Very welcome report on progress. Has the makings of a very busy park and ride sta. for London and Stevenage employees and any other refugees from Ulez. Invaluable infrastructure for this business park as its prime purpose. Prince Buster instead of Prince Jammy next time.
I take your point - but no!!! This station is unusual in that it is specifically built without any parking. It only has taxi drop off. And lots of cycle parking. It is expected to serve people walking from the station to the Addenbrookes Biomedical Campus.
Will Cambridge South station have 3 platforms just like Beaulieu Park or will it have 4 platforms. With 2 platforms used for Greater Anglia and the other 2 platforms for Great Northern & Thameslink.
I loved Rainbow when I was young.I still remember the words to theme song and I’m 49.It’s weird what stuff you never forget.😳I remember the theme lyrics to lots of 80’s children’s program’s but sometimes can’t remember what I went in a room for.😂😂😂😂
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Absolutely phenomenal video. I take the train from Ipswich to Cambridge very frequently and always wondered why it went through Cherry Hinton but shot upwards towards Asda
Oh... I don't know, thought it was just the name... i found this... Further along the track lay Polecat Farm, the last buildings until you reached Cherry Hinton. A farm sale in 1839 gives us a glimpse of Mill Road at this time, recording carts and farming tools, "a well shaped three year old nag, a promising black yearling cart colt" as well as a "strong brown cart horse, three ewes, twenty five guinea fowl, fifty head of poultry". Today this is the site of 'Cutlacks' and Romsey Terrace. Horses grazed the fields,and wheat, barley and potatoes were grown. It was a flat landscape broken by hedges along the side of Mill Road, and the occasional haystack. In 1839 the local newspaper reported one of these had been set alight by a young boy, Robert Creek; only his age prevented him from going to trial, and instead he got a flogging from his father. www.theedkins.co.uk/jo/gwydir/millroad.htm