News & Discussion: Trams

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PeFe
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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2536 Post by PeFe » Mon Feb 26, 2018 10:25 am

Of course, if there are centre island stops, they can't extend them easily without ripping up the tracks. If they can't extend the stops, they can't get longer trams. Oh dear. I guess we do have a problem then.
Well maybe the state government will just have to buy more trams.......at least the frequencies will be much better.......a smaller tram every 10 minutes is better than a large tram every 20 minutes......

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2537 Post by greenknight » Mon Feb 26, 2018 10:31 am

O'Connell Street Trams announced as well -- https://indaily.com.au/news/2018/02/26/ ... onnell-st/

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2538 Post by Eurostar » Mon Feb 26, 2018 10:40 am

Tramline extended to North Adelaide, hmmm
Buy the old Le Cornu site and use it for tram depot.

Apartments and commercial tenancies above the depot.

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2539 Post by SBD » Mon Feb 26, 2018 11:35 am

Eurostar wrote:
Mon Feb 26, 2018 10:40 am
Tramline extended to North Adelaide, hmmm
Buy the old Le Cornu site and use it for tram depot.

Apartments and commercial tenancies above the depot.
Surely a railway workshop is not compatible with apartments above or next door. If the depot is to be anything more than overnight storage, it needs to be in a light industrial area away from people trying to sleep.

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2540 Post by Nathan » Mon Feb 26, 2018 11:42 am

Maybe they're holding out on announcing the airport line - there would be much more opportunity for a new depot from there (either at the airport, or in Mile End South)

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2541 Post by Kasey771 » Mon Feb 26, 2018 11:54 am

Eurostar wrote:
Mon Feb 26, 2018 10:40 am
Tramline extended to North Adelaide, hmmm
Buy the old Le Cornu site and use it for tram depot.

Apartments and commercial tenancies above the depot.
I can see Anne Moran shaking with rage at the thought of those 'devil rails' entering the enclave of North Adelaide and bringing the stinking 'poor people' of Adelaide inside the castle walls :mrgreen: :mrgreen:

seriously though, I hope it goes ahead just so they might get rid of the extravagent waste that is on street parking on a primary city arterial road like O'Connell Street. Get rid of that(pushing parking to streets off O'Connell) and there's probably plenty of room for 2 lanes of traffic each way, a tram line and a bike lane!
Big infrastructure investments are usually under-valued and & over-criticized while in the planning stage. It's much easier to envision the here and now costs and inconveniences, and far more difficult to imagine fully the eventual benefits.

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2542 Post by Patrick_27 » Mon Feb 26, 2018 11:57 am

It's my guess that they have one more surprise tram announcement to be made. Labor have promised $2b in infrastructure spending at this election which $1.3b of that makes up for the removal of level crossings leaving $700m. There's both of these tram projects which roughly total $550m leaving $150m. Now whilst there was also a new deep sea port in amongst that, there's no costing for that and I'd suspect it would cost more than $150m to undertake such a development. It's in saying that, I wouldn't be surprised if we see an announcement abut CityLink, $150m might not cover the whole project but it would certainly cover a large portion when you factor in that North Terrace is complete in the way of trams and a part of East Terrace will be complete with the EastLink extension.

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2543 Post by Kasey771 » Mon Feb 26, 2018 11:58 am

Nathan wrote:
Mon Feb 26, 2018 11:42 am
Maybe they're holding out on announcing the airport line - there would be much more opportunity for a new depot from there (either at the airport, or in Mile End South)
Airport Line too much in one hit? People are already asking (mostly the usual gang of "tram to nowhere" clowns in the Sadvertiser) where the money is going to come from for Norwood and North Adelaide.
Big infrastructure investments are usually under-valued and & over-criticized while in the planning stage. It's much easier to envision the here and now costs and inconveniences, and far more difficult to imagine fully the eventual benefits.

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2544 Post by SBD » Mon Feb 26, 2018 12:11 pm

Patrick_27 wrote:
Mon Feb 26, 2018 11:57 am
It's my guess that they have one more surprise tram announcement to be made. Labor have promised $2b in infrastructure spending at this election which $1.3b of that makes up for the removal of level crossings leaving $700m. There's both of these tram projects which roughly total $550m leaving $150m. Now whilst there was also a new deep sea port in amongst that, there's no costing for that and I'd suspect it would cost more than $150m to undertake such a development. It's in saying that, I wouldn't be surprised if we see an announcement abut CityLink, $150m might not cover the whole project but it would certainly cover a large portion when you factor in that North Terrace is complete in the way of trams and a part of East Terrace will be complete with the EastLink extension.
SA Labor has promised $150M to establish and fund a bureaucracy to apply for a $500M loan to build a deep sea port. http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-02-24/d ... la/9481294

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2545 Post by rubberman » Mon Feb 26, 2018 12:15 pm

PeFe wrote:
Mon Feb 26, 2018 10:25 am
Of course, if there are centre island stops, they can't extend them easily without ripping up the tracks. If they can't extend the stops, they can't get longer trams. Oh dear. I guess we do have a problem then.
Well maybe the state government will just have to buy more trams.......at least the frequencies will be much better.......a smaller tram every 10 minutes is better than a large tram every 20 minutes......
You have just enunciated the worldwide problem that busy tram system operators have. Truly, and with zero sarcasm meant. Smaller and more frequent trams are great in the suburbs. However once you have a lot of them in the CBD, the greater the number of trams, the more they "platoon", and the capacity plateaus. This happened in Budapest. Their main tram street had huge numbers of smaller trams, and long delays. On that street they went to long trams on longer headways, and the delays ended. So, the answer to your question boils down to the numbers of trams needed. It may be possible. But we might not know till it's tried.

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2546 Post by rubberman » Mon Feb 26, 2018 12:48 pm

SBD wrote:
Mon Feb 26, 2018 11:35 am
Eurostar wrote:
Mon Feb 26, 2018 10:40 am
Tramline extended to North Adelaide, hmmm
Buy the old Le Cornu site and use it for tram depot.

Apartments and commercial tenancies above the depot.
Surely a railway workshop is not compatible with apartments above or next door. If the depot is to be anything more than overnight storage, it needs to be in a light industrial area away from people trying to sleep.
As a historical note, the Adelaide and Suburban Tramway Company had its depot in North Adelaide with stables in Margaret Street and access via Roneo Place. The stables continued with use for horses delivering Golden Crust bread. I used to live nearby, and can say the aroma was...horsey when the wind came from there.

A workshop would be unsuitable certainly. However, it's just space that's required. So, if space for trams isn't appropriate, then neither would space for cars, surely? Yet I have heard several suggestions the Lecornu site could be used for car parking. Personally, I'm not in favour of either, I'd prefer something commercial like a hotel. However, it would be a good strategy to put it up as a tram parking area, and then when the shouting started, withdraw that and say that of course if a tram park is not suitable, neither is a car park, to kill both ideas. There would be far less vehicle emissions and noise from a tram park too, since trams would be in and out far less frequently than cars going in and out for a couple of hours.

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2547 Post by HeapsGood » Mon Feb 26, 2018 1:17 pm

https://indaily.com.au/news/2018/02/26/ ... ise-twist/
Labor's preferred route for its promised tram extension to the eastern suburbs cuts through the iconic “green island” median strip on Osmond Terrace before turning right onto Magill Road, InDaily can reveal.

Over the weekend, Premier Jay Weatherill promised his a re-elected Labor Government would spend $279 million extending the new North Terrace tram corridor down East Terrace, up Rundle Road and onto The Parade, terminating near George Street.

However, InDaily can reveal that the preferred route to extend the EastLINK tramline further east will link The Parade to Magill Road by cutting through the large median strip along the centre of Osmond Terrace.

The EastLINK consultation document produced by the Government acknowledges likely “reticence to impact on the green island with associated trees and sculptures” on Osmond Terrace.

It is unclear how many trees or sculptures would have to be removed or relocated as a result of the planned EastLINK tramline extension, but a diagram contained within consultation documents for the preferred route the shows trams taking up about two-thirds of the green strip.

The Labor Party’s preferred route to extend EastLINK runs down Osmond Terrace, up Magill Road to St Bernards Road with a spur along The Parade to Parade Central. Image: supplied.

The Osmond Terrace north-south route would take trams up to Magill Road, continuing along the key suburban road before turning left to terminate at the University of South Australia’s Magill campus on St Bernard’s Road.

The plans show that last 300-metres of the extension announced on Sunday – which runs along The Parade to the areas central cinema, hospitality and retail hub, is essentially a spur line.

A tramline along Osmond Terrace, segregated entirely from traffic, is considered superior to placing trams on the road.


The ‘preferred’ option for a tram service down Osmond Terrace would take up much of the median strip. Image: supplied.

Consultation so far, detailed in the document, shows that Labor still has many people to convince about the benefits of tram travel, with just under a third of respondents saying they didn’t support the EastLink proposal at all.

It is unclear what proportion of respondents actively support EastLINK because responses from “supportive” to “hesitant” are lumped in as a single figure – 54 per cent.

The consultation documents caution against replicating the tram network in Melbourne – where carriages share the road with cars.

The Victorian city has “the largest, but slowest tram network in the world” and would need about 100 fewer trams if they did not have to compete with traffic, the documents say.

It follows that allowing cars to share the tram lane on Osmond Terrace would slow the service and make it less reliable, Government transport planners have reasoned.

A third option – building tram tracks along the road but excluded traffic – would knock out car parking along the key corridor.

Six potential north-south connections were considered to link The Parade and Magill Road, but problems with the design of the Portrush Road/The Parade intersection ruled out those options to the east of Portrush Road. Osmond Terrace and Queen Street were deemed the most viable of the westerly options.

Despite the expected “reticence” among locals to use the Osmond Terrace median strip as a new tram route, Queen Street was considered an even less palatable option.

“(Queen Street) was ruled out for a number of reasons including the likely push back from Queen Street residents,” the documents say.

Rethinking the purpose of Adelaide’s public transport system
Consulation documents for the EastLink and ProspectLink tram extensions also advocate a major re-think of Adelaide’s public transport network, which is currently dominated by buses, and a move away from the city’s heavy reliance on cars.

They say that the primary goal of Adelaide’s public transport has been to maximise coverage, so that most people live close to a service.

However, this approach has meant poor frequency of services for many bus routes in the outer suburbs of Greater Adelaide.

The public transport system in Adelaide has been “dominated by buses that compete with, rather than compliment, our backbone services (train, tram and O-Bahn),” the documents say.

“These backbone services have a much greater passenger capacity and are separated from general traffic, making them much more reliable, with better travel times.”

Government traffic planners want a transition from this high-coverage service model to one with services that link cohesively part of a “coordinated system” to “provide better travel times for passengers and improve the frequency and reliability of services”.

Under the proposed model, feeder bus services would take passengers to “backbone” train, tram and O-Bahn services, which would be complemented by high-frequency ‘GO ZONE’ bus services along key routes.

Meanwhile, planners argue that Adelaide’s increasing reliance on cars over the past several decades “has had a number of negative implications, not only for our environment, but the health and wellbeing of our communities”.

Though private car travel had given outer suburban areas Adelaide’s strongest residential growth, employment growth had been stronges in the inner suburbs, creating an “imbalance (that) has major implications for the transport system and contributes to peak hour congestion”.

Large trams move people with far greater efficiency than cars, the documents say.

“Tram services can move between 4000 and 20,000 people per hour in one direction, in space equivalent to one lane of road traffic,” one of the consultation papers reads.

“The same space dedicated to an arterial road lane could only move 800 cars – about 1000 people.”

Large trams such as those operating in the Gold Coast can carry up to 300 passengers at once.

“Replacing 300 car drivers with one tram … can essentially replace a 2km (motor vehicle traffic) queue with a 43 metre tram.”

Tramline along “narrow” Prospect Road has its pros and cons
Weatherill also announced this morning that a re-elected Labor Government would spend $259 million sending trams up O’Connell Street, the with ProspectLINK to be further extended along Prospect Road.

Consultation documents for ProspectLINK, also obtained by InDaily, acknowledge several disadvantages of the future Prospect Road extension.

These include the fact that the main street is relatively narrow, that a tram service there would heavily impact on bus services, that it would potentially impact heritage property and that it could impede access to the Braun Road Bicycle Boulevard.

However, the advantages of the route included a large nearby resident population, the 40km/hr traffic speed environment and the capacity for rear laneway parking.

Unlike consultation results for EastLINK – where opinions ranging from very strong support to hesitancy were lumped together – the ProspectLINK consultation results are clearer.

They show equal support and dissatisfaction with the plan: 26 per cent of respondents “very strongly” support it while 26 per cent support it “not at all”; 15 per cent “slightly” support it while 15 per cent support it “not really”; the remaining 18 per cent of respondents were “hesitant” about ProspectLINK.
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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2548 Post by adelaide transport » Mon Feb 26, 2018 1:35 pm

The Government has been talking about these High-Frequency Go-Zone bus routes on major roads for the last 5 years as well as more feeder services as you mentioned. It also wants to simplify Route numbering-"Hooray". But when? It should be starting to happen now-or is this more Government spin?
No one will answer those questions!

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2549 Post by Haso » Mon Feb 26, 2018 1:46 pm

Referring to today IndDaily article... and Heapsgood post

Does this route make sense? Magill road is too narrow for tram and road traffic (for Australian perception) and that will create a lot of opposition...
preferred-route-1100x329.jpg
preferred-route-1100x329.jpg (93.3 KiB) Viewed 3016 times
Image The 50-50-90 rule: Anytime you have a 50-50 chance of getting something right, there's a 90% probability you'll get it wrong.

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Re: News & Discussion: Trams

#2550 Post by HeapsGood » Mon Feb 26, 2018 2:03 pm

I also hate the Osmond Tce option... it should continue down the Parade and then go up either Port Rush or Glynburn before going onto Magill.
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