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#1 |
Membership Officer
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Maynooth
Posts: 1,116
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![]() Right people,
I pose a fun little question here. ![]() We have all been to various cities round the world and we marvel at the quality of their public transit systems, with seamless integration between modes etc. I'd like people to name places they've visited that make Dublin look a dream for getting about in comparison. I guess the only rule is the that the city has to have the pretence of Public Transit, ie it is supposed to exist. |
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#2 |
Really Regular Poster
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 826
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![]() Do other Irish cities count? If not I'm stumped.
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Dublin
Posts: 707
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![]() Dunno. Maybe some place in India? or Africa?
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#4 | ||
Membership Officer
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Maynooth
Posts: 1,116
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![]() Quote:
Quote:
so some "private" operators with Rickshaws dont count. I thought of this question because I was hard pressed to think of anywhere worse than here. One of the worst "western" cities for public transport was Auckland. A confusing ( for a tourist anyway ) mish mash of private buses and limited rail services. Dont think it is any worse than Dublin though. |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 632
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![]() I can't think of any city I've been to that I had to use PT where it was worse PT than Dublin. I've been to a fair few places for work where we'd use hire cars/taxis but I'd still say those places had Dublin licked.
Even supposedly dodgy PT cities in the UK tend to allow the private bus operators to at least seel an all-day pass for their own company on board the bus, even that's impossible with Bus Atha Cliath (DoT thing I know) but when you can't get on a bus and buy an all day ticket for that company on board your first bus it's pretty hard to get any worse. I can't even say Valetta because the buses are so cheap and frequent (if a little slow) that they still present better overall value than in Dublin. Maybe some North American sunbelt city could be in the running for many don't even have pavements in housing estates to walk along. |
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#6 |
Really Regular Poster
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 767
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![]() While many US cities have much better public transport than we might sometimes think, there must be candidates in the West, mid-West and South. LA, Phoenix, Las Vegas anyone?
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#7 |
Membership Officer
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Maynooth
Posts: 1,116
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![]() LA has a poor enough system but the Public Transit operator, LA county transit shames CIE.
The sprawl of LA ensures that PT provision is a nightmare, but if you happen to live nearby the any of the 5 rail lines ( one of them is a dedicated busway ) then the service is okay. You can get an all pass for only $3 also and bus transfers only cost an extra 25c on top of the regular bus fare. Again from my experience LA is margainally better than Dublin, though only by a small margain. |
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#8 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 541
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![]() My experience from LA is much, much better than Dublin but again, I lived close to the red line.
Integration between the public and private operators is a little confusing because some operators allow cross-ticketing with LACMTA and others don't. When it works, it works beautifully and (until now) without the need for any kind of magstripe or smartcard. Indeed, the entire ticketing system is very simple. All the staff, without exception, are incredibly friendly and helpful. The only downside are the metro drivers because they're actually worse than dart drivers when it comes to understanding what they're saying. Buses, on selected routes, run all day and all night and are 1/3 cheaper at night. Between 9pm and 5.30am, buses will stop for drop-offs everywhere, not just at bus stops. Security on buses ans trains is fantastic with the police, sheriffs, transport police and MTA security all doing regular checks. I felt safer on the blue line in Compton than I did in many of the buses in Dublin at night. The red line stations (not sure about the others) in North Hollywood all have huge carparks, great integration with MTA buses. All of the stations are beautifully decorated and maintained and usually themed to go with the local area. Strict enforcement of the no littering, nofood, no spitting, no loud music rules ($250 on the spot fine) makes using the train a pleasure unlike the 13/13A buses in Dublin. The system maps on the website show the exact routes of all the buses, per route, per area and (in the train stations) of the entire city. The journey planner on the website and on 1800 commute is a fantastic tool. I'm sure there are outlying areas of LA where public transport isn't as good but where its good, it blows the socks of Dublin. The only major advantage that Dublin (Dart) has over LA is that the metro system lacks a real-time system. It's offset by the fact that trains in LA are actually regular and frequent unlike the Dart and, like most tunneled systems, you can feel the train coming when its a few minutes away. Last edited by markpb : 06-03-2006 at 13:14. |
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#9 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 632
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![]() Quote:
Even Vegas beat Dublin when I was there-they had FREE buses running along the 'strip' anyway, most welcome in the 45 degree heat! |
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#10 |
Regular Poster
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 33
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![]() I'm sure even Milton Obote and Idi Amin Dada had better systems than we do.
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#11 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 267
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![]() I was in Muscat in oman - now there's urban sprawl for you damn thing is 30 miles long with barely any identifiable centre - just strip malls - and apartment blocks - bit like parts of blanchardstown
public transport consists of minibuses and shared taxis - once you get the hang of them they're not bad and if you put on a scowl they don't even try to rip you off all in all though I would have to say it was worse than dublin - although with rising oil and gas prices i forsee a maglev running from kuwait all the way to muscat! |
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#12 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 144
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![]() Qoute : "Strict enforcement of the no littering, nofood, no spitting, no loud music rules ($250 on the spot fine) makes using the train a pleasure unlike the 13/13A buses in Dublin."
A very valid point and one which Nobody wants to address. Put at it`s simplest it leaves Public Transport users at a strong disadvantage as the savages are constantly seen to have the upper hand. Very few of the CIE companies appear to have the stomach to face down the anti-social element and woe betide any staff member who does attempt to make a stand against them..... Much of the current Customer Friendly ethos has proven to be little more than an opportunity for the monkeys to stage a management buy out of the Zoo. ![]() |
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#13 |
Really Regular Poster
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Cork-Dublin, Cork Commuter and occasionally DART and Dublin-Wexford
Posts: 855
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![]() In Europe, I can't think of any cities the size of Dublin with public transport that is as bad. A lot of medium-sized, regional, French cities have poor public transport, but looking at a city like Lyons, which would be roughly the same size as Dublin, public transport is far better.
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#14 |
Chairman/Publicity
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: The Home of Hurling
Posts: 2,708
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![]() Alex,
Drivers aren't allowed out anymore, due to the threat of getting killed ect. Bring back conductors. Oh, and there isnt a candidate so far than worse public transport than Ireland yet.... |
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#15 |
Regular Poster
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 74
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![]() Iraq or Somilia ?
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#16 | |
Membership Officer
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Maynooth
Posts: 1,116
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![]() Quote:
The notion of Public Transport must exist, either a transit authority or a government agency. It is interesting that nobody has yet found an example, I have been thinking about this for a while and I cant for the life of me find a worse example than Dublin. ![]() Even in cities where bus based transit is the main form of public transport, ticketing and transfers between routes via bus interchanges are commonplace. Right there is a pint on offer from me on the 25th if anyone produces an example of a city they have visited that makes then wish for public transit - Dublin style! ![]() |
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#17 |
Chairman/Publicity
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: The Home of Hurling
Posts: 2,708
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![]() no, no, no - it's outside of IRELAND!
Cork, Limerick, Waterford, - all worse than Dublin, but see the rules above!! Iraq!!! ![]() |
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#18 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Limerick
Posts: 207
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![]() Quote:
I know this isn't really an example of what you're looking for, but I think it gets me my pint... I lived as a volunteer for two years in the depths of nowhere in Ghana, West Africa. I did manage however to escape to the capital, Accra, for my fix of running water and electricity every few months... Public transport in Ghana is primarily provided by the most ungainly acronym ever, the GPRTU of TUC (Ghana Public Road Transport Union of the Trades Union Congress -- just in case you were wondering!). The GPRTU is basically a drivers union setup that fixes fares, looks after stations and allocates services, and it works quite well - perhaps because any attempt at profiteering by the GPRTU is prevented by the simple inability to pay of the majority of the population. The main form of public transport in Ghana is a tro-tro: definitions vary but typically a beat-up mini-bus, four seats across (the aisle has a seat that folds down). It's very cramped, as you can imagine 4 people across in a hiace might be. The tro-tros don't leave until they're full, so you can be waiting a whole day just to get somewhere. They're all emblazoned with phrases such as 'In God We Trust', and rarely have functioning brakes. For short-hop routes in cities, tro-tros just travel along a set route, stopping off at various places. The fares are also fixed (a 3 mile journey might cost you 10p) Similar level of cramped-ness, but not as many chickens sharing your legspace. Still no brakes, mind... Inter-city buses are provided by the state bus operator, similar to bus eireann, except there are five seats across (again, one in a fold-down aisle seat). There are trains in Ghana, the lines form a triangle between the three biggest cities. In the early eighties some East German stock was bought for one side of the 'triangle', which included some relatively swish sleeper cars. The journey would take about 12 hours though, with the equivalent road journey taking about 5. Verdict: only slightly better than Dublin. Comfort wasn't exactly great, and more than once I had to dodge urine dripping down on me from a goat tied on to the roof. Having said that, being packed in like sardines meant there was never any skanger behaviour. Frequency was probably better on the municipal services than on DB routes...oh and you got change... For perspective, Ghana's per capita GDP is about 7% that of Ireland's. Even though it is held up as an African economic success story, malnourished children and abject poverty are still commonplace... |
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#19 |
Membership Officer
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Maynooth
Posts: 1,116
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![]() Right Thomas,
A pint on its way to you for your description of Ghana's transit system! It is sad that we have to use an impoverished African state as a comparison for my question but my only hope is that we will see T21 improve greatly the public transit in the greater Dublin area. As an aside, a friend of mine works in Tripoli, and his description of the local transit would make one pine for Dublin's transit ![]() |
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#20 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: West Tower
Posts: 355
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![]() Ghana sounds rough but it is West Africa and I will at later stage tell the story of the bus in Bolivia where three children managed to puke, **** and piss five feet away from me and throw bags filled with same a further 5 feet down the aisle needless to say the mother had bought only a single ticket and the person to my left had paid 5 bols more for his ticket than me and the guy to my left had paid 10 bols less
![]() North Wales; I left Birmingham on the 2033 Arriva trains service that departed at 2105; arrived in Shrewsbury 30 minutes late which resulted in a missed conection; got a train with 4 passengers to Chester where a 2 hour wait in sub-zero temps was encountered with the coffee machine turned off and the toilets all locked. The train for the boat left 30 minutes late and amazingly arrived only 5 minutes late so the boat was caught by the skin of the teeth. Any line that can have a 25% time padding margin is a joke and since arriva took tha franchise from Virgin this line has gone seriously south. |
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