News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
One I've thought of this morning. Now that Torrens run both 228 and J1 if 228 was to deviate via the Lyell McEwin and times adjusted they'll have a Go Zone beteeen Elizabeth East and Salisbury Heights
Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
A number of routes are annotated ""Service does not operate between Christmas and New Year" symbol removed – reduced timetable will operate during this time " - will Labor now complain that the new operators will be running a reduced service? It didn't seem to mention the new stops in the now-abandoned major rewrite of timetables.Modbury_Man wrote: ↑Sat Jul 04, 2020 1:25 pmSome tweaks to AdelaideMetro timetables and stop numbering effective from tomorrow - doesn't appear to be much but normally there is more than a day's notice (appears AdMet only posted it today).
https://adelaidemetro.com.au/Announceme ... ce-changes
Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
Article from In Daily discussing the fallout from the failed bus changes.
State Govt's own research shows why wheels fell off bus reforms
The market research the State Government says informed their now abandoned changes to the public transport system reveals where the plans went wrong – with more than three-quarters of people happy with their access to stops and stations. What now for public transport reform?
Transport Minister Stephan Knoll painted a sad picture of public transport during his ill-starred efforts to sell a “once-in-a-generation” change to Adelaide’s bus system – changes that were spectacularly dumped last week.
Knoll repeatedy referenced customer research which he said informed the changes, designed to provide speedier and more frequent services on busy corridors.
He insisted that the system was “not working”.
But did the Minister listen too closely to the concerns of people not using the system – rather than core customers?
“It’s very clear the stagnant growth, in fact some of the decrease in the number of people using it meant we have to look at changing the system,” he told ABC radio.
“And what we did last year and the year before is actually undertake some very in-depth, comprehensive market surveys as to why people weren’t using public transport, and what they came back with… is you need a more frequent service and by the way when we get on that bus we want to get to where we want to go more quickly, because at the moment it takes too long to get from A to B.”
However, the research, conducted by Colmar Brunton, shows that two-thirds of people are satisfied with the system – a number that’s higher among regular and occasional users and, perhaps not surprisingly, lower among non-users (a situation unlikely to be improved by Knoll repeatedly saying the system “simply wasn’t working”).
Knoll’s office released an executive summary of the research to InDaily, but refused to respond to requests to provide the full report.
While the research finds that frequency of services and value for money are the key barriers to using the services, it also shows that ease of accessing stops and stations is a top-five driver of satisfaction with the system.
In fact, 78 per cent of those surveyed were satisfied with the ease of accessing stops and stations – the stops that Knoll and his planners wanted to cut back substantially and make less convenient for many users.
In other words, the Government’s concept, to axe some 1000 general use bus stops to ensure more frequent and speedy services, would have made a massive hit to an area of strength in order to address an area of weakness.
The report also casts some doubt about whether the concern of frequency of services is accurate.
It says that South Australians’ perceptions of public transport are divided, with 22% believing that public transport is getting better and 16% feeling it getting worse. The majority – 61% – feel it is staying the same.
Tellingly, the most commonly cited reason for why the system was seen to be improving was “new infrastructure and updated stops and stations”, while “poor service frequency was the main reason why people felt it was getting worse”.
“However, those who use public transport rarely or not at all were more likely to think it is getting worse, which suggests that perceptions of service frequency may be outdated or ‘incorrect’.”
University of Adelaide transport researcher Jennifer Bonham says that public transport has strong support in the community and the Government’s research shows this.
Improvements need to take into account all of the factors that influence people’s decision to use the bus system – or not.
“As the report says, people choose public transport when it is easy to do,” Bonham told InDaily. “And ‘easy’ needs to be understood in a multi-faceted sense including (but not limited to) – ease of access to stops and stations, ease of the journey itself (not being stressed by services not arriving on time or the journey taking a long time), set downs in convenient locations.”
Former Director-General of Transport in SA, Derek Scrafton, says that if the survey had told customers that the trade-off for faster, more frequent services was the loss of local of bus stops and, in some cases, an entire service, then the answers on frequency would have been different.
He said the proposed new system favoured commuters going to key centres ahead of people who don’t have access to private transport and “are captive to the public modes to due financial limitations, old, age, infirmity or who are too young to drive”.
The fact that such a profound shift was contemplated indicates to Scrafton either a misunderstanding of the role of public transport, or the dominance of rail and tram-focused planners in the bureaucracy – or maybe both.
“An essential role of government is to part-fund public transport services that provide basic accessibility in the same way it does to ensure other essential services such as shelter, health and education are available,” he said in a submission to Minister Knoll.
Scrafton also believes the proposals “have the hallmark of being thought up by planners who run (or would prefer to run) trains and trams rather than buses: end-to-end line service with few stops, no bifurcations, minimial network connectivity or local areas services”.
This is understandable as the SA Government has owned and operated the rail system directly for over 25 years, during which the bus system has been contracted out to private companies for its operation,” he says.
“In recent years up to half the cost to the taxpayer has been spent on rail and tram services which only serve at most 25 per cent of public transport users who pay a fare. A bias, whether deliberate or unintentional, is evident in the Government’s public transport planning and administration.”
What next?
Bonham, a senior lecturer in geography, environment and population at the University of Adelaide, believes there are positive actions the Government can do in the short, medium and long-term to address the barriers to public transport identified in its research.
As a guiding principle, however, she says the Government needs to consider public transport services as an investment, because they foster social inclusion across all socio-economic categories.
In the short-term, she says, increased patronage could be encouraged by increasing the proportion of people living within 400 metres of a stop or station – both through increasing services and using land-use mechanisms.
The benefits of having more frequent services is reduced if the buses get stuck in traffic. So what’s needed is to provide more dedicated bus lanes, or high-occupancy vehicle lanes, on major cross-town routes and key reoutes into the city – such as Tea Tree Gully to Elizabeth or Mt Barker to the city.
“If our transport planners are serious about improving the reliability and timeliness of public transport then this is one of the most important measures they can introduce,” she said.
Bonham also believes the Government can use price signals to encourage patronage, by introducing weekly, monthly, quarterly and annual tickets.
“People are incentivised to use the system to maximise the return on their investment,” she said.
Increasing patronage would also improve safety, with more people providing “casual surveillance” at stops and stations.
In the medium term, better integration is Bonham’s favoured approach.
The Government says it is focusing on this as a strategy, but Bonham suggests cycle park and ride facilities would be a useful addition to the network. It’s cheaper than car park and ride and is good for commuters who live beyond comfortable walking distances from their stop, but don’t want the expense of car parking nor the hassle of congestion which is common around park and ride stations.
In the long term, Bonham wants to see regulatory mechanisms in place to make sure we design neighbourhoods where people have options for getting to the services they need – a concept sometimes called “20-minute neighbourhoods“.
At the moment, she explains, Adelaide has very little housing choice – it’s predominantly either a tower apartment in the city or a detached home in the suburbs. As a result, many people must have a private car to navigate even their own suburb.
Greater housing choice, concentrating population around key hubs, would make it more feasible for people to walk, cycle or use a mobility scooter to get to services, and it would also make public transport services more feasible.
“You start thinking much more broadly than ‘everyone needs a car and public transport is just the fill-in option’, which is what we do at the moment and pretty much have been doing since the ’60s,” she said.”
https://indaily.com.au/news/2020/07/06/ ... s-reforms/
Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
So, in summary, the changes were proposed to address the reasons why some people do not currently use public transport. The proposal was then dumped because some people who currently use it complained.
If "we" want more people on public transport, it has to be made more attractive to the people who are not using it at present. Whether any of the people who gave reasons not to use it would change, and how quickly are issues to consider too.
I think that the Government did a poor job of marketing the change, not just the new system. The ALP did a good job of cultivating outrage against the change, and the government was not ready to counter that opposition. By the time they got to counting the removed bus stops, they should have at least counted the news ones, and preferably counted the increased number of "stop services", at the same time. One bus route near me was going to be removed under the changes, to be replaced by two others. It's easy to argue this is a reduction in service, particularly as the route numbers were all changing at the same time, so three old numbers would be replaced by only two new ones, and I think a stop or two closed. What didn't show up as quickly is that route number is only used evenings and weekends, and was already the compromise between the two routes that would be renumbered. If a stop was "lost" it was the one on the road linking the two parallel routes, since the weekend service doesn't go into as many housing estates, and uses a stop along the edge that isn't served in weekday daytime as other stops are closer to the people's homes.
If "we" want more people on public transport, it has to be made more attractive to the people who are not using it at present. Whether any of the people who gave reasons not to use it would change, and how quickly are issues to consider too.
I think that the Government did a poor job of marketing the change, not just the new system. The ALP did a good job of cultivating outrage against the change, and the government was not ready to counter that opposition. By the time they got to counting the removed bus stops, they should have at least counted the news ones, and preferably counted the increased number of "stop services", at the same time. One bus route near me was going to be removed under the changes, to be replaced by two others. It's easy to argue this is a reduction in service, particularly as the route numbers were all changing at the same time, so three old numbers would be replaced by only two new ones, and I think a stop or two closed. What didn't show up as quickly is that route number is only used evenings and weekends, and was already the compromise between the two routes that would be renumbered. If a stop was "lost" it was the one on the road linking the two parallel routes, since the weekend service doesn't go into as many housing estates, and uses a stop along the edge that isn't served in weekday daytime as other stops are closer to the people's homes.
Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
That's not what I took from this article. The research which proceeded the whole process was poorly designed. The government then designed a solution for a problem it had misdiagnosed.SBD wrote: ↑Mon Jul 06, 2020 2:24 pmSo, in summary, the changes were proposed to address the reasons why some people do not currently use public transport. The proposal was then dumped because some people who currently use it complained.
If "we" want more people on public transport, it has to be made more attractive to the people who are not using it at present. Whether any of the people who gave reasons not to use it would change, and how quickly are issues to consider too.
We won't get more people on public transport if we alienate or cut out of service those who are dependent upon it.
I suspect the only way system change can be achieved is through a maximalist implementation, which can be made more targetted over time as people adjust.
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Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
The system needs changes but now they won't do them because of a few whingers to Leon Byner.
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Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
The SA government does have a duty to get "the best" results out of the money spent.....Of course opinions differ on what is best.....I know its tough but not everybody deserves a bus route at the end of the street......Adelaide is just way too low density and sprawled out for that to occur.SRW wrote: ↑Mon Jul 06, 2020 2:33 pmWe won't get more people on public transport if we alienate or cut out of service those who are dependent upon it.
I suspect the only way system change can be achieved is through a maximalist implementation, which can be made more targetted over time as people adjust.
So instead of compromising on the service cuts (there were some obvious gaps.....even I said that in my personal submission) we lose the whole thing......no simplification of the numbering system (a 100% winner in my book) no differentiation between "connector" routes and "go zone" routes just the old "hodgpodge" of route duplication and numbering anarchy.
Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
The reason we have a poor* public transport system is because of our past mistakes in planning and removal of the trams. We have started to fix our planning strategy for the better to support a better, more frequent network, but the viability will take some time to be realised as the form of Adelaide changes.
In the meantime, we need to keep our local routes intact so that we don't abandon those who are currently using it, and focus on strengthening our corridors so that they can continue to receive higher frequencies and faster, more direct services.
*I actually think it's decent in the inner suburbs but gets worse the further out of the city you are.
In the meantime, we need to keep our local routes intact so that we don't abandon those who are currently using it, and focus on strengthening our corridors so that they can continue to receive higher frequencies and faster, more direct services.
*I actually think it's decent in the inner suburbs but gets worse the further out of the city you are.
Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
One road is in Adelaide and one road is in Sydney both of them are roughly the same width. Looking at the Sydney example they have managed to fit a bus lane (meaning that buses are not in a traffic jam). If we followed this example on many of Adelaide's main roads as possible that will surely get the buses moving faster and attract people to use the bus, its a better use of existing infrastructure too.
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Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
Yes, but at the loss of bike lanes. No thanks...Eurostar wrote: ↑Mon Jul 06, 2020 6:06 pmOne road is in Adelaide and one road is in Sydney both of them are roughly the same width. Looking at the Sydney example they have managed to fit a bus lane (meaning that buses are not in a traffic jam). If we followed this example on many of Adelaide's main roads as possible that will surely get the buses moving faster and attract people to use the bus, its a better use of existing infrastructure too.
Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
So you prefer the buses be stuck in traffic jam ? Or spend heaps of money widening roads?Patrick_27 wrote: ↑Tue Jul 07, 2020 12:35 amYes, but at the loss of bike lanes. No thanks...Eurostar wrote: ↑Mon Jul 06, 2020 6:06 pmOne road is in Adelaide and one road is in Sydney both of them are roughly the same width. Looking at the Sydney example they have managed to fit a bus lane (meaning that buses are not in a traffic jam). If we followed this example on many of Adelaide's main roads as possible that will surely get the buses moving faster and attract people to use the bus, its a better use of existing infrastructure too.
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Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
Hampstead Road is a major freight route - I'm sure Botany Road is not. However, there are many roads in Adelaide that could benefit from this treatment.
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Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
Without the bike lanes, it means eitherEurostar wrote: ↑Tue Jul 07, 2020 10:17 amSo you prefer the buses be stuck in traffic jam ? Or spend heaps of money widening roads?Patrick_27 wrote: ↑Tue Jul 07, 2020 12:35 amYes, but at the loss of bike lanes. No thanks...Eurostar wrote: ↑Mon Jul 06, 2020 6:06 pmOne road is in Adelaide and one road is in Sydney both of them are roughly the same width. Looking at the Sydney example they have managed to fit a bus lane (meaning that buses are not in a traffic jam). If we followed this example on many of Adelaide's main roads as possible that will surely get the buses moving faster and attract people to use the bus, its a better use of existing infrastructure too.
- bikes travel in the Bus Lane, and buses are required to provide a metre if they pass (and hence have to move in to the next lane), or
- bikes are not allowed in the Bus Only Lane, so have to travel in the next traffic lane, far enough out that a bus can safely provide a metre between the bus on the left and the bike on its right, at the same time other motor traffic is merging out to the right to overtake the bike if the traffic is faster than the bike.
On any route that gets more than a couple of bikes in peak time, the bike lane probably makes other traffic faster than not providing it.
Re: News & Discussion: Adelaide Metro Buses
Having lived in both Sydney and Adelaide, I would say that Sydney is better at managing traffic on major roads.ChillyPhilly wrote: ↑Tue Jul 07, 2020 12:16 pmHampstead Road is a major freight route - I'm sure Botany Road is not. However, there are many roads in Adelaide that could benefit from this treatment.
Firstly, there is very little on-street parking on major roads in Sydney. You generally don’t have to weave around parked cars on major roads. If parking is allowed, the clearways are like 6-10am and 3-7pm.
Secondly, right-hand turns are strictly controlled on major Sydney roads. You won’t find cars stopped in the right-hand lane waiting to turn right into a side street. You turn right at signalised intersections, which usually give you a very long right-turn green arrow so you are not waiting for many cycle changes before you can turn right.
I think DPTI could learn a lot by how Sydney manages its major road network to keep traffic flowing. I think they do it very well considering the traffic volumes they experience.
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