Is Effective Transit Possible in a Transit-Hostile City?
» Despite the sound intentions from the mayor, opposition may kill Nashvilles BRT project.
One of the primary arguments made for investing in bus rapid transit (BRT) is that such systems can be implemented not only more cheaply, but also with more ease, than rail lines.
A look at the situation in Nashville suggests that there are limitations to that ease.
Much like in cities across the country, residents of Nashville have strenuously debated the merits of investing in a 7.1-mile, $174 million BRT line called the Amp. The project would link the citys east and west sides, running from the Five Points in East Nashville through downtown to St. Thomas Hospital, past the citys West End. With dedicated lanes along 80% of its route, frequent service, pre-paid boarding, level platforms, transit signal priority, and an improved streetscape to boot, the line could potentially serve about 5,000 rides a day, double the existing demand. In this years federal budget, the Department of Transportation recommended allocating it $75 million over the next few years.
From a pure public transportation perspective, the line makes perfect sense: It serves the citys central east-west spine. Within a half-mile of its stations are 33% of the countys jobs (132,000 of about 400,000) and 5% of its population (32,000 people), and it is currently undergoing something of a building boom. It would link several hospitals, Vanderbilt University, the downtown core, the transit center, and several tourist attractions. And it would offer transit service speeds similar to those available for private automobiles today. ...............(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2014/04/03/is-effective-transit-possible-in-a-transit-hostile-city/
CurtEastPoint
(19,178 posts)nxylas
(6,440 posts)Big surprise there, too.
Lydia Leftcoast
(48,217 posts)and the stupider subset of whites has been subjected to a whispering campaign saying that black people will come in and commit crimes in their neighborhood and recruit their children for gangs.
It's the reason for the 18-year time difference between the opening of the MAX line though north Portland and the opening of the MAX line through suburban (Republican/Libertarian central) Clackamas County.
Have Randall O'Toole, John Charles, and Mel Zucker shown up yet?
Gormy Cuss
(30,884 posts)I lived in Boston when the Red line extension was being built. It terminated in Cambridge at the Arlington border because at the time it was proposed some NIMBYs in Arlington and Lexington didn't want a direct line from Dorchester to their town. The sad part is that by the time the extension was built most people in Arlington would have loved a station or two rather than continuing to ride the slower bus lines to the subway.