• Welcome to RAIL - Back On Track Forum.
 

French Light Rail / Tramway presentation

Started by Scott, January 01, 2017, 09:19:47 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Scott

If people are interested in light rail, I would encourage thenm to study the French systems, which are state of the art in my opinion.

France pioneered modern Light Rail with the Nantes system opening in 1985.  They then took the idea a step further in 1994 when the Strasbourg system opened with the first 100% low floor trams.

In the past 30 years France has built new LRT systems in 28 cities with great success, attracting high ridership (often beating forecasts) reducing car usage, and encouraging economic redevelopment where they are built.  All have segregated track (Type B or C priority ROW) with priority at signals and large low floor vehicles.  This gives them the capacity of a four or six lane freeway (6000 to 9000 passengers per hour per direction).  This has all come at a cost per km lower than what we spend on new freeways of equivalent capacity. 

Today six French LRT systems (Bordeaux, Lyon, Montpellier, Nantes, Paris and Strasbourg) have daily patronage exceeding 250,000 trips per day.  This is higher than the Brisbane Citytrain heavy rail patronage, on less than half the length of track.  These cities are not all high density - Bordeaux, Nantes and Strasbourg have population densities comparable with Adelaide or Brisbane, and lower than Melbourne.  In fact the LRTs have been so successful that Nantes and Bordeaux have abandoned plans to build underground Metros since opening their LRTs.

Why are they so successful?  They are easy to use - convenient access and integrated with feeder buses.  Segregated track and signal priority makes them quick (average speed 20 to 25 km/hr) and reliable.  They run a very high level of service - typically French LRT frequencies will be 3 to 6 minutes during the peak, and at worst 6 to 10 minutes off peak.  This means they also get much higher patronage off peak.  Lastly they look good.  The French are willing to spend up to 10% of project cost on grass track, landscaping, and improved paving of footpaths.  This gives them high public acceptance.  The current fight between Sydney City Council and NSW state government over landscaping in George Street for Sydney SE Light Rail illustrates the importance of this.

This presentation gives a useful overview.
http://onlinepubs.trb.org/onlinepubs/conferences/2012/LRT/TParkinson.pdf

So given that they have the capacity of a six lane freeway (or busway), cost less, and look much better, I find myself asking, why don't we build them more often here?

ozbob



Thanks for the information.  Very interesting.  :tr :tr :tr
Half baked projects, have long term consequences ...
Ozbob's Gallery Forum   Facebook  X  Threads  Mastodon  BlueSky

Scott

Thanks Ozbob.  I only just discovered your forum.  Good job!  I hope to visit here regularly in future :)

BTW the French language version of Wikipedia also has much more detailed articles on all the French LRTs, which they call tramways.  Pop the text through Google translate and you can get the gist.  Lots of good stats too.

While I think the latest generation LRT technology is great, I do not suggest it replace heavy rail.  Heavy rail will always have more capacity and speed.  But in a suburban corridor with no land preserved for heavy rail, street running LRT, G:Link style, makes a great cost effective alternative.

I work in transport planning, but not in Qld. 

rogerfarnworth

Trams in Nice. I travel often to Nice and in recent years the centre of Nice has been transformed from a gridlock to open roads. The new tramways seem to have been partially responsible for this ................

http://rogerfarnworth.com/2017/11/13/a-first-tramway-for-nice-since-1953-and-the-closure-of-the-cote-dazurs-vast-tram-network


verbatim9

A lot of cities are resorting to putting trams underground in their respective CBD's. It works well. Portland is considering this too, as a way to speed up travel times and make the tram more attractive as a mode of transport.  Germany and the Netherlands have been doing this for many years. I think there are a few bottlenecks in Melbourne where trams could go underground as well. Smith St and Chapel St. The Glink tram for the GC Airport leg should be tunnelled under Burleigh Heads for a fast and efficient line.

🡱 🡳