underground
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It's best as a series of particle transport stations that conveniently shoot people anywhere they want in seconds flat.
Sorry to ask a question that could be researched online, but.... Is the Urban Ring better as a rapid bus transit or a subway/ground rail subway?
The Urban Ring, in its most recent form, was another BRT clusterfuck dreamed up by the same people who brought us Silver Line Phase 3. Basically they wanted to build a ring of BRT lines around the city which isn't so bad except the roads on which they wanted to run them aren't really wide enough for dedicated bus lanes and would have also involved stupidly expensive bus tunnels. Furthermore the headways proposed would have meant a river of buses circling the city which would have ADDED to the traffic problems rather than improved them. There is a reason no one at the MBTA has mentioned the Urban Ring in a decade.
The Urban Ring needs to be totally rethought for a growing Boston. BRT should rightfully be a part of the plan but not the majority. I wrote about reworking the Green Line into Urban Ring loops a while ago as a way to also create more capacity in the central subway. Looking back I see some issues with the plan but I still think it's a much better alternative than the proposed Urban Ring.
^ I'd love to see you post something that doesn't consist of either copy-paste articles/images or the phrase "big government"
Rather -- It was all about Political Correctness or its disciple -- Economic Justice -- offering a mythical one seat ride from Roxbury / Dorchester to what were then considered the prime employment clusters
Lol at political correctness. The MBTA decided that replacing SL4/5 with a light rail extension of the Green Line would only lead to 130 new daily transit riders, and as a result such extension would be cost-ineffective. That's how interested the local power brokers are in adding transit service to Roxbury.
Alon -- the fact that T planners considered digging a 1B$ tunnel between SL on Washington St. to the Silver Line @ South Station -- aka SL-3 -- was all about political correctness / economic justice, At the time no one disembarking from a Commuter Rail at South Station or the Red Line @ South Station was going the other way to a job in Roxbury
One could just as easily argue about the stupidity of restoration of the Greenbush Line while there was already a T-sponsored ferry from Hingham
Alon -- the fact that T planners considered digging a 1B$ tunnel between SL on Washington St. to the Silver Line @ South Station -- aka SL-3 -- was all about political correctness / economic justice, At the time no one disembarking from a Commuter Rail at South Station or the Red Line @ South Station was going the other way to a job in Roxbury
One could just as easily argue about the stupidity of restoration of the Greenbush Line while there was already a T-sponsored ferry from Hingham
Lol at political correctness. The MBTA decided that replacing SL4/5 with a light rail extension of the Green Line would only lead to 130 new daily transit riders, and as a result such extension would be cost-ineffective. That's how interested the local power brokers are in adding transit service to Roxbury.
Funny, I would have pegged it as a stupid airport line more than anything. No other reason to connect the two Silver Lies; if the point is just to give Roxbury better access to Downtown Boston, then a Green Line extension is both much cheaper and much more useful.
Although, coming to think of it, the idea that what Roxbury really needs is an airport connection is basically how I'd define political correctness, which is the veneer of anti-racism (or feminism, etc.) without any of the substance.
That said, to the MBTA's credit, it pulled the plug after costs ran up to $2 billion, i.e. what a normal city would spend on the NSRL.
I think it has more to do with assumptions made in regional demand models.
The proposed Green Line, based on the higher-capacity of light rail vehicles, would operate on a 12-minute peak headway while the SL4/SL5 runs about every 4/5 minutes for both routes combined. The model would assign an advantage to the bus which might mitigate a travel time advantage to light rail.
Eh.
First, SL4/SL5 is a reverse branch; each destination - South Station and Downtown Crossing - only has half the frequency. The Green Line would not have this split.
Second, the report does give the Green Line 34,000 weekday riders, twice the ridership of SL4/SL5, and more than each of the existing branches; it just thinks all but 130 of those would move from other transit modes, which is insane. So even though the likely frequency actually higher than that of SL4 or SL5, the report still sandbags light rail.
And third, don't sell the speed issue short. The mixed traffic in downtown is pretty slow.
The primary purpose of Silver Line phase-III was to provide improved connections from locations on the Green Line and Orange Line to the South Boston waterfront by providing a two transfer rider (Green/Silver or Orange /Silver) vs. the present three-transfer ride (Green/Red/Silver or Orange/Red/Silver).
That's really not much better. SL2 has shit ridership too, and American cities overinvest in transit to waterfront condos as much as in transit to airports. You should see the sort of stuff that New York politicians come up with - ferries with double-digit per-rider subsidies are in vogue right now. In the name of avoiding expensive subway and light rail extensions, American cities will light large quantities of money on fire on so-called low-cost BRT and ferries. The Silver Lie's part of that tradition. It has nothing to do with social justice concerns, which, if Boston had even an ounce of, it would railstitute SL4 and then push branches to Forest Hills and along Blue Hill Avenue (the 28 is in a near-tie with the 39 for the busiest single bus route in Boston as per the 2014 Blue Book).
What would be the point of an extension to Forest Hills? The Orange Line already provides service to Forest Hills and Green St., the old pre-1987 Orange Line never had that many local riders traveling just between Forest Hills and Dudley, the old Egleston Sq. station catchment area is still close to the relocated Jackson Sq. and has three bus routes to connect it for those that don't want to walk, and the present bus route from Forest Hills to Dudley has a 25-minute headway in the p.m. peak. Doesn't sound like good territory to justify light rail construction.
If the auto share for the corridor is already low, where are the diversions to the light rail line coming from?