...which is why you don't mindlessly copy things. The River Line has too much single track, therefore a new interurban should have less single track. This does not disprove the idea of a modern interurban, it suggests the specific implementation has some flaws which are not fundamental to an interurban.
And where are you going to find "less single track" with a ROW out of East Providence that would have to be built rail-with-trail next to a very popular bike path, and virtually no extant ROW at all in Massachusetts. Route 103 is a 2-lane road with no parking that has no side median because of people's front yards and has driveway cuts galore in dense-ish Ocean Grove. Where are you going to fit 2 interurban tracks on a majority of this route so the frequencies aren't shit? And not spend $1.5 billion dollars trying to do it? You're pitching this as "Reasonable Transit", no? How are we not launching clear past "Crazy Transit Pitches" straight into God-mode here?
And despite the single track, and the street-running, it's still faster than a bus with ~30MPH average speed would be. Even post-covid, it carries more people per trip than you can comfortably fit seated on a bus. And it does that without good integration with bicycle infrastructure, your #1 champ at feeding a regional service through compact(ish) railroad towns.
Non sequitur. I said a "195 bus". Doing the speed limit on an expressway that has very little congestion outside of Providence. There's very little density in-between making the local roads more attractive, and East Providence+Barrington+Warren already have some RIPTA coverage so their catchment would not be in this bus's wheelhouse. And why are you citing bike infrastructure as an ace-in-the-hole for this service? Do you really think Swansea, Somerset, Westport, and Dartmouth are really itching to build out their bike infrastructure to push back against the sprawl that dominates their physically very large towns?
At least for Fall River and New Bedford, this is actually just false. There are currently 19 nonstop round trips per day between Fall River and New Bedford plus another 23 stopping round trips. If that's not a 'pulse' then frankly I don't know what is. Providence to Fall River is most definitely more speculative, with only 9 daily round-trips, mostly during peak times. But given the numbers Fall River-New Bedford pulls, I'd be very surprised if it didn't work out reasonably favorably.
And SRTA does indeed have ridership numbers for that corridor:
https://www.srtabus.com/wp-content/uploads/SRTA_RidershipReport_FY24.pdf. The passengers per revenue hour for Route #9 is just a shade over the SRTA system average for all routes, while passengers per revenue mile is a shade under the average, and passengers per trip is a system-high...28? Which is...*fine*...for a faceless local bus route equipped with 40-footers but hardly screams "
RAIL-worthy!" much less
"RAIL-capacity!" And it's not growing, either...ridership was down the most of any route on the system in FY24 (an overall growth year for SRTA) and is basically flat over a longer term. With Providence to any of those points being that much more speculative because of the extreme peak orientation of their ridership...where exactly is the beef here? You're proposing more-or-less a gadgetbahn for a usage case where a bus will very clearly do.
Could you not say all of these things about the Hartford Line? It's a rail line that travels between two mid-sized cities (which combined actually have fewer people than Fall River and Providence), and doesn't serve much in-between density apart from a couple pockets. And yet it has been a success. Should that have been a bus line instead?
A couple pockets???
Meriden, CT - pop. 60,850
Wallingford, CT - pop. 44,396
Windsor, CT - pop. 29,492
Berlin, CT - pop. 20,175
Windsor Locks, CT - pop. 12,613
...with infills being added:
West Hartford, CT - pop. 64,803
Enfield, CT - pop. 42,141
Newington, CT - pop. 30,536
North Haven, CT - pop. 24,253
No station on the route has fewer than 2 local bus connections each, with most having 3+ and otherwise tiny Windsor Locks also having the key Bradley Airport shuttle.
Let's compare the intermediates between Providence and Fall River (old rail route and/or Route 103 corridor):
East Providence, RI: pop. 47,139
Barrington, RI: pop. 17,153
Warren, RI: pop. 11,147
Swansea, MA: pop. 17,144
Somerset, MA: pop. 18,303
...and Fall River and New Bedford:
Westport: pop. 16,399
Dartmouth: pop. 33,783
No, the corridors are not
remotely comparable in density served. Much less public transit-served, as while RIPTA coverage is pretty decent on that side of the state line SRTA has a fat lot of nothing everywhere west of Fall River except for where #114 Swansea Mall route intersects literally across the water in sight of Fall River Depot, and to the east is taken up by that very capable and within-capacity Route #9 bus.
At least for Fall River and New Bedford, this is actually just false. There are currently 19 nonstop round trips per day between Fall River and New Bedford plus another 23 stopping round trips. If that's not a 'pulse' then frankly I don't know what is. Providence to Fall River is most definitely more speculative, with only 9 daily round-trips, mostly during peak times. But given the numbers Fall River-New Bedford pulls, I'd be very surprised if it didn't work out reasonably favorably.
Then I guess you'll end up being very surprised, because SRTA #9 ridership isn't blowing it out as outlined above and frequencies from Providence don't extend much beyond the peak hours pointing to a lack of all-day demand. It's several orders of magnitude shy of what will fund a rail build.