More RIPTA routes aren’t always better for transit


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Human Transit by Jarrett Walker leads us to some unexpected conclusions about RIPTA

At Transport Providence, we evaluate the book Human Transit by Portland, Oregon planner Jarrett Walker.  We ask whether perhaps RIPTA should cut some routes, and question whether the streetcar plan is really the best option for transit in Providence.  We welcome people to debate in the comments section.

Walker says:

Transit debates. . . suffer form the fact that today, in most of our cities, most of our decision makers are motorists.  No matter how much you support transit, driving a car every day can shape your thinking in powerful, subconscious ways.  For example, in most debates about proposed rapid transit lines, the speed of the proposed service gets more political attention than how frequently it runs, even though frequency, which determines waiting time, often matters more than speed in determining how long your trip will take. Your commuter train system will advertise that it can whisk you into the city in 39 minutes, but if the train comes only once every 2 hours and you’ve just missed one, your travel time will be 159 minutes, so it may be faster to drive, or even walk.

Check out more here. And here’s an excerpt from my post:

…on the West End, we have the 92, the 27, and the 19, and any one of these could be used to get to Downcity–and in fact, these are just the routes I happen to use sometimes.  I’m fairly sure there are even more.

On the map, this looks like lots of options. In reality, none of these options is good though, because they’re all infrequent and unreliable.  The 92 moves at glacial pace through Atwells Avenue traffic, while the other two, although faster, are still fairly infrequent.  It’s like a Sophie’s choice trying to decide whether to risk missing one route for the other, especially when on any given day the schedule may not even hold to be true.

Fertile Underground co-op backs bicycle efforts


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Click on the image to learn more about Fertile Underground.
Click on the image to learn more about Fertile Underground.

Fertile Underground, the West End’s community grocery cooperative, decided at its General Assembly recently to support two great transportation reform endeavors:  Park(ing) Day and Bike-to-FUG-Sundays.

In cooperation with the Recycle-a-Bike bike valet, Fertile Underground will use two of its front parking spots for temporary bike parking on Sunday mornings in order to encourage families to cycle in.  The store will feature a different discount or special offer for cyclists each week.  Recycle-a-Bike will offer the service for free, but suggests a donation of $1 for the valet attendant to watch each bike.

As we’ve previously pointed out on this blog, bikes take up so much less space than cars, that removing the parking spots in favor of bike parking actually greatly increases the number of people who can shop at the store.

FUG has also become the first business in Providence to make a hard commitment to be part of Park(ing) Day on September 20th.  Park(ing) Day is when businesses temporarily use their parking spaces for something other than parking.  It highlights the huge amount of space used to store cars–an East Providence-sized area in Rhode Island alone, and an area the size of Puerto Rico (or about three Rhode Islands) nationally–and how that space can be used for more creative purposes like public gardens, outdoor seating, sales areas, or bike amenities.  As a temporary model, Park(ing) Day is low-risk, but sometimes the changes are so popular that they get adopted permanently, as in my old neighborhood of West Philly, where the Green Line Cafe instituted outdoor parklets with seating.

I’m really excited that Transport Providence has been able to partner with FUG on both these projects.

This piece is reposted by James Kennedy from his blog TransportProvidence.


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