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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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On Tue, 6 Apr 2004, Sky Fly wrote:
Here's an idea I thought about to improve bus services in London. Instead of having all bus routes serve all bus stops in London, there would be a division of bus routes into 'local' and 'express' bus routes. Bloody good idea. However, i think it would need to be planned in concert with the rail network; you wouldn't want to have express bus lines duplicating the inherently fast rail lines. Perhaps the bus lines would assume a more orbital configuration, moving people around within the suburbs rather than in and out of the town centre (exactly like the Brixton - Croydon route you describe). Although it would be very nice indeed if there were express night bus services covering the rail corridors. Local routes would serve all currently designated bus stops, but their range would be limited so that no journey was longer than 5 miles. So the existing routes would be split into 5-mile chunks? I'm not sure of the necessity of this, and the introduction of arbitrary breaks would make certain short journeys (from one side of the break to the other) much harder than at present. This would be to improve reliability - the longer a bus route, the greater the chance that 'bunching' will happen and the more the timetable is thrown out of whack. I'm not entirely convinced that bunching is unavoidable with long routes; surely it could be beaten by better control systems? I'm thinking of detecting that buses are close (which would mean tracking them by GPS or GPRS triangulation) and instructing the back one to slow down a bit. Express routes would serve specially designated stops (which would be at major town centres - as an example, the 109 which currently runs from Brixton to Croydon might stop at Brixton, Streatham, Norbury, Thornton Heath and Croydon). The routes would be longer distance routes, because the limited stops would mean that the journey would be a lot faster. Also, these routes would have priority for bus lanes, traffic modulation measures, better driver training, linking of traffic lights to the bus control system, bendybuses, nicer bus shelters, etc. Also, because they only need to get from point to point without stopping on the way, they can make more use of fast, non-stoppable roads like clearways and such, which should speed them up even further. A twist on the scheme would be to have partial express services, along the lines of the fast Metropolitan services; you might have something which looked like Finsbury Park - Hackney - Stratford which stopped at all the present 106 or 253/4 stops between FP and Hackney, but was then express from Hackney to Stratford. I have no idea if that particular route would be any use, but there might well be cases where that sort of thing would be good. Anyway, it'd be one in the eye for the fecking tram nazis!!! tom -- alle Menschen werden Brüder |
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