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A Good Synopsis of "BRT"

Started by SteelPan, October 05, 2022, 21:02:12 PM

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SteelPan

I also posted this in the Brisbane Metro thread, people often debate these issues on this forum and this brief video, gives a good overview of BRT as a transit method....certainly it has it's place, but [particularly in SEQ's case], it's really just politicians kicking the can down the road!

BRT's get a 6/10 from me!

SEQ, where our only "fast-track" is in becoming the rail embarrassment of Australia!   :frs:

#Metro

I think costs are more about the level of Priority you buy for the corridor than anything else.

Express services are also easier to implement on BRT than rail.

In the Brisbane case, any rail operation requires a tunnel into the Brisbane CBD. BRT could use the existing QSBS and Victoria Bridge and not require purchasing any new rail vehicles at all.

You could have of course just run more trains on the existing rail network, particularly off peak. But for some mystical reason, there has always been a bias against funding increasing ongoing funds for boring day-to-day operations.

This has led to bizarre outcomes such as multi-billion dollar rail lines that don't have much more service frequency than the buses they replaced.
Negative people... have a problem for every solution. Posts are commentary and are not necessarily endorsed by RAIL Back on Track or its members.

Jonno


Jonno

#3
Seems our Buswsy Doesn't meet minimal BRT criteria

https://t.co/PE20l3qxq3

QuoteThe Definition of Great BRT Is Changing Fast — And Most of the U.S. Isn't Measuring Up
A top international transportation organization is setting the record straight about what BRT is – and what it should aspire to be in 2024.

A top international transportation organization is laying out exactly what makes a bus rapid transit system great in our rapidly-changing world — and why so many in the U.S. aren't measuring up.

Late last month, the Institute for Transportation Development and Policy released the newest edition of the Bus Rapid Transit Standard, which since 2012 has set the bar for exactly how BRT should be designed and run to maximize its benefits for riders — and ranks which cities are clearing that bar in 2024.

Though laymen might assume that "BRT" is synonymous with any old bus lane, the Institute says actual BRT must meet a few crucial requirements that guarantee lines will operate as quickly as possible — and many BRT-esque systems, like New York City's Select Bus Service, don't qualify. Specifically, true BRT has to give buses not just their own lane, but at least a couple miles of separated and protected lanes that drivers can't easily enter; operators also have to align those lanes in such a way that drivers are only rarely allowed to cross them, like in the median of a road or on a dedicated two-way busway, guaranteeing that buses can run nearly as fast as light rail at a fraction of the cost.

Moreover, to even be eligible for ITDP's best-BRT rankings, operators have to incorporate at least a few other basic design elements aimed at speeding vehicles, like off-board fare collection so passengers aren't caught fumbling for change, and boarding platforms raised to the level of bus doors, so passengers can walk or roll straight on with assistive devices or strollers.

And the best-of-the-best systems score highly on hundreds of sub-categories, which assess such things as the providers' underlying business models, how well the lines integrate the local sidewalk network, or whether buses arrive on time.

Defining great BRT at that granular level of detail, Institute officials explain, is becoming even more important as the model explodes in popularity — and as some communities dilute the game-changing concept in response to pushback on drivers.

"There's been a lot of slipping and sliding, especially as the political decisions became more difficult," said Aimee Gauthier, chief knowledge officer for ITDP. "Suddenly BRT wasn't always operating in dedicated lanes, because it was too hard, politically, to take that space from cars. And so that was part of the point [of the standard]: to make sure that when you when you're talking about bus rapid transit, you really get to the heart of what 'rapid' is, and really understand what things are going to make the bus system work better for people."

The 2024 edition of the standard also seeks to get to the heart of what BRT should be besides just "rapid": namely, green, equitable, healthy, and accessible to people of all demographics. The new edition has been updated to factor in things like whether staff is trained to address violence and sexual harassment on board, and whether stations are designed to mitigate flooding and urban heat island effects, rather than adding ever-more asphalt to ever-warming cities.

Systems can also lose points for things like overcrowding, which has become a particularly big deterrent to ridership since the dawn of the pandemic.

"You can't solve every cultural problem with a transit system," adds Gauthier. "But there are ways that you can build in safety into your design and use public transport as a platform for where you want to go as a culture, and as a society."

Some of the communities that ranked highest might come as a surprise. The single best BRT line in the world is in Peshawar, Pakistan, which claimed the title thanks in large part to a "gender audit" that prompted the agency to radically transform its corridor explicitly around the needs of women. A line in Guadalajara, Mexico came in second, thanks in part to its excellent connectivity with the local active transportation networks — something Gauthier says nearly every American system on the list struggled to accomplish.


A green station in Gualdajara, Mexico.Photo: ITDP
A line in Curitiba, Brazil, which is widely credited with launching the world's first BRT system way back in 1974, came in third, and nearly 40 percent of "gold"-ranked routes belonged to Bogotá's famous Transmilenio system, which popularized BRT in the early 2000s.

Meanwhile, only two U.S. lines — one in Hartford and another in Cleveland — earned "silver" status, while six others earned "bronze" or "basic." 


The top-ranking BRT line in the world, in Peshawar, Pakistan.Photo: ITDP
None earned gold.

Cox emphasized, though, that simply making the rankings at all is an "amazing" achievement, and that she's thinks the U.S. is on track to become a global BRT leader — if it invests the money and energy it needs to do better. And she also adds that many of the metrics the Institute outlines can serve as a blueprint to make other kinds of transit great, too.

"The level of dignity that people have when using bus systems is pretty low right now," she added. "You have to wait for a long time, often in an unattractive, terrible places. And if they were able to dignify that experience just a little bit more, that would be great. ... Transit is the cornerstone of the solutions we need for our changing world. The BRT standard elucidates that."

https://itdp.org/library/standards-and-guides/the-bus-rapid-transit-standard/

I have issue with more points for lots of routes and points for buses able to stop anywhere in the platforms. Not sure this creates the customer experience they think it does.



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