Went down to Pawtucket the other day (Saturday) and the return trip further cemented my belief that the Providence Line needs more service. I was on train 1806 the 11:50am out of Providence. While waiting at Pawtucket/Central Falls the platform looked like a typical weekday rush-hour load of 30+ people which led me to think this was going to be a busy weekend train. I was unprepared for the entire train to be 70% full upon arrival in Pawtucket, the second stop on the line. A 6-car train of entirely bi-level cars with all open except the Cab Car and there were slim pickings for seating. It also wasn't like single riders were taking up the 3 seat benches making them "full" but people doubling up. There was also a scramble to figure out where to put all the baby strollers and bikes but that's a whole issue on its own. All remaining stops had about the same traffic as Pawtucket but with some passengers alighting at each one to free up room. That on its own showed the demand to take the train to Providence instead of Boston and surprisingly the train was less full upon leaving 128 than it was leaving Pawtucket.
@Teban54 and I should take a look at the weekend ridership, because yeah, this sounds intriguing. I know they've been advertising the weekend pass pretty heavily over the past couple of years, so maybe that's starting to pay off?
Granted this is a holiday weekend but close to this level of loading on midday weekend trains is typical of both the Providence and Worcester Lines and the T knows this because they run full bi-level trains with multiple conductors for these trips (and the typical loading is displayed on the online schedule). Surely the additional paying riders attracted by running hourly on these lines on weekends would reduce the additional costs of doing so to make it worthwhile.
I would caution against overinterpreting the T's use of full bi-level trains.
1) AFAIK, the T pretty much always tries to keep train consists together -- if a set has 8 bi-levels on weekdays, it'll have the same on weekends. Different rolling stock may be deployed based on demand, but the consists themselves remain consistent (no pun intended) -- it's not worth shunting things around.
2) My vague recollection (
@F-Line to Dudley can correct me) is that there's a limit on how few passenger coaches they can run on a single consist, because the coaches actually supply some of the braking power. IIRC, I think the minimum is 5 coaches. Among other things, this would mean that there's not much variability to play around with in terms of consist length anyway.
3) At least on the Providence Line, my understanding is that T equipment has an extra requirement to be able to interface with Amtrak's dispatching system (which is why Providence and Worcester sets sometimes get swapped at the last minute at South Station -- if they can't get the PVD set to talk correctly to Amtrak, they'll switch). This is an example of what I suspect is a larger phenomenon: it's simpler and more cost-effective to simply use the same equipment on weekends as on weekdays -- just use the equipment that's already there.
4) It's not super obvious to me that the T incurs significantly higher costs by running full-length sets. Presumably the main variable is the number of conductors; so, in this respect, I agree that we have some evidence that the T knows that there is weekend demand.
Another idea would be higher-fare weekend express trains filled into schedule gaps. Running a few round trips that are either normal weekday fare or the $20 event fare but make very limited stops could add more flexibility to people taking the train to one of these cities and make a very attractive alternative offer to driving. For the Worcester Line this could be BOS-Framingham-WOR with possibly Southborough for the I-90/495 park n ride and for the Providence Line BOS-128-Mansfield(?)-Pawtucket-PVD. Doing four round trips, 1 mid-morning, 1 midday, 1 afternoon, and 1 evening could cover all the common weekend travel times with an express option. A summer pilot with 4-car trains could be a good start to determine how attractive this is to the public.
This is a really interesting thought -- run faster and/or more frequent service to key stations (cities and park-n-rides) to attract leisure passengers on weekends. I think the conventional wisdom has always been that weekend demand is anemic and so you should just run the bare minimum anyway. But you're presenting an intriguing theory: latent demand might be higher but with a different profile and set of needs than weekday.
I'm not quite convinced that 4 round-trips would be enough to be more attractive than driving -- the time differences aren't going to be that enormous for rail vs driving, and 4 round-trips per day limits flexibility. So, the question is, how much more would the T need to do to make itself more attractive than driving?
Looking at the current schedule, it looks like the Providence Line is probably run with two sets simultaneously:
These may or may not be literally the same two sets all day -- that's what I'm attempting to indicate with the asterisks, in that these could be the same trains, but wouldn't have to be.
I played around in
my skip-stop generator and got the following:
An
All-Stops and E
xpress service, each every two hours, alternating to provide 2 trains per hour to Providence, Mansfield, and Route 128. Not perfectly clockfacing because the X trip is ~20 min faster (see below), but by synchronizing departures at :29 at Mansfield, the departures at PVD and RTE deviate from clockfacing by 8 min or less. (The corresponding outbound schedule is sketched out in the lower section: the top
finish layover indicates the departure from South Station,
finish return indicates the arrival in Providence [following the same stopping pattern as the set's inbound journey], and the bottom
finish layover indicates when the set is available for the next departure.)
By my read, this pattern would require 3 simultaneous sets, up from today's 2. It would also see all three sets in more or less constant service/turns, as opposed to today's schedule which definitely has "downtime" in it.
But yeah, looking at this schedule... I like. Those express times are comparable to driving. And with return trains leaving once an hour (give or take 5 minutes) all day, you can be flexible about when you decide to head home for the day.