Transport for Suburbia
eBook - ePub

Transport for Suburbia

Beyond the Automobile Age

  1. 240 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Transport for Suburbia

Beyond the Automobile Age

About this book

The need for effective public transport is greater than ever in the 21st century. With countries like China and India moving towards mass-automobility, we face the prospects of an environmental and urban health disaster unless alternatives are found. It is time to move beyond the automobile age. But while public transport has worked well in the dense cores of some big cities, the problem is that most residents of developed countries now live in dispersed suburbs and smaller cities and towns. These places usually have little or no public transport, and most transport commentators have given up on the task of changing this: it all seems too hard.

This book argues that the secret of 'European-style' public transport lies in a generalizable model of network planning that has worked in places as diverse as rural Switzerland, the Brazilian city of Curitiba and the Canadian cities of Toronto and Vancouver. It shows how this model can be adapted to suburban, exurban and even rural areas to provide a genuine alternative to the car, and outlines the governance, funding and service planning policies that underpin the success of the world's best public transport systems.

Frequently asked questions

Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
  • Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
  • Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
Both plans are available with monthly, semester, or annual billing cycles.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere — even offline. Perfect for commutes or when you’re on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Transport for Suburbia by Paul Mees in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Biological Sciences & Ecology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2009
Print ISBN
9781844077403
eBook ISBN
9781136544538
1
Public Transport 101
Monash University
The second university of the Australian city of Melbourne celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2008. Since the passage of its enabling legislation in 1958, Monash University has educated over 200,000 students at its campus in suburban Clayton, granting degrees in disciplines ranging from medicine to literature. But regardless of their academic discipline, most Monash students over the half-century have been educated in one unofficial common subject. This subject could be called Public Transport 101, and it has been offered continuously since the Clayton campus opened on 11 March 1961.
Sir John Monash, the Australian engineer and general after whom the University is named, spent much of his early career building railways. In military and civilian life, Monash demanded the highest standards of planning, organization and delivery. He might not have been impressed had he tried to reach the university named after him by public transport. To do so, one takes a suburban train to Huntingdale Station, some 17km from the city centre. From there, the campus is just over 2km away by privately operated bus.
Let’s visit Huntingdale Station in the first week of the academic year and join the students taking Public Transport 101.
The most popular train reaches Huntingdale at 8:40 am, which should leave plenty of time to reach campus for the first lectures at 9:00 am. The Clayton campus is home to 32,000 staff and students, and even though most drive, that still means around 200 alight from the train. They must queue to leave the station, as the single exit is a narrow ramp, leading to a cramped subway. Passengers emerge into the station car park, which must be crossed in the open. It’s raining, so they cop the full force of the weather.
Past the car park is a busy road. On the other side are two bus stops, one for each route that travels to Monash. Each stop is in a different street, with a blind corner in between, so if a passenger waits at one and the first bus comes to the other, they will miss the bus. There is no such problem today: the 8:35 am bus is still waiting, as a long queue of passengers from the previous train boards, one by one, each required to insert a ticket into a validating machine. Eventually the bus departs, ten minutes late and packed to the gunwales, leaving dozens of passengers behind. They are joined by those from the 8:40 train. As the shelter at the stop only holds five people, everyone else waits in the rain; some take refuge among cars parked in the undercroft of a nearby factory. The 8:46 bus arrives and eventually leaves, full, at 9. The last passengers from the 8:40 train reach Monash University at half past nine.
At quieter times, the problem is the opposite of overcrowding. Some students stay back at night as the campus libraries are open late, while students living on campus often go out at night and come home through Huntingdale. Because the bus and train timetables are not co-ordinated, waits can be up to half an hour. The main bus stop is in a laneway between the blank concrete wall of a road overpass and the blank brick wall of a factory. Students are understandably afraid to wait there after dark.
A visiting Canadian academic colleague returned from a trip to Monash fuming. The squalid facilities, the long walk in the open and the lack of timetable coordination astonished her. The visitor was from York University in Toronto, which is of similar age and size to Monash, and also a few kilometres from the nearest station. Dedicated ‘university rocket’ express shuttles leave every two minutes (the frequency drops to every two minutes 15 seconds in the off-peak)1 from the top of the escalators serving the station platform. As explained in Chapter 6, there are no delays from ticket checking as the bus terminal is inside the station fare gates. The Toronto Transit Commission is currently planning to extend the rail line to York University.
My colleague could not understand why things were so much worse at a place that in other respects was so similar. ‘How long has this been going on?’ she asked me. The answer is: since Monash opened in 1961. For many years, the main bus route and the train service both ran every half-hour during the evening: as the bus actually ran in the evening, it was regarded as good by Melbourne standards. Each bus reached the station two minutes after the corresponding train left, ensuring a 28-minute wait for the next train – which was even helpfully shown on the timetable. This continued until 1990, when the bus company, citing low demand, scrapped most evening services.
I told the story of the bus missing the train in my 2000 book A Very Public Solution, but apparently nobody in Melbourne noticed, because in 2006 the saga was repeated. A second bus route, called ‘Smart Bus’, was introduced between Huntingdale Station and the university, as part of a government response to complaints about Melbourne’s privatized, but state-subsidized, public transport. Smart Buses provide the very best Melbourne has to offer: they even run seven days a week – which is handy because the Monash library is open every day, including Sunday. The new Smart Bus ran every half hour on Sunday mornings, just like the train, with buses departing Huntingdale at 4 and 34 minutes past the hour. As trains reached the station at 7 and 37 past the hour, each bus missed the nearest train by three minutes. After 7 pm, trains arrived three minutes earlier – at exactly the time the buses left. Since even an Olympic sprinter would take two minutes to reach the bus stop from the station, all this ensured was that passengers could view the departing bus from the station platform, before waiting half an hour for the next one.
This story does have a happier ending. I incorporated the printed Smart Bus timetable, which actually showed the buses and trains missing each other, into a presentation for the Australian Government’s Garnaut Climate Change Review. My presentation was placed on the review’s website, where it embarrassed the bus company into changing the timetable. Smart Buses now connect with trains at Huntingdale on Sunday mornings and evenings, although not during the day or most of the rest of the week. The interchange facilities remain as appalling as ever.
So what have 200,000 Monash graduates learned in Public Transport 101? Before the end of first semester, the crowding problems at Huntingdale ease as students begin to desert public transport and drive cars. By graduation, nearly all of them are driving to campus. The student environment office helps them by organizing car pooling: even it has given up on public transport. The Monash Clayton campus is surrounded by a sea of parked cars, and parking shortages are a constant subject of on-campus discussion.
These same students are among the most environmentally aware section of the community, concerned about issues like pollution and global warming. They are avid followers of the Garnaut Review’s warnings about the need to reduce carbon emissions, including those from transport.2 Monash students take courses on climate change, insecure oil supplies and other constraints on a car-dominated future. They learn that a sudden interruption to supplies of affordable oil, or a serious attempt to reduce carbon emissions from transport, would cripple the university and the metropolis of Melbourne. Some of the more curious ask why their city and campus are not better prepared for the future. Why has public transport to campus been so hopeless for so many years, and why is nothing being done about it?
The answer students at Monash and other Australian universities most commonly receive is that their parents’ housing preferences are to blame. Urban density is the major cause of automobile dependence, so public transport problems can’t be fixed until Melburnians abandon their separate houses and backyards, and begin living in apartments like Europeans.
Sternenberg
Nobody in Sternenberg lives in an apartment. The 349 residents of the highest and remotest municipality in the Canton, or State, of Zurich prize their rural lifestyle. Sternenberg’s rustic charms were celebrated by its most famous resident, the poet Jakob Stutz, who lived there from 1841 to 1857 after being convicted on a ‘morals charge’ in his previous home town. In Stutz’s time, the municipality had 1400 residents, but rural depopulation reduced this to a low-point of 297 by the 1980 census. People live on farms or in tiny hamlets of three or four dwellings scattered across the municipality’s 9km2. The village centre is a few houses grouped around the picturesque 1706 church. Farming is still important, but so is tourism, particularly summer hiking along the Jakob Stutz Way and other trails.3
In recent years, the population has begun growing again, thanks to commuters with jobs in the City of Zurich and its suburbs. The majority of workers are still employed locally, mainly in rural industries, but nearly half now travel to jobs outside the municipality. This reflects a pattern seen across the Canton of Zurich and indeed across Europe: the City of Zurich, which houses a third of the canton’s 1.3 million residents, has been losing people since the 1960s, while suburban and rural populations are booming.4
The church at Sternenberg is 42km from the centre of Zurich, but because of the mountainous terrain, the route by road or rail is longer. It takes an hour by train to reach the village of Bauma from Zurich’s main railway station, and then another 15 minutes by bus up the hairpin bends of the Sternenberg-Strasse.
Of the 171 municipalities making up Canton Zurich, Sternenberg has the worst public transport service – because it’s the only one without an urbanized population of 300, the minimum required for regular-interval, all-day public transport (see Chapter 8).5 Bauma, with just over 1000 residents, has two trains an hour every day of the year, from 6:00 am to midnight, with an hourly all-night bus service on Fridays and Saturdays. Of course, if Sternenberg was in Australia or the UK it would have no public transport at all, and Bauma would be lucky to see a bus a day.
There are seven buses to Sternenberg each weekday, five on normal weekends and seven on summer Sundays and holidays. Each Sunday bus leaves from outside Bauma station at 24 minutes past the hour, connecting with trains arriving at 20 past the hour. The bus calls at the church, dropping off hikers, then does a circuit of the main hamlets collecting locals before returning to Bauma to connect with an outward train. Once they board the bus, residents of Sternenberg don’t need to worry about timetables. Each bus meets the train at Bauma, which in turn connects at the regional hub of Winterthur with another train to Zurich, as well as departures to Zurich Airport and major centres across the canton. Each of these trains is met by connecting bus services at stations en route, providing access to every place with more than 300 residents or jobs.
Sternenberg is about as car-dependent as it gets in Canton Zurich. Only 19 per cent of workers used public transport on census day in 2000; 10 per cent more walked or cycled. These figures are, however, much higher than the mode shares of 13 and 3 per cent respectively recorded for metropolitan Melbourne at the following year’s Australian census.6 They are also higher than every US metropolitan area except New York, and higher even than most British urban regions. Public transport is only the second-most popular mode for travel to work in Sternenberg, but its share of travel is increasing: Zurich is the only Swiss canton in which public transport’s share of travel is growing, and the increase is occurring mainly in suburban and rural areas. Only 14 per cent of Sternenbergers took public transport to work in 1990. The shift away from the car that Zurich City achieved in the 1980s is now being repeated, admittedly on a more modest scale, in the rest of the canton.
So if the oil supply was suddenly interrupted, or carbon emissions from transport rationed, even rural areas of Canton Zurich could cope. Sternenberg has not yet moved beyond the automobile age, but it is ready if it needs to. And the hikers could keep coming.
Densityas Destiny
Nobody in Sternenberg thinks the population density is too low to justify an integrated, albeit basic, public transport service designed to make travel by car a choice instead of a necessity. But the dominant view in the much larger, denser metropolis of Melbourne is that suburban densities cannot support viable public transport. It’s a local truism that transport policies that work in European cities could not possibly hold lessons for Australia.
Urban planners across Australia, the UK, the US, Canada and New Zealand insist that transport patterns are outcomes of urban form. The way to improve public transport is through compact cities, new urbanism, smart growth and transit-oriented design. In the words of one prominent New Urbanist, ‘we have to earn our transit through urbanism.’ There is much less interest in directly tackling transport policy, reflecting a mindset among planners that goes back decades. Transport planning is boring and mathematical; design is artistic and creative. Planners ‘own’ city design; transport means working with engineers and economists, who are much better at maths than us. Urban design is what we do; transport planning is what other people do.
Many transport planners are happy to agree with these arguments. Even Switzerland has powerful highway agencies that specialize in building new and expanded roads. The professionals who staff these agencies are intelligent enough to realize that, as communities become more concerned about the environment, questions will increasingly be asked about the wisdom of continued large-scale road-building. The notion that urban form, rather than transport policy, determines transport outcomes is convenient for these bodies. It can also suit those responsible for providing public transport, because it pins the blame for poor services on suburban residents rather than public transport providers.
For two decades, the Australian capital, Canberra, was racked by controversy about a proposal to build a freeway through the Canberra Nature Park. Hardly surprisingly, environmentalists and concerned citizens were horrified. They argued that the funds would be better spent tackling Canberra’s woeful public transport. In 2001, a parliamentary inquiry was called to resolve the controversy. It conceded that the freeway was environmentally disastrous, but argued that there was no alternative:
The committee is struck by [the] major differences between the transport studies with a car-oriented approach and those making public transport pre-eminent … the car-oriented strategy is associated with a dispersed city of mostly low rise buildings; whereas the public transport approach is associated with fairly dense ‘urban villages’… The committee is not convinced that th...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. List of Figures and Tables
  8. Preface
  9. List of Abbreviations
  10. 1.Public Transport 101
  11. 2.The Automobile Age
  12. 3.Beyond the Automobile Age
  13. 4.The Compact City
  14. 5.Planning, Markets and Public Transport
  15. 6.Toronto and Melbourne Revisited
  16. 7.The Busway Solution
  17. 8.The Zurich Model
  18. 9.Towards a General Theory of Public Transport Network Planning
  19. 10.Planning a Network
  20. 11.Every Transit User is Also a Pedestrian
  21. 12.The Politics of Public Transport
  22. References
  23. Index