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Excellent post, especially the map showing how operator boundaries frustrate the planning of orbital services that cut across these slices.
One caution in your abstracted map: The piles of route numbers on a segment don't necessarily indicate that the corridor is major or heavily served. The Whangaparoa peninsula has oodles of route numbers and almost no service. Route numbers just indicate complexity, usually derived from the number of branching patterns. What really matters is all-day frequency, which may happen all under one number or a combination of many.
In addition, once you streamline the system in this way other important links become possible and fundable, including major orbitals. New services also come to make sense because they have strong frequent corridors to connect to -- the so-called "network effect."
Happy holidays!
main issue I have here is the CBD focus of the network.
Aucklands public transport does not cater well for those who work outside the CBD.
Network needs to be based around nodes at places like Manukau, New Lynn, busway stations, Panmure, and Greenlane.
Major employment areas like Greenlane have good north-south services, but dreadful east-west services, because of the CBD focus of the network.
When the trams ran in Auckland, people shopped at their local grocer, butcher, dairy and hardware store and only went to “the big smoke” to visit John Courts or Smith and Caughey or to see if Rock Hudson would finally nail Doris Day. Then we had fifty years of the City of Cars which produced malls and mega stores and put the local shops on life support. The only evidence for your transport redesign seems to be tram lines from that bygone age and routes from our current inadequate bus system.
I live in Mt Eden and the only time I go into Queen Street is to the annual film festival or to a public lecture at the University. I go to St Lukes (library, movies shopping), Royal Oak (Pak ’n Save), Mt Roskill (Bunnings) and Newmarket (dentist, movies , shopping). If you think I’m going to bus down Dominion Road, into the City and out again to get to these “sideways” destinations you’re wrong.
Over at ATB Nick R hit the nail on the head when he said:
people will generally use the transport that is easiest for them; they will do whatever is cheap, convenient and actually gets them where they need to be on time.
So instead of hypothesising that Queen Street is at the centre of some celestial transport sphere how about researching where people actually want to go and using that as evidence for your redesign?
These are constructive comments. They all suggest a need for orbital routes, to deliver lateral connections. That is a big part of the Curitiba design. The thing to remember in any redesign though is where the buses go today - albeit inefficiently. That is, they deliver people to the Auckland CBD, and points along the way. The purpose in my redesign is to rationalise some of those corridors/routes - and to increase their carrying capacity - and to deliver frequencies of 10 minutes and less. That gives a service that is "convenient and gets there on time", but not to all destinations. What the bus operator map doesn't show well are the inner-outer link loop services (yellow band under the other operator sectors). It would be a challenge to rebuild the bus network from scratch, so incremental change is likely. Question: do you build the radial bones first, or the lateral orbitals? I suspect it's the radial bones that come first, and which don't assume buses stop and park in the CBD centre. This will deliver one-trip, through-CBD connectivity for some trips. Another thought: instead of pure orbitals (which are difficult given Auckland's isthmus topography), there can be high frequency cross town connector services.
4 comments:
Excellent post, especially the map showing how operator boundaries frustrate the planning of orbital services that cut across these slices.
One caution in your abstracted map: The piles of route numbers on a segment don't necessarily indicate that the corridor is major or heavily served. The Whangaparoa peninsula has oodles of route numbers and almost no service. Route numbers just indicate complexity, usually derived from the number of branching patterns. What really matters is all-day frequency, which may happen all under one number or a combination of many.
In addition, once you streamline the system in this way other important links become possible and fundable, including major orbitals. New services also come to make sense because they have strong frequent corridors to connect to -- the so-called "network effect."
Happy holidays!
main issue I have here is the CBD focus of the network.
Aucklands public transport does not cater well for those who work outside the CBD.
Network needs to be based around nodes at places like Manukau, New Lynn, busway stations, Panmure, and Greenlane.
Major employment areas like Greenlane have good north-south services, but dreadful east-west services, because of the CBD focus of the network.
When the trams ran in Auckland, people shopped at their local grocer, butcher, dairy and hardware store and only went to “the big smoke” to visit John Courts or Smith and Caughey or to see if Rock Hudson would finally nail Doris Day. Then we had fifty years of the City of Cars which produced malls and mega stores and put the local shops on life support. The only evidence for your transport redesign seems to be tram lines from that bygone age and routes from our current inadequate bus system.
I live in Mt Eden and the only time I go into Queen Street is to the annual film festival or to a public lecture at the University. I go to St Lukes (library, movies shopping), Royal Oak (Pak ’n Save), Mt Roskill (Bunnings) and Newmarket (dentist, movies , shopping). If you think I’m going to bus down Dominion Road, into the City and out again to get to these “sideways” destinations you’re wrong.
Over at ATB Nick R hit the nail on the head when he said:
people will generally use the transport that is easiest for them; they will do whatever is cheap, convenient and actually gets them where they need to be on time.
So instead of hypothesising that Queen Street is at the centre of some celestial transport sphere how about researching where people actually want to go and using that as evidence for your redesign?
These are constructive comments. They all suggest a need for orbital routes, to deliver lateral connections. That is a big part of the Curitiba design. The thing to remember in any redesign though is where the buses go today - albeit inefficiently. That is, they deliver people to the Auckland CBD, and points along the way. The purpose in my redesign is to rationalise some of those corridors/routes - and to increase their carrying capacity - and to deliver frequencies of 10 minutes and less. That gives a service that is "convenient and gets there on time", but not to all destinations. What the bus operator map doesn't show well are the inner-outer link loop services (yellow band under the other operator sectors). It would be a challenge to rebuild the bus network from scratch, so incremental change is likely. Question: do you build the radial bones first, or the lateral orbitals? I suspect it's the radial bones that come first, and which don't assume buses stop and park in the CBD centre. This will deliver one-trip, through-CBD connectivity for some trips. Another thought: instead of pure orbitals (which are difficult given Auckland's isthmus topography), there can be high frequency cross town connector services.
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