Two Adelaide F-Type ‘drop centre’ trams at St Kilda have already been modified to allow disabled access, as has the Melbourne W7 1013 and the Melbourne W2 trams the museum holds.rev wrote:How difficult would it be to modify the old trams to allow wheel chair access?VLtom wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 3:29 pmUndoubtedly very hard to run a heritage services along Jetty Rd given the frequency of the trams, even on weekends. As the trams already run every 10 minutes outside peak 7 days a week it makes it very hard to slot an additional tram service in that only uses three stops. The biggest problem is the lack of platform space at the Glenelg terminus, with the tram services themselves tending to get backed up in peak. I would very much like to see a heritage service be introduced, but Jetty Rd probably isn't ideal. North Terrace could work imo, given there should be plenty of spare capacity at the moment, but heritage services aren't ideal - mostly with accessibility for disabled passengers
They required very little internal modification due to, as the name suggests, the drop in the middle. They do still require a purpose-built concrete ramp for wheelchair passengers to board as the entrance is still a way off the ground.
Adelaide’s modern tram platforms cater for low-floor trams, so I actually see issues with disability access even if a modified heritage tram were to run again.
While it is unfortunate, I do think the services should run occasionally anyway as others have suggested. Maybe once a new depot is built. So in another 3 decades or so. lol