Teban54
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Using street names as stop names: A slightly different perspective
A key reason why cross streets worked for NYC and Chicago was that their transit routes often followed a single road, as you mentioned. But there may be another contributing factor: Back then, most transit maps were still geographical, rather than diagrammatic. If transit lines are drawn on a real-world map that also contains major roads and their names -- most crucially, the roads on which the transit lines run -- one can infer the "coordinate names" more easily.
AFAIK, the worldwide trend towards schematic transit maps started with Harry Beck's London Tube map in 1931. These modern maps, together with the modern naming of transit lines themselves, eliminate an implicit assumption that makes "cross street names" work: Riders are easily aware of the road that they're on. This explains my impression (if not a common one) that cross street names "feel" outdated.
In the case of Boston, I'd argue that the use of cross street names is correlated with whether the transit route follows a single road:
Aside: How Chinese cities name their subway stations
Interestingly, the two biggest rapid transit systems in China -- Beijing and Shanghai -- followed completely different naming strategies:
Most other systems in China are somewhere in-between. You often see a chunk of street names on a subway map, but there are also names of villages that are lost in excessive urban renewals (often triggered by subway extensions themselves).
Given that they face the issue of "no good names" more often than US cities do, there are two common "last resort" measures of dealing with them in Chinese systems:
Well, the "convention" of naming transit stations after cross streets certainly isn't unique to North America. I'm far from a worldwide transit expert, but I know that plenty of Chinese cities are also using street names.My hunch is that this convention (insofar as it exists in North America) emerged from originating practices in New York and Chicago, and to a lesser extent Philadelphia and Boston. I've always been baffled how it can work to have, for example, six stations named "Western", including two on the same line! But Chicago and Manhattan (and to decreasing extents, Brooklyn, the Bronx, and Queens) all feature extremely strong street grids and rapid transit routes that hew to major arterials. Particularly in earlier days, when it was more common to refer to "Eighth Avenue Locals" etc, the line itself provided the second half of the x, y coordinates. In that context, a street name is sufficiently disambiguating.
A key reason why cross streets worked for NYC and Chicago was that their transit routes often followed a single road, as you mentioned. But there may be another contributing factor: Back then, most transit maps were still geographical, rather than diagrammatic. If transit lines are drawn on a real-world map that also contains major roads and their names -- most crucially, the roads on which the transit lines run -- one can infer the "coordinate names" more easily.
AFAIK, the worldwide trend towards schematic transit maps started with Harry Beck's London Tube map in 1931. These modern maps, together with the modern naming of transit lines themselves, eliminate an implicit assumption that makes "cross street names" work: Riders are easily aware of the road that they're on. This explains my impression (if not a common one) that cross street names "feel" outdated.
In the case of Boston, I'd argue that the use of cross street names is correlated with whether the transit route follows a single road:
- Most of the notable cross street names are on the Green Line B/C/E branches, SL 4/5, and the former Orange Line stations (Dover, Northampton). They clearly satisfy the criteria of "running on a single road", and were also once known by the street's name, most notably the Washington St El.
- In contrast, the D branch and the Red and Blue lines use much fewer cross street names. Not only do they not follow the street grid extensively, but considering their former names (the Cambridge-Dorchester Subway and the East Boston Tunnel), there were little expectations of riders knowing which street they're on.
Aside: How Chinese cities name their subway stations
Interestingly, the two biggest rapid transit systems in China -- Beijing and Shanghai -- followed completely different naming strategies:
- Beijing typically avoids using street names as subway names, despite both the road and the subway networks having a well-defined grid structure (albeit not as much as NYC's). The way that Beijing avoids using street names is by naming after places, such as villages, bridges, and historical city gates.
- What's particularly interesting is that they often use names of historical villages, even when the villages themselves are long gone.
- Shanghai absolutely loves using street names, and does so for the vast majority of their subway stations (pretty much unless there's a notable landmark). But while downtown Shanghai's streets and newer subway lines have some resemblance of a grid network, they're not nearly as structured.
- Amazingly, they managed to avoid duplicate station names.
Most other systems in China are somewhere in-between. You often see a chunk of street names on a subway map, but there are also names of villages that are lost in excessive urban renewals (often triggered by subway extensions themselves).
Given that they face the issue of "no good names" more often than US cities do, there are two common "last resort" measures of dealing with them in Chinese systems:
- Falling back to street names. This is sometimes used even by cities that are averse to street names otherwise.
- "Place name + direction name". For example, our Boston Landing would be named "Allston West" in this scenario, and Oak Grove may become "Malden North", even if neither are names of actual neighborhoods (unlike North Quincy and West Medford). This is another common theme, and likely not limited to China either.