stick n move
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Wait your a girl?
Smartphones and apps have infinitely improved the usability of Boston's buses. The routes are irregular, so you used to need to memorize a lot of information. Smartphone helps with that. And frequency and OTP is still a weak spot on almost every route, which the the apps help with. I had given up on buses entirely until the live tracking apps came out. Now I use them occasionally.
Same. I was apart of the pilot for NextBus in with the MBTA because i am a 111/116/117 rider.
I used to carry around a large stack of paper schedules and print outs for various buses I ride. The apps really make all the difference, especially if you are in an area where you aren't familiar with what routes are nearby. GPS on your app tells you.
Its easier now with the apps because you know how long you're going to wait.. so you can have that extra cup of coffee, or hit the rest room before you go OR not wait out in a cold, snowy, street corner for a bus that may or may not show up.
As a Boston transplant (albeit a long time ago) I never understood the bus stigma.
I do prefer the trains for speed -- when they make sense. But I use the buses all the time for cross-cutting routes where taking the train is just slow, indirect and painful.
With the apps, bus service is not bad at all (could be more frequent on some routes; could use more bus lanes -- Mass Ave, #1 bus, I am talking about you!)
A typical inner turning radius of a standard 40-foot bus is 21.5 feet,
How many other cities have a similar "school bus variant" of a standard MBTA bus? How, as a practical matter, do people actually use these buses (how do they learn when a bus is in "school bus mode")?
how tight a turn can a standard bus "do"?
A new route from Winchester Center to Davis Sq overlaid on the:
134 (Winchester - Wellington)
95 (Playstead Rd West Medford - Sullivan Sq)
94 (High St West Medford - Davis Sq)
Google Map of a 94-95-134 bus
- Winchester connected to both Green & Red (instead of just Orange on the 134)
Extend the 80 from Arlington Center to Arlington Heights
- provides GLX access to Arlington Center & "outer" Arlington @ College Ave
(free up fleet for this by truncating 80 to Union Sq GLX and stop reduction close to College, Ball, & Gilman Sqs)
Extend the 89 from Clarendon Hill to Arlington Center (full time)
- provides GLX access to Arlington Center & "inner" Arlington @ Ball Sq.
(free up fleet for this by a 2-to-1 stop-reduction along Broadway)
Then, when the GLX gets to MVP, I would propose:
Extend the 88 via North St to MVP
(truncate the 88 to Union Sq)
Nice. This is something the T should do *right now*Why not extend both 87 and 89 to Arlington Heights, and eliminate 79? According to the PDF schedules, 87's trip from Arlington Center to Davis (8:20 AM to 8:34 AM is 14 minutes) is faster than 79's trip from Arlington Center to Alewife (8:36 AM to 8:54 AM is 18 minutes), and then a lot of riders would avoid a few additional minutes of Red Line time from Alewife to Davis.