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Light-rail: Dope or Nope? Coolio says yes
Read More: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-...722-zvosj.html Quote:
Artist's impressions of the proposed Capital Metro light rail. http://images.canberratimes.com.au/2....jpg-300x0.jpg http://images.canberratimes.com.au/2...pg-620x349.jpg |
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Building Cloverleafs Won’t Inspire Americans to Pay More for Transportation
Read More: http://usa.streetsblog.org/2014/07/2...on/#more-98275 Quote:
http://www.dissentmagazine.org/wp-co...3unfreeway.jpg |
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The value of fast transit
Read More: http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2...-fast-transit/ Quote:
http://i.imgur.com/c1baguF.png?1 |
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And less of getting from A to B, you have to travel through C over long distances, whether it be grade separated or not.
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Like if one lives in Scarborough and wants to go to Downtown Toronto, they have to sit through all the Danforth stations, and that's after getting to that subway to start off with. Made worse by everyone converging on that bottleneck to transfer to Yonge. |
Yeah, but that's true even with driving. The only way around it is teleportation. That trip from Scarborough to Bloor-Yonge Station is a lot more effective when you're going 80 km/h underground rather than the speed limit and stopping at traffic lights.
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For at-grade transit signal priority is a must tho. |
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I agree that trams (i.e. LRT that runs at-grade and in the streets) in essence act a lot like busses. That is the point. Some bus lines have too many passengers to be able to function properly using buses. Trams provide the extra capacity already needed as well as attracting both more passengers (about 30% iirc) and more investments in the areas it goes through. The added capacity and added attraction is important on many line to alleviate other already crowded rail lines.
What about subways in such a case? Sometimes it would be very helpful, but often a subway would mean much further walks to get to the vehicles and from the vehicles to one's destination. Subways are for longer trips. I'd go so far as to say a tram line running on the same street that a subway line runs under can be a good set-up (note: if one has 3-5 more stops per km on the tram line than the subway line). Won't always be, but if there's enough need it will work beautifully. Just like a Subway + bus line can if the passenger numbers are slightly lower or the subway is closer to the surface or has more frequent stops. The whole "trams/LRT are bad, subways+busses is good" schtick is so 60s to a Stockholmer like me. Up until about 1990 the planners and the transit agency here not only closed down all the urban trams almost over-night, they kept trying to get everything that wasn't subways, busses or commuter rail shut down. Some politicians still are very dismissive of everything on rails that isn't subways/commuter rail. Over-crowded inner city bus line? build a subway on the same alignment! Never mind that it is very bendy and parts already have subway lines running right under the same streets. Gah! |
I might add that in a large, dense and heterogeneous transit network, light rail/streetcar lines are simply more easily recognizable and readable than the too many bus lines that feel a little confusing for blended with regular road infrastructures, even when buses have their own dedicated lanes and especially to commuters who're unfamiliar with a particular line or area. In Paris, I noticed people including locals like myself were often kind of annoyed whenever they have to take a bus for an occasional ride, cause it requires a bit more attention and time, while trams feel just about as easy and convenient as a heavier subway line. That might partly explain the bigger ridership and success of the light rail lines.
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Make the effort, and commuter rail can be as effective as rapid transit
Read More: http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2...rapid-transit/ Quote:
Thanks to political initiative and the need to serve a growing region, Toronto’s GO Transit is increasingly making its commuter rail services not so commuter-oriented. http://i.imgur.com/HNXqNeM.jpg?1 |
What Congress Should Be Talking About When It Talks About a National Transportation Plan
Read More: http://www.citylab.com/politics/2014...n-plan/375288/ Quote:
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Need to run smaller DMUs during non-rush hours
The key IMO to making what GO is trying to do work without electrification would be for smaller DMUs to run the same route during non-rush hours.
The out-of-hours GO train should address the need to serve a smaller number of passengers more frequently. Problem is, with double deckers being pulled by huge locomotives, that the for fewer passengers who use such trains, the resulting higher ratio of diesel consumption per unit passenger becomes "uneconomic." While running passenger trains on mixed freight and passenger sections requires robust strengthening of locomotives and cars, even in the tank train US, the SMART project in California is looking at smaller than Budd like diesel cars with multiple dual door exits. |
The problem with Minn's new LRT line is that it forgot what it's original purpose was.
Supporters will say that it is more comfortable, reliable, and creates TOD. That may well be true but if that is the result then the citizens {meaning the people who paid for it} were lied to from the start. They were promised RAPID transit and clearly this new LRT line does not qualify and certainly will not entice any drivers to park their car at home. People want speed. People believe that the best transit trip is the one you don't remember because it was fast and comfortable. Rapid transit can be LRT, monorail, SkyTrain, Metro, commuter rail, or BRT with Transitways, you choose the system that best works for the corridor, the citizens, and the budget. Things like this new LRT line in Minny does more harm than good in certain ways. When hundreds of millions are spent, years of disruption have to be tolerated, and promises of a fast commute are made and then the system is only marginally faster than the bus that preceded it, people feel duped. They look at the new system and see nothing but a waste of tax dollars that could have been spent elsewhere. |
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Miami has a tunnel now
http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/08/0...mi-tunnel.html Quote:
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