Moving
this discussion to the appropriate thread:
@TheRatmeister just pointed out that the
Bus Network Redesign (BNRD) Remix Map has proposed frequencies for each route during each time period. This information was used in
@Riverside's map
here. However, when I last saw it last time, I felt the listed headways were too generic and almost felt like placeholders.
So I took a closer look: I'm in the process of making a spreadsheet with all the proposed BNRD headways for each route.
I have not finished yet, but current progress
(Key Bus Routes and regular routes up to 45) already seems to confirm that my earlier impression was, for the most part, correct:
There does seem to be a "baseline" standard applied to almost all Frequent Bus Routes, or what I ended up calling "15-8-11-8-11-15" towards the end of this list:
8-min peak, 11-min midday, and 15-min early mornings and late nights.
Only a few routes deviate from this standard, and for the most part, they're what showed up on
@Riverside's map: T1, T23, T28, T32, T57, T66, T77 (early morning and late night), T111, T116, and SL5 (merged with SL4). It's interesting to consider both what's included in this list and what's
not, but I'll leave it to you all to discuss for the time being.
To the point Riverside made
here: it seems like the difference between the "high" and "low" tiers is much less notable than you expected, and for the most part, it's just 11 mins midday vs. 8, 9, or 10 mins. So for the most part, we can actually call the Frequent Bus Routes
"12-min routes", instead of the "15-min routes" that the T advertised. Like, the difference between
8-min peak headways and 15-min peaks (implied by the T's branding) is
huge - those hours see headways almost halved from the branding.
The "standard service levels" also appear for non-frequent bus routes:
I for one don't understand why we're still left with so many "light brown" routes with 50-min midday headways, some of which even have 50-min headways during rush hours. I was in Phoenix earlier this year, and was very surprised by how the
vast majority of their buses seem to run every 30 min or better. (They also have quite an interesting network design, for sure.)
But regardless,
these numbers do seem to only indicate a planned service level and not the actual schedules. It's very unlikely we'll see all these frequencies play out exactly like this during implementation.
Also, holy F-ing downgrade on the 11.