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#41
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Paul Corfield wrote:
On Tue, 20 Feb 2007 00:17:18 -0500, David of Broadway wrote: Paul Corfield wrote: It seems like London is very much organized around specific points of interest, while New York is organized around streets and overall directions. I'm not sure London is particularly "organised" - it just "is"! I have never been to New York or looked at their timetables, but I'd imagine the difference between the cities is not one of philosophy but one of frequency. If you're going to run 6 buses per hour down each major road, you follow the NY model of running a single 6bph route down each road and let people change at the junctions. If you're going to run 120 bph down each major road, you run ten different 12bph routes down each road, with each route going different ways at each junction so few people have to change. I also like to study maps which is partly why I have some understanding of the bus system in the 5 boroughs and the limited links between them - another interesting factor which is not really noticeable in London. Except in Havering, Croydon, Harrow, Bromley and Waltham Forest, which have reasonably self-contained bus networks. Keep in mind that NJT does not publish an overall bus map. I was unaware that there was not a system bus map. I consider such things to be essential. Sheffield didn't have one when I lived there in 1993. |
#42
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#43
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Tom Anderson wrote:
On Mon, 19 Feb 2007, Dave A wrote: Paul Corfield wrote: On Mon, 19 Feb 2007 08:59:02 -0500, David of Broadway wrote: I will say that your spider maps are much easier to read and much more useful than the maps we have posted at bus stops. They are fine if there is a direct bus from the stop you are standing at. They are hopeless if your journey requires interchange to another service at some point. There is no sense of there being a network with spider maps which I believe is counterproductive when you have a network which is as dense as London's and where the move to shorter routes over the last 4 decades means changing services is much more of a necessity. There is little to guide people as to how to accomplish such journeys if they are relatively unfamiliar with the bus network. My impression of bus use in London is that it is broadly confined to the use of single routes from origin to destination - ISTR a statistic that only 4% of journeys involving buses, involved changing from one bus to another. Any idea if that includes night buses? I can almost never get home in the wee small hours without changing. On further inspection, it looks like I was lying my face off. The figure I quoted is for all bus journeys in Great Britain. In London, it looks like the figure is nearer 20%, which surprises me. Source: TfL Interchange Plan (2002), Para 2.19 (primary source was London Transport Planning in 1997) http://cache.tfl.gov.uk/tfl/pdfdocs/inter_improve.pdf Putting information on making onward connections by bus could make the diagrams overly complicated, just to serve a fairly small proportion of passengers. The only way I can think of to make a clear diagram like this is to combine the spider and the traditional bus map - by using the traditional map as a base, and overlaying buses from the current location as individual coloured lines. How about annotating the spiders to show interchange points, as on the tube strip maps? So, for instance, on the Finsbury Park spider, the Holloway Nag's Head stop on the 29/253/etc bundle would have a little box saying "4 17 43 271 393", maybe with arrows pointing away on either side labelled "Archway" and "Highbury & Islington" (or something, since not all those routes go those ways). It wouldn't completely solve the problem, but if you were at A, wanted to go to B, and knew what the routes serving B were, you could look for a suitable C on the spider map at A. Even if you didn't know the routes at B, you could perhaps make a reasonable guess based on the destination hints. The key problem would probably be the sheer number of boxes and arrows - there are a *lot* of routes in London! Perhaps it would be better to limit it to important destinations which are reachable by bus within a practical time frame - say an hour (average journey time to work for those travelling by bus is 39 mins across London; 47 mins in central London). For example, from Notting Hill Gate there are 10 daytime bus routes covering most destinations reachable within an hour by bus from there, except a few which could be noted in the way you suggest - e.g. Clapham Junction, Barnes, Holborn. -- Dave Arquati www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#44
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Paul Corfield wrote:
Although London's rail network has pretty wide coverage, it has limited capacity in comparison to NYC's. Our trains are wider and longer and most of our major trunk lines (and some of the minor ones, too) have four tracks. Given how crowded our trains get, if we had to give up our express tracks and shorten and narrow the trains, the buses would become a lot more popular, by necessity. I'm a tad taken aback by your comments on the relative capacities of London's rail network vs NYC's. Now I'm certainly not an expert on your subway or rail network but surely your rail network (not subway) is but a mere shadow of London's? By "rail network" he must mean only LU vs. NYCT. National Rail in the southeast would surely dwarf LIRR+MNR+PATH. In my (albeit limited) experience of the NYC rush hour you get pretty high frequencies on common sections of route served by multiple services but if you want a particular letter / number then frequency drops noticeably compared to almost all of London's tube service pattern. Hmmm, does it really compare that poorly with waiting for a train to, say, a particular branch of the District line? -- Michael Hoffman |
#45
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[Paul Corfield]
We no longer have area maps at our stops. We have bloody stupid and unhelpful spider maps that tell you very little. I really like the spider maps, and find them incredibly useful when trying to figure out if I can get somewhere I want to go from a nearby bus stop. For an occasional user of a particular stop they are fantastic. [David of Broadway] Keep in mind that NJT does not publish an overall bus map. For most routes, the "approximate geographic representation" is all there is. And, in my experience, it's completely useless. [Paul Corfield] I was unaware that there was not a system bus map. I consider such things to be essential. New Jersey is 14.3 times larger than Greater London in area. That'd be one hell of a map. Of course maps of smaller areas would be useful. -- Michael Hoffman |
#46
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On Tue, 20 Feb 2007 23:13:13 +0000, Dave A wrote:
Tom Anderson wrote: On Mon, 19 Feb 2007, Dave A wrote: Paul Corfield wrote: On Mon, 19 Feb 2007 08:59:02 -0500, David of Broadway wrote: I will say that your spider maps are much easier to read and much more useful than the maps we have posted at bus stops. They are fine if there is a direct bus from the stop you are standing at. They are hopeless if your journey requires interchange to another service at some point. There is no sense of there being a network with spider maps which I believe is counterproductive when you have a network which is as dense as London's and where the move to shorter routes over the last 4 decades means changing services is much more of a necessity. There is little to guide people as to how to accomplish such journeys if they are relatively unfamiliar with the bus network. My impression of bus use in London is that it is broadly confined to the use of single routes from origin to destination - ISTR a statistic that only 4% of journeys involving buses, involved changing from one bus to another. Any idea if that includes night buses? I can almost never get home in the wee small hours without changing. On further inspection, it looks like I was lying my face off. The figure I quoted is for all bus journeys in Great Britain. In London, it looks like the figure is nearer 20%, which surprises me. Source: TfL Interchange Plan (2002), Para 2.19 (primary source was London Transport Planning in 1997) http://cache.tfl.gov.uk/tfl/pdfdocs/inter_improve.pdf Thanks for owning up ;-) In my own experience I have to change buses quite a lot to make any number of even quite local journeys. It is impossible for me to reach the central area from where I live without changing buses - admittedly only one change gets me onto a good spread of radial routes into zone 1. My observations would also suggest that substantial volumes of people do change buses in order to make their journeys despite the relative richness of London's bus network. The easy availability of capped bus fares via Oyster PAYG may inadvertently encourage this trend as would the introduction of transfer tickets offering discounts. One simple example of the extent of transfer between services is somewhere like Silver St in Edmonton. Large numbers of people get off route 34 (east - west) to change onto north-south routes at this point. This pattern is repeated all over London. I'm actually surprised the figure is as low as 20%. Perhaps it would be better to limit it to important destinations which are reachable by bus within a practical time frame - say an hour (average journey time to work for those travelling by bus is 39 mins across London; 47 mins in central London). For example, from Notting Hill Gate there are 10 daytime bus routes covering most destinations reachable within an hour by bus from there, except a few which could be noted in the way you suggest - e.g. Clapham Junction, Barnes, Holborn. The problem with your suggestion is that it relies on various parameters that have different meanings to people. What is an "important destination"? The destination for each individual passenger is "important" to them and an awful lot of maps will not show such places - especially if a change of bus is needed. What is a practical time frame? - this must vary depending on whether you are time rich or time poor as well as the activity that you will do when you complete your journey. Finally a time based parameter will unravel given the variability in journey times over the operating day and it again does not deal with peoples' willingness to travel for a long period by bus if overall they consider the bus to the best mode for them given other factors like affordability. I sometimes travel by bus even though "logic" would dictate that the tube or a train would be more "sensible". -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#47
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Michael Hoffman wrote:
[David of Broadway] Keep in mind that NJT does not publish an overall bus map. [Paul Corfield] I was unaware that there was not a system bus map. I consider such things to be essential. New Jersey is 14.3 times larger than Greater London in area. That'd be one hell of a map. In the 1970s National Buses used to publish a bus map of England and Wales on a single sheet. It showed all the routes operated by London Country, Crosville, Potteries Motor Traction etc. It might have omitted town services. |
#48
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On Tue, 20 Feb 2007 09:21:58 +0000, Tom Anderson
wrote: What's the typical deliver size? Or rather, what weight would you say 80% of deliveries are smaller than or equal to? Would it be small enough to do by bike (using a freight bike of some sort, rather than a courier's panniers)? Most jobs go in (as a minimum) an A4 box (i.e. a box that would contain five reams of A4 80gsm. Not to mention large scale deliveries. As I was leaving work this morning we had 50+ reams of paper turn up. How are they supposed to deliver that without a lorry? I assume you get your paper in quite big sheets - 50 reams of A4 at 80 gsm is 125 kg, doable on a trike or 8-freight or something. If it's A0, though, that's two tonnes, which i would certainly agree requires motor power! Actually, I got that wrong. It was 20 boxes of A4 which is 100 reams. Plus some A3 and other stuff. A0 paper comes in rolls - 200m long, works out to maybe 10cm across at a guess. 24 rolls on a pallet. |
#49
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On Tue, 20 Feb 2007 11:28:32 -0000, "Paul Scott"
wrote: "James Farrar" wrote in message .. . We *do* have foot messengers for small jobs to local addresses, but that's a small minority of the work we do. Not to mention large scale deliveries. As I was leaving work this morning we had 50+ reams of paper turn up. How are they supposed to deliver that without a lorry? Get them to email it - 'paperless office' anyone... Lots is, though that's not much use for hard copy, not to mention proofs! |
#50
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On Wed, 21 Feb 2007 02:01:34 -0000, "John Rowland"
wrote: Michael Hoffman wrote: [David of Broadway] Keep in mind that NJT does not publish an overall bus map. [Paul Corfield] I was unaware that there was not a system bus map. I consider such things to be essential. New Jersey is 14.3 times larger than Greater London in area. That'd be one hell of a map. In the 1970s National Buses used to publish a bus map of England and Wales on a single sheet. It showed all the routes operated by London Country, Crosville, Potteries Motor Traction etc. It might have omitted town services. And more recently when Southern Vectis published the Great British Bus Timetable that included a national map of bus services and for National Express coaches. I wish they would bring that book back but they probably never will. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
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