutes later, train 003 enters zone A, drops off passengers, exits zone A into B. Train 004 enters zone C, drops and takes in passengers, while in the same time train 102 enters zone A and takes in EB passengers, while train 004 exits to let train 003 enter zone C...
This can be applied to normal hours, not only peak.
Why let one train go to the middle track, from NSL to EWL EB then to middle track, then turn back to NSL? This acts as an invisible turn-around facility, without having the train operator walk from end to end when the train is in the platform (or having operators waiting at both platform ends), wasting operation time!
By routing a train to the middle service track at the eastern end of JUR station, the line can be clear for the EWL EB trains to continue service. NSL can maintain 2 minute frequency.
The JEMP project seems to be starting.
I went past JE today and noticed an area, planned for the JEMP, being fenced up.
The JE interchange shelter seems high.
They might need to remove part of it.
It is an "obstruction" to the tracks.
Originally posted by Call4ljw:The JEMP project seems to be starting.
I went past JE today and noticed an area, planned for the JEMP, being fenced up.
The JE interchange shelter seems high.
They might need to remove part of it.
It is an "obstruction" to the tracks.
They might do something like what the New York City Subway did to their Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue station: reconstruct a new arching roof over the expanded station. When the New Yorkers went in to reconstruct and upgrade that station, they build a new, single arching roof over the large, 8-track station; it previously also had 8 tracks, but the platforms had individual roofs originally. I don't see why LTA won't want to take this opportunity to reconstruct the roof of Jurong East station and make it similar to New York's Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue, though it will definitely be a precarious and dangerous job - the New York City Subway had to close down part of that station when they were upgrading it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coney_Island–Stillwell_Avenue_(New_York_City_Subway)
Now the area between JE St 12 - JE Int n JE St 11 - Summit Lane also being fenced up