TheRatmeister
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I think deep down we all know.and who knows if Phase II is even still happening at this point
I think deep down we all know.and who knows if Phase II is even still happening at this point
Yeah, I don't expect to see Phase II actually happen. But I didn't want to definitively say "it's not gonna happen" in an absolutist way since there's always a small chance of it happening...I think deep down we all know.
The 2013 FEIR for Phase II predicted 240 daily boardings at Battleship Cove vs. 840 at Fall River Depot, or about 28% of FR Depot's ridership. That was third-worst on the line after Easton Village (150) and Freetown (180). The 2018 FEIR for Phase I reduced the Fall River Depot boardings to 390, while Freetown's went down to 60. Assuming 28% of FR Depot's ridership, Battleship Cove under Phase I would board 109. Assuming the 133% of Freetown's boardings (the Phase II ratio), Battleship Cove would board 78.It really sucks that Battleship Cove station was postponed to Phase II, and who knows if Phase II is even still happening at this point. I know Battleship Cove wasn't projected to be a high-ridership station, but it still would've been a nice terminus since it's so close to Downtown Fall River (compared to Fall River Depot).
Battleship Cove station should be built regardless of whether or not Phase II is happening.
Never say never of course, but I think we can reasonably say with very high certainty that basically no matter what at this point any opening would probably be around 2040 or later, so for any time period really worth talking about and experiencing as a person rather than a transit enthusiast, it's not happening.Yeah, I don't expect to see Phase II actually happen. But I didn't want to definitively say "it's not gonna happen" in an absolutist way since there's always a small chance of it happening...
But it does suck that Phase II probably won't happen. Even though it would be outrageously expensive, Phase II would result in significantly shorter travel times and much better frequencies. Plus the other station in Taunton (on Dean Street) would be so much better than East Taunton, which is far from downtown Taunton and exclusively a park-and-ride station.
Is it this guy? Holy cow this is quite the playlist for 5 months of content. I would really love a Newport Rail Connection. I've tried to get to Newport, RI by public transit and the only time friends or I were able to do it well was with the Providence->Newport ferry in the summer, but you need to take the bus (or shuttle) or an uber to the ferry (30 minute walk from the train station).There's a YouTube railfan who's been documenting the progress on the restoration of the Newport Railway between the transit center and Pell Bridge alongside rail-with-trail. They have I think a 40-tonner and 2 RDCs already there and operational. If they had funding they could probably easily run an island shuttle every like 30min
I do the trip to Newport/Middletown from Boston via mass transit regularly.Is it this guy? Holy cow this is quite the playlist for 5 months of content. I would really love a Newport Rail Connection. I've tried to get to Newport, RI by public transit and the only time friends or I were able to do it well was with the Providence->Newport ferry in the summer, but you need to take the bus (or shuttle) or an uber to the ferry (30 minute walk from the train station).
It's a loooong schedule. The NYNH&H took 2:05 for a Boston-Newport run in 1930. That's well beyond the comfort threshold for Commuter Rail travel. Fall River-Newport alone took 40 minutes, so project that on top of the 75-78 minutes that the Phase II FEIR projected and with fewer stops you're still scraping 2 hours. Ridership's not going to be good at those travel times.All are viable. Commuter Rail directly to Newport via Stoughton and Fall River would be way better, though.
Yeah I think having a Newport-Fall River route, connection at a Fall River/Battleship Cove station that connects to Boston would probably make the most sense.It's a loooong schedule. The NYNH&H took 2:05 for a Boston-Newport run in 1930. That's well beyond the comfort threshold for Commuter Rail travel. Fall River-Newport alone took 40 minutes, so project that on top of the 75-78 minutes that the Phase II FEIR projected and with fewer stops you're still scraping 2 hours. Ridership's not going to be good at those travel times.
The study I mentioned a few posts ago, theIt's a loooong schedule. The NYNH&H took 2:05 for a Boston-Newport run in 1930. That's well beyond the comfort threshold for Commuter Rail travel. Fall River-Newport alone took 40 minutes, so project that on top of the 75-78 minutes that the Phase II FEIR projected and with fewer stops you're still scraping 2 hours. Ridership's not going to be good at those travel times.
I think Newport is something you trial with a Newport Flyer in-season experiment (though it might require Phase II because of limited capacity). Do an express run to Fall River, then an extension on 30 MPH unsignaled track from FR Depot to Newport. It's going to have to prove its bona fides the same way the Cape has.
Makes sense to begin as a Newport Flyer summer service. The 2002 study projected 576 daily visitor trips through the corridor on weekends, which would probably push a little higher if you removed the cross-platform transfer penalty and ran a train straight from Boston.
On peak weekends, Newport's daytime population can climb as high as 100,000, at least according to this article. Would 576 more day-trippers really be so noticeable in comparison? If anything, you'd be more likely notice parking spaces aren't quite as hard to come by. The more Boston-area travelers that choose to take the train and avoid the hassle and expense of parking, the better Newport will be able to handle the usual crowds.The last thing anyone who actually lives in or visits Newport regularly wants is more day trippers waddling up and down the sidewalks debating between the t-shirt or the refrigerator magnet to commemorate their visit.
On peak weekends, Newport's daytime population can climb as high as 100,000, at least according to this article. Would 576 more day-trippers really be so noticeable in comparison? If anything, you'd be more likely notice parking spaces aren't quite as hard to come by. The more Boston-area travelers that choose to take the train and avoid the hassle and expense of parking, the better Newport will be able to handle the usual crowds.
Probably not but what they suffer with now is far more than the place can handle and it makes it both a less attractive place to live and to spend time for anyone acquainted with how much better it used to be. It’s one of those places that could be so much nicer if it was a lot harder to get to.
This is the type of stuff I would often hear when I worked in southeast CT and what it always seems to really be about is parking and traffic, not people.
I haven’t driven into Newport in season in probably five years and I haven’t parked in a commercial lot or on the street for at least ten. It’s about the overcrowding and the rapidly diminishing character of the town.
But WHY does it feel overcrowded and changed in character? Is it actually the number of people? Its population is about 50% of its peak. It's not like Newport wasn't a tourist destination in the 1960s. What's changed is how much of the surface area has been given over to parking and wide roads. Take a look at the urban fabric of Newport in 1963 versus today. The same amount of people are being crammed into smaller spaces.
It's the exact same complaint in Mystic, Groton City, and Niantic.
Downtown Boston also gets an absurd number of visitors every day. Downtown has far more visitors than it does permanent residents. People visit awesome places, it's a fact of life--the only way to stop them is to make the place less awesome. It's better to capitalize on the tourism and buiId infra to manage it than to kneecap yourself in order to drive it away.I haven’t driven into Newport in season in probably five years and I haven’t parked in a commercial lot or on the street for at least ten. It’s about the overcrowding and the rapidly diminishing character of the town.
Several times, yes. If you're done with the ad-hominin I'd be interested in why you think I'm incorrect. The population of Newport has dramatically shrunk. The percentage of surface area taken away from the use of people dedicated to the movement and storage of vehicles has dramatically increased. In as much as I "have an agenda" it's Newport being a lovely place to live and visit in 2024. It's certainly not declaring an arbitrary point in time to be the town's character that needs to be locked in amber. You bemoan how Newport has changed in the past 30 years as if the change is any less than that over the 30 years prior.Have you ever actually been there? You come across as living under a rock and just having an agenda.
Have you ever actually been there? You come across as living under a rock and just having an agenda.