botach wrote:
Quote:
Buses are an essential service for those who do not / can not drive, but a door-to-door integrated public transport system has always seemed a bit unrealistic to me.
Not door to door --- but terminal to terminal - you walk to the bus - walk from the bus station etc to the train , and at the other end , would expect to find a bus to take you into town etc.
Most rail stations are remote from towns/town centres - thats why it's essential to provide a bus service to town, how else can people be encouraged to give up the car??
It's actually quite easy to get from my place of residence to town where I work, but there are a few reasons why I do not.....
There
used to be a railway right past my house into town but it was torn up in the 70s...... Ok so buses??
Yep we have those. We even have a park and ride - although it's generally the same buses which do the Park & Ride and the normal bus service - it just that some runs of the service (same bus number) go different routes - so you need to be well practised to know if any particular bus is going to drop you at the P&R when you didn't P&R, or near home with your car 2 miles away at the P&R
Upon arriving in town, the bus station is very central right next to the railway station. You can jump straight on a train without getting wet and head 3 miles out to the industrial estate where most people work, and wave at it from a distance of 600 yards as the train carries on to the next stop 6 miles away in the next town
Similarly, the railway runs within about 300 yards of Aberdeen Airport - on the opposite side to the terminal and industrial estate.
There are no maps on bus stops like the London tube, although they have thought to colour in the buses in the city to show which "line" they run. Sadly though, unless you know the names of each street corner through all the minky chavtastic council estates, and owing to there being no schematic maps to show exactly where the Red Line actually goes - it's a bit of a lottery climbing on a bus.
The long and the short of it is that if I didn't have a car I'd have to leave the house 45 mins earlier, arrive at work half an hour later, having spent £2.70 more on buses than the car cost, plus a mile walk up a steep (usually wet and windy hill) to the industrial estate to work, then even more hassle getting home.
Public transport would net me £13.50 per week worse off, and I'd get 2 hours per day less at home with the family.
If the train still went past my house I'd probably use it, or indeed if the train stopped near my work rather than sailing straight past it I'd probably use that too.
Hell I'd even mix it up and use the bus into town (if they'd decide which buses went where, gave them separate numbers, regular times (Between 5pm and 6pm, there's one bus heading my way at 17:10, then nothing until 17:45 when 3 turn up together going basically the same way, but one drives straight past the P&R, one does the P&R, and one takes in an extra village or two along the way

)) then the train to work if they'd build a station on the way past Aberdeen's largest industrial estate.