bigeman312
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A somewhat extreme example: Boston Landing vs the 57 bus for Allston. The success of Boston Landing shows that people do prefer an 18-min ride to South Station despite its irregular and (somewhat) infrequent schedule.
However, I'm not sure if this applies to the topic at hand because:
On the other hand, I'm not sure if you can add more trains on the Red Line until more CRRCs arrive, given the deterioration of the old fleet. That may make the whole comparison moot.
- The time difference on the Red Line is probably not as drastic as commuter rail vs. bus.
- Commuter rail has fixed schedules, whereas schedules for the Red Line are not nearly as easily accessible beforehand. In addition, people expect rapid transit to be turn-up-and-go, unlike commuter rail.
This is actually a really good example. Let’s nail the point home:
If you are standing at KFC on North Beacon in Allston, it would take you:
- The same amount of time to get to South Station via the Worcester Line from Boston Landing as Red Line Alewife to JFK/UMass with no slow zones.
- The same amount of time to get to South Station via the B-Branch of the Green Line and walking from Park St as Red Line Alewife to JFK/UMass at the recent slow zone peak.
So then the question is, would residents prefer that trip via B-Branch every four minutes or via Commuter Rail every 15 minutes? I think the answer is clear.
Obviously, it should be fast and frequent though. But anyone should see that the slow zones have been so much more extreme, that this insane B-Branch to Commuter Rail example actually works.