Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 15:54:19 -0000, "Tim Roll-Pickering"
wrote: Paul Corfield wrote: And for me that's the issue. I like Routemasters but their time is gone. I cannot see for a moment how hundreds of millions could be spent on reviving an old bus design. Well there's the cost issue that's true, but the basic problem is the Routemaster has several features that a) are not duplicated on the replacement buses, particularly the ability to jump off between stops, open platform that prevents it from getting too hot inside and onboard staff who gave reassurance; and b) have been incorporated into road and bus stop planning - e.g. the Liverpool Street to Tottenham bendy that takes forever because of the over frequent bus stops that were placed for Routemasters or the narrows built into roads that bendies have problems navigating. I think it would be extremely doubtful that any replacement Routemaster would be allowed to have an open platform no matter what is shown on Autocar's sketches. I doubt it would pass health and safety checks and there may well be insurance problems with such a design given the relatively poor accident record of the Routemaster. Any before anyone screams about bendy buses being unsafe I said relatively poor not "horrendously unsafe" as others are wont to claim. You're obviously referring to the 149. I confess I have not seen it in the absolute height of the peak in the City but I do remember when the 149 was double deck OPO. Buses would literally sit for 5-8 minutes at somewhere like Liverpool St as the driver could never get the doors shut as the queue was never ending. With the bendy buses they do manage a quick get away on other parts of the route and I've honestly not seen any problems up at the Tottenham - Stoke Newington section. I've also travelled on the 73 from Tottenham into town in the peaks and that's much twistier than the 149 and the buses seem to do OK to me. I confess I like bendy buses so perhaps I'm a bit biased but as crowd shifters I think they do a decent job. I imagine there will be some thinning out of buses on the Kingsland Road when the ELLX opens anyway but I don't see bus stops being removed - there'd be too much of an outcry. The legacy of short gaps between stops may actually be from trolleybus days rather than the Routemaster era. What could address some of these problems would be more flexibility on the part of drivers and/or the training - e.g. allowing passengers to be able to escape the buses when on a scorching day they're stuck in traffic only 200 metres from the bus stop. It's these kind of things that make people want the Routemaster back. Yes there's nostalgia for the bus but if the modern buses were doing as good a job at meeting passenger requirements then demand for the return would be less. To be fair to bus drivers they are in a bind when it comes to traffic jams. They have legal duties placed on them with respect to passenger safety and they are clearly told not to open doors between stops. Now clearly if the roads are jammed solid and nothing is moving and a safe step to the pavement is possible many will do the sensible thing and allow people off. The occasional jobsworth may not but they are working within what are generally sensible rules and it would only take one accident for them to be stuck. Passengers can help by ensuring that if they do step off that they actually look to see if there are obstructions or possibly a cyclist sneaking up the inside. That would reassure drivers that the passenger is taking some responsibility too. Another one that springs to mind are pushchairs. On modern buses owners of toddler tractors seem to assume they have a God Given Right to the limited open space and that anyone in that space for whatever reason can be simply shoved aside (more than once I've had my shopping almost rammed) and battles ensue when there isn't enough space to go round. I can't recall the battles occurring on the Routemaster because it was clear they had to be folded. I could rant on about buggies for a long time but let's just say I agree with your comments. The problem with the new Routemaster design is that it is low floor, wider (the aisle would be accessible by buggies) and would have lots of lovely space at the front of the lower deck complete with its own door. I would envisage you'd have exactly the same expectations of access from buggy wielding parents as on "normal" low floor buses but with the added excitement of them being able to argue with a conductor as well as with other buggy toting parents and the other passengers. In such circumstances I don't see the buses actually moving off the stop while the rowing continues. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 19:46:59 +0000, Tom Anderson
wrote: On Thu, 20 Dec 2007, Tim Roll-Pickering wrote: That's a good point but I think too many people overlook the level of faredodging on the bendy buses - how much would ticket insepctions claw back? I don't doubt that it probably wouldn't reach the cost, but passengers also find the bendies in particular to be scarey to travel on (again this may be a 25 specific problem) and having a member of staff on board who isn't locked away in a booth at the front would reassure many. I've often heard it suggested that these problems are linked: the dodgeability of fares means they attract people we might charitably describe as 'low-life scum', who then make travel a bit frightening for everyone else. I think it is far more to do with the general areas that bendy buses serve. By their nature they run on very busy, high use corridors and these are typically in poorer, run down areas of London where bus use is proportionately higher. There may be the odd exception with the Red Arrow routes but Harlesden, Peckham, New Cross, Camberwell, Dalston, Hackney, Islington, Stoke Newington, Tottenham, Camden, Holloway, Finsbury Park, Shepherds Bush etc etc all have their problems. I'm afraid the social problems of crime and deprivation have their roots in issues other the fact there are a few bendy buses in these areas. I can recall Evening Standard headlines saying how Routemaster routes like the 36, 38 and 73 were mobile drug dealing dens and they took great delight in painting a lurid picture of how unsafe routes like the 12 and 36 were in South London. This, of course, was before they spotted the newspaper selling potential of pretending to be the Routemaster's Saviour (just weeks before they were finally withdrawn). Hypocrites? - never! -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Paul Corfield" wrote in message
I could rant on about buggies for a long time but let's just say I agree with your comments. The problem with the new Routemaster design is that it is low floor, wider (the aisle would be accessible by buggies) and would have lots of lovely space at the front of the lower deck complete with its own door. I would envisage you'd have exactly the same expectations of access from buggy wielding parents as on "normal" low floor buses but with the added excitement of them being able to argue with a conductor as well as with other buggy toting parents and the other passengers. In such circumstances I don't see the buses actually moving off the stop while the rowing continues. But at least the buggues wouldn't get in the way of other pax getting on, as happens with current buses. |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 22:06:26 -0000, "Recliner"
wrote: "Paul Corfield" wrote in message I could rant on about buggies for a long time but let's just say I agree with your comments. The problem with the new Routemaster design is that it is low floor, wider (the aisle would be accessible by buggies) and would have lots of lovely space at the front of the lower deck complete with its own door. I would envisage you'd have exactly the same expectations of access from buggy wielding parents as on "normal" low floor buses but with the added excitement of them being able to argue with a conductor as well as with other buggy toting parents and the other passengers. In such circumstances I don't see the buses actually moving off the stop while the rowing continues. But at least the buggues wouldn't get in the way of other pax getting on, as happens with current buses. You don't know that. It's quite possible that they would attempt to get in at the back - remember no steps and a wider aisle as the bus would be as wide as a modern bus at 2.55m - and wheel it to the front. Yes it would be possible to open the front door and let them on but is that really going to happen for buggies? Would the ramp have to be deployed if the bus had pulled in awkwardly at a stop? It that was the proposal then stop dwell times would become extended compared to an old Routemaster which would worsen the case for the bus overall as they'd be standing still for longer. This would make the economics of such routes far worse than even conventional crew operation never mind compared to a normal OPO bus or a bendy bus. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 15:41:34 -0000, "Tim Roll-Pickering"
wrote: That's a good point but I think too many people overlook the level of faredodging on the bendy buses - how much would ticket insepctions claw back? I was talking to a bus gripper a couple of weeks ago, and he told me that whenever he focusses on bendies, he claws back so much extra revenue it's silly... they're not known as "the free bus" for nothing! |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
At 21:52:33 on Thu, 20 Dec 2007 Paul Corfield opined:-
I imagine there will be some thinning out of buses on the Kingsland Road when the ELLX opens anyway but I don't see bus stops being removed - there'd be too much of an outcry. When the 207 went over to bendy buses they did remove a stop near Ealing Broadway. No outcry that I can recall. -- Thoss |
#17
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 21 Dec 2007 11:33:01 -0000, thoss wrote:
At 21:52:33 on Thu, 20 Dec 2007 Paul Corfield opined:- I imagine there will be some thinning out of buses on the Kingsland Road when the ELLX opens anyway but I don't see bus stops being removed - there'd be too much of an outcry. When the 207 went over to bendy buses they did remove a stop near Ealing Broadway. No outcry that I can recall. You forgot to mention the removal of every stop West of Hayes Bypass! -- Fig |
#18
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
At 12:16:31 on Fri, 21 Dec 2007 Fig opined:-
On Fri, 21 Dec 2007 11:33:01 -0000, thoss wrote: At 21:52:33 on Thu, 20 Dec 2007 Paul Corfield opined:- I imagine there will be some thinning out of buses on the Kingsland Road when the ELLX opens anyway but I don't see bus stops being removed - there'd be too much of an outcry. When the 207 went over to bendy buses they did remove a stop near Ealing Broadway. No outcry that I can recall. You forgot to mention the removal of every stop West of Hayes Bypass! They weren't removed, just transmogrified from 207 stops to 427 stops. -- Thoss |
#19
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Tim Roll-Pickering" wrote in message ... Mizter T wrote: is guilty of subscribing to the orthodox media opinion when she claims that London's "bendy- busses" (sic) are "loathed and problematic" - the opinion of Londoners on these buses is by no-means universally hostile as is often portrayed in the press (though I certainly know a few non-transport enthusiast normal people who detest them, but many more who find them quite acceptable). It's quite possible that opinions vary given the actual bendy bus people are likely to use. The number 25 serves QMUL (and also my home) and I'm hard pressed to think of *anyone* with a good word to say about bendy buses in general. And of course there is the fact that these would be two-man buses, requiring a conductor. As great as conductors may be, that is a very significant expense - London's bus network is already subsidised, so unless the subsidy is increased there would have to be cut backs elsewhere. If the network was less frequent, less comprehensive or more expensive to the passenger in terms of fares, then ridership would be likely fall. That's a good point but I think too many people overlook the level of faredodging on the bendy buses - how much would ticket insepctions claw back? I don't doubt that it probably wouldn't reach the cost, but passengers also find the bendies in particular to be scarey to travel on (again this may be a 25 specific problem) and having a member of staff on board who isn't locked away in a booth at the front would reassure many. My version of a new RM would be an oyster-only bus, with an entrance barrier and an exit barrier with oyster readers, on the wide, low open platform. There would be automatic fail-to-move to stop hangers-on, and yes, a conductor who, freed from the need to collect fares, would be able to concentrate on making pax feel safe, assissting the disabled and preventing vandalism. Jim Hawkins |
#20
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Conductors axed from NB4L/New Routemaster/Boris Bus | London Transport | |||
Boris's New Routemaster competition | London Transport | |||
Web designs | London Transport | |||
Save the 73 Routemaster!!!! | London Transport | |||
Last Routemaster Service | London Transport |