Daniel wrote:I've seen them at Petone station and Upper Hutt Station (painted green I believe) but not at any other on the Hutt lines. There should be at least 8 for every station.
Upper Hutt 26
Wallaceville 4
Trentham 4
Melling 2
Waterloo 22
Petone 8
Otaki 4
Paraparaumu 24
Paekakariki 4
Plimmerton 4
Paremata 4
Porirua 4
Wellington 12What sort of usage do they get?keg wrote:Daniel wrote:I've seen them at Petone station and Upper Hutt Station (painted green I believe) but not at any other on the Hutt lines. There should be at least 8 for every station.
Current locker locations and numbers:(Source: Metlink)
- Code: Select all
Upper Hutt 26
Wallaceville 4
Trentham 4
Melling 2
Waterloo 22
Petone 8
Otaki 4
Paraparaumu 24
Paekakariki 4
Plimmerton 4
Paremata 4
Porirua 4
Wellington 12
Changes to cycle lockers at stations
Posted on 18/08/2010 12:00am
Greater Wellington Regional Council has recently taken over the administration and maintenance of cycle lockers at a number of stations.
Shortly, cycle lockers will become available to rent on an annual basis at the following stations:
- Wellington Station
- Porirua Station
- Plimmerton Station
- Paekakariki Station
If you wish to rent a cycle locker at any of these locations please contact Nichola Powell on 04 381 7779 or transportinfrastructure@gw.govt.nz
Please note that an annual fee of $20.00 plus a $20 key deposit are payable upon commencement of locker rental.
Looks like Tranzmetro/Metlink are more on the ball than they get credit for.keg wrote:From Metlink:Changes to cycle lockers at stations
Posted on 18/08/2010 12:00am
Greater Wellington Regional Council has recently taken over the administration and maintenance of cycle lockers at a number of stations.
Shortly, cycle lockers will become available to rent on an annual basis at the following stations:
- Wellington Station
- Porirua Station
- Plimmerton Station
- Paekakariki Station
If you wish to rent a cycle locker at any of these locations please contact Nichola Powell on 04 381 7779 or transportinfrastructure@gw.govt.nz
Please note that an annual fee of $20.00 plus a $20 key deposit are payable upon commencement of locker rental.
The Hutt Rd is an issue though (and one that NZTA and it forerunners have faffed about on or ignored).Passenger with bike ordered off train
KERRY MCBRIDE
METRO AND CAPITAL DAY REPORTER
01/08/2012
A commuter train was halted for 15 minutes as two police officers threatened to arrest a passenger because she'd taken her bike with her.
Huck Haeata tried to board a Matangi train from Lower Hutt to Wellington just before 9am yesterday when she was told by staff that she could not take her road bike on the peak-hour service.
She refused to get off, saying she would not cycle on the main highway because it was dangerous.
Although the train departed with Ms Haeata - and her bike - still on board, it stopped for about 15 minutes at Petone station and police were called to escort her off because staff said she was blocking the doorway with her bike.
Two officers came into the carriage and told her to get off the train or she would risk being arrested for disorderly behaviour.
"And then they forced me off the train," she said. "One of the officers gave me an extra little shove, which was really unnecessary."
Ms Haeata, of Lower Hutt, said the rules around bikes on trains were unclear. Train staff told her that prams and wheelchairs were allowed during peak services, but bicycles were not.
Ms Haeata, who is a student at the New Zealand Institute of Sport, said she would not have made a fuss if the rules were clearly signposted to passengers.
continues
keg wrote:Pisses me off as an occasional (considerate) cyclist that sometimes uses metro services (outside the peaks) - this kind of bad attitude rubbish gives cyclists a bad name.The Hutt Rd is an issue though (and one that NZTA and it forerunners have faffed about on or ignored).Passenger with bike ordered off train
KERRY MCBRIDE
METRO AND CAPITAL DAY REPORTER
01/08/2012
A commuter train was halted for 15 minutes as two police officers threatened to arrest a passenger because she'd taken her bike with her.
Huck Haeata tried to board a Matangi train from Lower Hutt to Wellington just before 9am yesterday when she was told by staff that she could not take her road bike on the peak-hour service.
She refused to get off, saying she would not cycle on the main highway because it was dangerous.
Although the train departed with Ms Haeata - and her bike - still on board, it stopped for about 15 minutes at Petone station and police were called to escort her off because staff said she was blocking the doorway with her bike.
Two officers came into the carriage and told her to get off the train or she would risk being arrested for disorderly behaviour.
"And then they forced me off the train," she said. "One of the officers gave me an extra little shove, which was really unnecessary."
Ms Haeata, of Lower Hutt, said the rules around bikes on trains were unclear. Train staff told her that prams and wheelchairs were allowed during peak services, but bicycles were not.
Ms Haeata, who is a student at the New Zealand Institute of Sport, said she would not have made a fuss if the rules were clearly signposted to passengers.
continues
On an unrelated note when sufficient Matangi units are available GW/Tranzmetro should stop inflicting old clapped out rubbish (Ganz sets) on peak hour Kapiti pax just to keep a tiny minority of cyclists happy. Clapped out rusty stuff should be kept to the shorter runs as much as possible (ie Porirua, Plimmerton, Taita & Melling).
Cyclist to lay complaint over removal from train
KERRY MCBRIDE
METRO REPORTER
02/08/2012
A cyclist has defended her decision to remain on a Tranz Metro train after being told to get off.
Huck Haeata was removed from a Matangi train by police on Tuesday morning after she boarded at Lower Hutt with a road bike. Bicycles are not allowed on the train during peak times.
Ms Haeata said train staff were threatening towards her when she would not get off the train immediately and said that calling police was unnecessary and "ridiculous".
She confirmed yesterday she would be lodging a complaint with the Independent Police Conduct Authority, as well as Tranz Metro. However, some fellow passengers came forward yesterday to say that she was aggressive, and that it was selfish to have delayed the train for 15 minutes.
continues
Ms Haeata responded that, if any of the passengers had stood up and told her to stop, she would have got off the train immediately.
keg wrote:The Hutt Rd is an issue though (and one that NZTA and it forerunners have faffed about on or ignored).
kaiwhara wrote:All feedback I have seen so far shows she was the one who was abusive, not train staff or the police. She is an attention seeker, pure and simple. Let's hope she gets banned for endangering public safety...
Yeah they need to do something about it, annoys me nothings been done except a couple of studies and a lot of talk for 5 years.
I actually thing they don't utilize the full extent of off road cycleway (which is overgrown and blocked off) deliberately to discourage people altogether.
pickle wrote:This is a situation where a transit police could be helpful. The power to remove her from the train without having to wait for a patrol to arrive would have shortened delays.
"Unclear"... ...if you're a total moron!keg wrote:Pisses me off as an occasional (considerate) cyclist that sometimes uses metro services (outside the peaks) - this kind of bad attitude rubbish gives cyclists a bad name.Passenger with bike ordered off train...
...Ms Haeata, of Lower Hutt, said the rules around bikes on trains were unclear. Train staff told her that prams and wheelchairs were allowed during peak services, but bicycles were not....
Daniel wrote:Out of interest: did the EE's allow bicycles at peak times?
geoff_184 wrote:I take it the Matangis don't have vertical bike stands?
Doesn't look like it.geoff_184 wrote:I take it the Matangis don't have vertical bike stands?
Okay. Well the GWRC didn't include dog boxes in the spec's for the Matangis so...Callum wrote:Daniel wrote:Out of interest: did the EE's allow bicycles at peak times?
The English Electrics had dog boxes, so yes, they were allowed.
geoff_184 wrote:I take it the Matangis don't have vertical bike stands?
Daniel wrote:Well the GWRC didn't include dog boxes in the spec's for the Matangis so...
Sounds like a wise compromise to me.The King wrote:Daniel wrote:Well the GWRC didn't include dog boxes in the spec's for the Matangis so...
They didn't want dog boxes as they took up "valuable passenger space"
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