TheGuy77
Member
Let's imagine that you (unlikely) get a huge sum of £100 million from the Government to improve Sheffield's buses.
What would you do to improve Sheffield's buses?
What would you do to improve Sheffield's buses?
I remember the X99 from Sheffield to Scarborough.Reintroduce the X18 to Hanley (Stoke-on-Trent ) via Buxton, Bakewell and Castleton
Bring the X78 back on its old route for a start…
Yes. Increase the frequency of the 18 / 18A to start.More frequent timetables, most routes are on a Saturday type frequency. Improve the terrible 2 hourly frequencies some route have.
Derby doesn't have any electric or hydrogen buses. Indeed one of the main operators has just ordered 29 more diesels. As for buses from Sheffield or Meadowhall to Doncaster. I'd just catch the train and be there quicker.Reverse the dreadful bus partnership network changes particularly in October 2015 which upset & drove passenger’s away & into cars.
Reopen Pinstone Street & Leopold Street in City Centre to buses with buses going back to their old routes via High Street. Better stops on here & Leopold Street than a stop on a pole & connected to a lamp post with no protection in poor weather.
Invest in electric/hydrogen buses, for it’s size Sheffield must have the lowest amount of electric/hydrogen buses in the country.
More frequent timetables, most routes are on a Saturday type frequency. Improve the terrible 2 hourly frequencies some route have.
That was done to prop up the poor X1 & X2 which are no where near as popular as first thought. The X3 is still faster than X2 to Doncaster which takes around 2 hours. X3 is 1 hour 30.
Often the frequency expressed in buses per hour is quite good, but the lack of coordination means headways are typically far longer than they need to be.More frequent timetables, most routes are on a Saturday type frequency. Improve the terrible 2 hourly frequencies some route have.
A very measured post, and not just the "the answer is franchising - now what's the question?"Let's get the basics right first. Make sure everywhere has a bus service, including evenings and Sundays and at an acceptable frequency. Ensure there are enough drivers and buses for the service to be reliable. Ensure bus priority measures are properly enforced and maybe even expanded, so journey times can be attractive and reliable. Sort out the city centre bus routes and stops, we still have the temporary arrangements from after the first Coronavirus lockdown!
Secondly do the buses go where and when passengers want to go? Demand has changed, buses haven't. Tendered services are the worst for this with local authorities ticking boxes rather than providing a useful service.
Thirdly, where multiple routes serve the same corridor, there are examples of poorly coordinated timetables. An example of this is Abbeydale Road in the evening where buses 75, 76, 97 and 98 all run hourly providing four buses an hour but only a half hourly combined frequency as they run in pairs!
Services like the 24/25, 52/52a and 120 also seem to have lost the coordination they had pre covid under the bus partnership.
Finally cross border services, which could get worse under bus franchising as local authorities put up a glass wall at the county boundary.. there is no multi operator / multi modal ticket that includes both Sheffield and Derbyshire, there is no bus service between Bradway and Dronfield, there are no buses to Sheffield from villages like Holmesfield and Apperknowle whilst Ridgeway and Coal Aston are very poorly served compared to nearby places such as Lowedges, Jordanthorpe, Birley and Gleadless.
The PTE no longer exists, the organisation was wound up a few years ago and replaced by the Mayoral Combined Authority.A very measured post, and not just the "the answer is franchising - now what's the question?"
Remember that when Sheffield City Council brought in their Clean Air Zone, they excluded private cars as they wanted to target the worst polluting vehicles... Much more electorally safe than a per capita calculationThat said, there are some quite extensive bits of bus priority but it needs to be better linked. Better enforcement too - traffic congestion pays no respect to the logo on the side of the bus!
The whole Buses for Sheffield initiative that was brokered by the PTE was so badly managed in terms of publicity and execution. I'd be concerned about their ability to take on greater responsibility; I find them one of the weaker PTEs.
As for coordination of headways etc... I'll take your word on that.
Sorry - I know they're combined authorities. Just a regression to an archaic term - they were PTEs much long than CAs to me.The PTE no longer exists, the organisation was wound up a few years ago and replaced by the Mayoral Combined Authority.
Who runs the buses I think is something of a red herring, however the place we're in is different to before Covid and if franchising unlocks things like funding, ability to coordinate the network and the inclination of the council to play their part then it could be a positive thing, however a lot of money has to be spent restructuring first!
Using one area i know as an example, Bradway, the complaints are
It seems like the 2015 consultation is causing all the problems. How would you guys fix them?
There are some easy fixes to all these problems.Using one area i know as an example, Bradway, the complaints are
- Journey time to the City centre too slow, up to 50 minutes to go 5 miles!
- no evening service (last bus back from the city centre is 8pm)
- no bus to Abbeydale Road or London Road
- no bus to Dronfield
- link to medical centre at Jordanthorpe is limited to just a few trips a day
- buses are regularly cancelled, sometimes even the last one at night leaving passengers stranded.
The current network however is now well established and tearing everything up and starting again isn't always helpful, I'd get the current network working first - fill in the gaps such as restoring lost evening and Sunday services, get services reliable, then look at where there is new connections that could be added to fulfil demand not currently catered for.
We could start off by extending the 86 and 24 to Bradway, as well as a full route on Evenings and Sundays,- no bus to Abbeydale Road or London Road
so the last bus from the City Centre would be around 11pm. We could even have London-Style night buses, which would be extended to places like Crystal Peaks, Swallownest (24/25) and High Green (86).- no evening service (last bus back from the city centre is 8pm)
We could then extend the M17 to Dronfield Station (via Coal Aston), following the route of the 44. Have 2 buses running the route (Half-hourly frequency) and have it run 6am-Midnight and you would have 27-ish buses on the M17, 5 times as much as now.- no bus to Dronfield
- link to medical centre at Jordanthorpe is limited to just a few trips a day
I'd perhaps go for the option of extending the 86 to Dronfield via Bradway.There are some easy fixes to all these problems.
We could start off by extending the 86 and 24 to Bradway, as well as a full route on Evenings and Sundays,
so the last bus from the City Centre would be around 11pm. We could even have London-Style night buses, which would be extended to places like Crystal Peaks, Swallownest (24/25) and High Green (86).
We could then extend the M17 to Dronfield Station (via Coal Aston), following the route of the 44. Have 2 buses running the route (Half-hourly frequency) and have it run 6am-Midnight and you would have 27-ish buses on the M17, 5 times as much as now.
It seems like making buses better is easier than you think, you just need some actual funding from an actually good government.
If anybody wants me to fix other areas of Sheffield's bus services, please let me know.
Tap on tap off only really works if everything is on the same system, ie same operator. First is the only operator with a tap on tap off system and it only caps within First operator specific products. It's also proved passengers do not like the concept, don't trust it and choose not to use the system. Those that pay cash, which includes those on low incomes, cannot use it anyway.Is there a countywide, operator-independent tap-on / tap-off fare system with daily and weekly caps? If there is not, I'd suggest that should be a high priority.
Integration with tram and train as a bonus.
Oh for turning the clock back, to when buses were still the first and only choice for most journeys. By 1957/8 that was coming to an end, about the time of this extract from the route 22 timetable joining Bradway to Dronfield Woodhouse and the city half hourly. The 86 also served Bradway and Holmesfield.Using one area i know as an example, Bradway, the complaints are
- Journey time to the City centre too slow, up to 50 minutes to go 5 miles!
- no evening service (last bus back from the city centre is 8pm)
- no bus to Abbeydale Road or London Road
- no bus to Dronfield
- link to medical centre at Jordanthorpe is limited to just a few trips a day
- buses are regularly cancelled, sometimes even the last one at night leaving passengers stranded.
The current network however is now well established and tearing everything up and starting again isn't always helpful, I'd get the current network working first - fill in the gaps such as restoring lost evening and Sunday services, get services reliable, then look at where there is new connections that could be added to fulfil demand not currently catered for.
So basically you're saying that we should go back to the drawing board and recreate the routes to integrate with new housing developments and tram and rail services? That would be a good idea, but doing a mammoth task like that would cause backlash at first. Perhaps a really long, like 3-month-long consultation should take place with public surveys could do the trick.Throw away the entire current network. The biggest mistake made in 2015 was not doing so. That proposal was little more than a tinkering around the edges of the then network, with little gain.
Start afresh with a ground-up re-analysis of the flow of people in the entire area, extending to and including the nearby larger places like Chesterfield and Worksop (including their residential suburbs). Map this "latent demand" and then calculate the best way of meeting it using the entire suite of "not-car" options, integrated.
For example only (so, not necessarily accurate)
- there may be an unsatisfied latent demand between the huge housing development around Gateford (Worksop) and Sheffield.
- the most effective not-car way to move people between these places may be by bus to a nearby rail station, thence by train.
So, provide for both and integrate them. Fares, tickets, schedules, connections. The whole thing.
Longer routes need to be faster and/or more direct. Using one route/vehicle to provide for longer distance travellers whilst meandering around as many housing estates and other "diversions" as possible renders use of the route unattractive.
Expand this process out to the entire region. That becomes the core. Add socially necessary links to this.
Conceptually - buses consist of a "virtual tram" core network of unchanging, frequent, limited stop, fairly direct routes, supplemented by local feeders, again, integrated. And those together further integrated with existing and/or expanded tram and train routes.
In a list of other major towns and cities in the UK would the bus service in Sheffield rank lower than any of the following:
Nottingham, Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds, Hull, Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Coventry, Reading, Brighton, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Newcastle, Bristol etc…
Are you talking about the 15 / 16?extend the Chesterfield to Dronfield services through to Bradway & Lowedges possibly also terminating at St James Retail Park.