Previously I said that Park n' Rides, or car parks at stations were a bad idea, but the reality is we need them now and in the near future. People use them. My family uses them. Most of them are at freeway stations that are hard to walk to and offer little redevelopment opportunity anyway. But they can be improved.
For one, the concept of partly free parking and partly paid parking is a good one. However the paid bays are at the back, so those who paid are further inconvenienced by walking further, while those who got free parking also get parking close to the station, so the only way to get convenient parking is, well, to arrive early. Or at least this is the set up at Stirling train station; I haven't seen the other stations but I suspect the situation is the same. It would be better to have paid parking at the front and free parking at the back, so people can pay for the convenience of parking near the station.
A blog focused on public transport (PT) issues, particulary that in Perth (formerly A Transport Geek in Middle School)
Showing posts with label Access. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Access. Show all posts
Monday, 28 November 2011
Second thoughts on Park n' Rides
Labels:
Access,
Charges,
Congestion,
Economics,
Free,
Infrastructure,
Joondalup Line,
Park n' Rides,
Parking,
Perth,
Profit,
Subsidies,
Trains
Friday, 21 October 2011
Analysis of Northern Suburbs Service Changes (Part 1)
From 6 November Transperth will be implementing service changes on
buses across the middle northern suburbs (Wanneroo Rd, Alexander Dr, Stirling ,
Warwick , Whitfords , Mirrabooka , Morley , Ballajura and Alexander
Heights). The network will be made simpler, with some new routes and trips
added, increasing frequencies, and after-hour routes cut back or removed,
replaced with more services on regular routes (The Transperth page for these changes is here, and a map is here). This first post of this three-part series covers changes on services on Wanneroo and from Stirling to Warwick, Warwick to Whitfords and Whitfords to Joondalup.
Wanneroo
Rd services will be changed and improved significantly, with two routes
deleted, two routes renumbered, two new routes, and 374 staying mostly the same
apart from a few small timing changes. 363 will be deleted and replaced with extra
service on the 373 and 365, while 347 is also to be withdrawn and replaced with
the new route 387, from Warwick via Balcatta and Wanneroo Rd to Perth, running
every 15 minutes during peak hour and every hour in off-peak. Route 388 will
also be introduced, from Warwick on Beach and Wanneroo Roads to Perth running
every 10-15 minutes in the peak, and every half an hour during off-peak and on
Saturdays. The 346 will be renumbered to 389 and will services will increase to
every hour on Sundays, with small time changes on weekdays, and 373 will become
the 386, with Sundays services again increased to every hour, with small time
changes on weekdays, and only wheelchair accessible buses will operate on it.
The aim of these changes is to get a bus along
Wanneroo Rd as far as Amelia St every 10 minutes on weekdays, every 15 minutes
on evenings until 9:30 pm and on Saturdays, and every half hour on Sundays.
This is good because TUAG frequencies (every 15 min or less) are important in
attracting riders who have the choice of a car. Wanneroo Rd will be join the now
lonely club of corridors that run TUAG buses on Saturdays, although Sunday
buses still won’t be up to scratch.
Some
buses departing from Stirling Train Station will undergo time changes and a few
extra trips, and one route will be added but another removed. Routes 413 will
have some time changes, 414, 423 and 427 will have some timetabling changes as
well as some additional trips. 425 will have timing changes, some extra trips,
including some serving Charles Riley Rd and on Sundays, and a stand change at
Warwick to Stand 8. Route 428 will be added, operating along Jones St and in
Balcatta to Warwick every 15 minutes in peak time, and every hour during
off-peak and on weekends. The after-hours route 435 will be replaced with extra
425 services, with some deviating to Charles Riley Rd. Removing an after-hours
route will make the network simpler and easier to remember, and the
introduction of a new route will improve coverage and make PT for those near
Jones St or going Balcatta better.
Warwick
services will also have some changes. Route 381 will change stands at Warwick
to stand 7, 441 will have major time changes, and it’s route will be modified
slightly, 442, 443, 445, 446 and 447 will have major timing changes and night
and weekend service, to replace the after hour routes 452, 455, and 457 that
will be discontinued, and 444 will undergo major timetabling changes. 344
chnages will be explained in the next part of this analysis. In addition, two
services from Whitfords to Joondalup will only be served with low floor disability
accessible buses. The network between Warwick and Whitfords will be made much
simpler with the removal of after hour buses, and the accessible buses from
Whitfords to Joondalup will not only be better for the disabled, they are
newer, and more spacious and attractive to able-bodied passengers.
In the
next part of this analysis I will look at the revised Alexander Dr, Ballajura,
Alexander Heights, Mirrabooka and Morley services.
Labels:
Access,
Buses,
Feeder buses,
Frequency,
Joondalup Line,
Perth,
Service Changes,
Stations,
Trains
Saturday, 15 October 2011
Why Park n' Ride isn't the answer
Park n’ rides consume
large amounts of land and discourage walk-up patronage. While our Park n’ Rides
are mostly at freeway stations on the Joondalup and Mandurah Lines, where
walking to the station is already hard, the large parking lots surely aren’t
helping. There is also insatiable demand for them, just like roads. They often fill up in the morning peak, so they encourage peak
usage over off peak usage. Instead of replacing car usage with PT usage, it lets car usage
continue along with PT, which is an easy and fairly good outcome for now but
not optimal.
In place of these
alienating Park n’ Rides we could allow residential and commercial development,
or TOD (Transit-oriented development), buildings that will generate much more
traffic that is also more balanced than in Park n’ Rides, while earning money
rather than costing money. To compensate for the loss of the car park feeder
buses should be run much more frequently.
We could also place Park
n’ Rides just beyond walking distance of the station (about 400m for most
people) where the attraction of the station is lesser and so land cheaper, with
links to the station by feeder bus. This would be the best of both worlds, but
it would be difficult to get the land in our existing suburbs because it would
probably be housing, and new suburbs should be optimised for walking, cycling
and taking a feeder bus to the station, so large Park n' Rides aren't
necessary.
In conclusion, we should
reduce our dependence on Park n' Rides, although the idea suggested in the last
paragraph of car parks beyond walking distance of the station deserves
consideration.
Labels:
Access,
Active Transport,
capacity,
Development,
Feeder buses,
Induced Demand,
is not the answer,
Joondalup Line,
Low-density,
Mandurah Line,
Park n' Rides,
Parking,
Roads,
Stations,
TOD,
Trains
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