gingerheid
Established Member
- Joined
- 2 Apr 2006
- Messages
- 1,585
A lot of what's going on with bus and coach routes in the UK is doom and gloom, but there must be some shining example of success (I have one locally...)
What examples of greatly growing bus routes are there? I'm looking for cases where the growth has occurred over a number of years and improved services are stable, so not just services being doubled by a bus war or an operator trying out an improved service that may or may not work. Also looking for things over a decent area, not one short new route to a new estate that didn't exist before!
I'm looking for things to compare with the Cambridgeshire Guided Busway. Before the guideway opened there were 4 or 5 buses an hour from St Ives to Cambridge, which from a new timetable to be introduced soon will be 12 buses an hour for much of the day (and has been stable at at least 8 for a few years). The Sunday service will have become a lot similar to the previous weekday service.
On the southern stretch all the previous services in the area around it are really unchanged (except one rural route that has been in terminal decline that seems to have been rescued by a transfer to the guideway), and the guideway itself has 12 buses an hour at peak time (soon to increase a little, 4 of which are subsidised by the University).
There's a lot of reasons for this but, as much as the illogical nature of this offends me, the busway itself seems to be the main one. There has been building on the route, but there's been building on other routes nearby (like Cambourne and St Neots) without the same effect on bus services, and in fact where efforts to expand services such as the X4 failed.
What examples of greatly growing bus routes are there? I'm looking for cases where the growth has occurred over a number of years and improved services are stable, so not just services being doubled by a bus war or an operator trying out an improved service that may or may not work. Also looking for things over a decent area, not one short new route to a new estate that didn't exist before!
I'm looking for things to compare with the Cambridgeshire Guided Busway. Before the guideway opened there were 4 or 5 buses an hour from St Ives to Cambridge, which from a new timetable to be introduced soon will be 12 buses an hour for much of the day (and has been stable at at least 8 for a few years). The Sunday service will have become a lot similar to the previous weekday service.
On the southern stretch all the previous services in the area around it are really unchanged (except one rural route that has been in terminal decline that seems to have been rescued by a transfer to the guideway), and the guideway itself has 12 buses an hour at peak time (soon to increase a little, 4 of which are subsidised by the University).
There's a lot of reasons for this but, as much as the illogical nature of this offends me, the busway itself seems to be the main one. There has been building on the route, but there's been building on other routes nearby (like Cambourne and St Neots) without the same effect on bus services, and in fact where efforts to expand services such as the X4 failed.