This started off as a note about reducing public transport fares.
However, once I started to put together the data needed to estimate
what some of the proposals were going to cost the picture became more
complex. Up till then I thought that, because about 65% of commutes
used cars as their main method of travel to work there was plenty of
scope for reducing transport emissions and congestion by getting most
of these commuters to switch to public or active transport.
However, some key bits of data changed my mind:-
67% of trips to work were to places that were within the commuters “normal area of residence.”
-
Only 10% of car commutes were to places within the city centre area.
-
63% of commutes to the city centre were already using public transport by 2011.
It was concluded that the potential for switching car commutes to
active or public transport was much less than what was implied by the
“65% of commutes used cars”.
A number of possibilities were considered for increasing the use of
public transport:
-
Make public transport times more competitive by increasing the number of T2 lanes. (Lanes restricted to the use of buses, commercial vehicles and cars with passengers.)
-
Replacing low frequency public transport routes that go all the way to the city centre with free, shorter, high frequency feeder bus routes that only go to nearby high frequency transport routes, local workplaces, shopping centres, parks etc. Potential benefits include:
-
Increasing the number of people who have access to high frequency transport.
-
Providing a system that will encourage people to use public transport instead of cars for travel within their local area.
-
Reducing the number of buses going into the city centre.
These proposals should be accompanied by campaigns to highlight the
quality of life benefits of public transport such as reduced
transport stress, time to think, wind down etc.
Both these proposals would have negligible costs unless a decision
were made to use more buses on the feeder routes to increase
frequency or extent of the feeder bus system.
DETAILS:
Table 1 provides a breakdown of the modes of travel used by commuters
on Tues 9 2011.
Table 1: MAIN Method of travel to work Tues 9 August 2011- GREATER
Brisbane
Method of travel
|
Number
|
Brisbane %
|
Queensland %
|
Total public transport
|
127459
|
12.7
|
7.4
|
Total Car
|
648082
|
64.5
|
67.2
|
% cars driver only
|
82.5
|
82.5
|
81.5
|
Truck
|
11403
|
1.1
|
1.3
|
Motor bike
|
9729
|
1.0
|
0.9
|
Total Active
|
41774
|
4.2
|
4.7
|
Total employed people over 15
|
1004813
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Census of Population and
Housing 2006 and 2011. Compiled
and presented by .id , the population experts.
Tables like this suggest that many of Brisbane's commuter problems
could be solved by getting people out of cars and onto public
transport. The underlying assumption here is that it is
practical for most commuters to use public transport to get to work.
However, it is not quite as simple as this. When “How
many commuters travel every day?” was googled this came up:
“As of the 2011 census, Brisbane
had a working population of 643,000. Of this
figure, only 211,281 (33%) commute outside their usual area of
residence to work. The destination most commuted to is the inner
city, with 145,599 (22%) commuting to the inner city on a daily
basis. “
Funny thing is Brisbane has a public transport system that is largely
about moving the 22% between the CBD and the suburbs. It is not
about moving the 67% who work within their usual area of residence
and certainly not about moving across the city to a workplace that is
nowhere near the CBD.
A Brisbane
Times article was also found that came with the
following chart and map that changed the way I think about Brisbane
public transport:
Fig
1: Public transport mode share of journeys to work by work location
(Census 2011).
Source:
Chartingtransport.com
And
And
Fig
2: Percent of people using public transport to go to work
(darker
green denotes a higher percentage).
Source:
Chartingtransport.com
Fig 3 gives more information about the transport split of people going to work in city centres.
Fig 3 gives more information about the transport split of people going to work in city centres.
Fig 3: Transport split for city centres – 2001 to 2011
Source: Chartingtransport.com:
The
Journey to Work and the City Centre (Australian cities 2011)
The key Brisbane figures for 2011 were:
-
Public transport=63.2%
-
Active transport=7.8%
-
Total sustainable=71.0%
-
Private transport=28.7%
Note that the share of public and active transport grew
significantly between 2001 and 2011.
NOTE: There
are differences between some of the data sources. These differences
are not large enough to affect key conclusions or create significant
errors in calculations based on mixed data.
Travel to the City Centre for Work:
The high use of public transport by those travelling to the city
centre should hardly be surprising:
-
The Brisbane public transport system is largely about meeting the needs of people travelling to and from the city centre.
-
For most of travellers, parking costs make the cost of driving higher than using public transport.
Not sure why some people choose to drive to the city center to work.
Possibilities include:
-
They want to spend less time travelling to and from work. (I found that 3 zone commuting between the CBD and Chapel Hill using a low frequency bus route (425) took about twice as long as driving.)
-
Simply see travel time using public transport as the same as driving time. (Public transport involves less stress, time to wind down, etc. compared with driving.)
-
The start and/or finish of their journey is not well served by public transport. (Part of the problem I found when depending on route 425.)
-
They drive a company car (or at least get free parking as part of their package.)
-
They have found somewhere to park for free and want to avoid the higher cost of using public transport.
-
They drive a vehicle that really is needed for work.
-
They need to carry things like tools or teaching materials to and from work.
NOTE: Commuting to the city centre by car in 2011 was about
10% of the Brisbane total car commutes. This should be kept in
mind when deciding where the increasing public transport effort
should go.
In terms of commuting between the city center and the suburbs:
-
Not sure that reducing fares would be a very cost effective way of getting people out of cars and on to public transport. (It would be easy to spend a lot of money reducing the fares of people who are already using public transport in return for only a small increase in the use of public transport by city centre commuters.)
-
It may be far more cost effective to link a campaign highlighting the stress reduction etc. benefits of public transport while doing things to make public transport more competitive in terms of travel time using low cost options such as:
-
Converting low frequency routes into shorter, higher frequency feeder routes.
-
Increasing the use of dedicated T2 lanes for buses, taxis, commercial vehicles and cars with passengers.
Some polling of city centre commuters who drive instead of using
public transport would be useful.
NOTE: In terms of the total contribution cars make to to
congestion, keep in mind that the city centre figures above for cars
do not include vehicles that are merely passing through to
destinations that are outside the city centre. The location of
bridges, the number of major roads that feed into the city centre and
the quaint practice of placing a toll on congestion bypasses all
contribute to this through traffic problem.
People Working Within Their “Usual Area of Residence”.
(NOTE: My understanding is
that “Usual Area of Residence” are the areas shown in fig2.)
The figures above suggest that
about 85%% of those working outside of the city centre would work
within their “usual area of residence” and that, for this group,
the average use of public and active transport would be lower than
the overall. This is not surprising. For example, for the Chapel
Hill/Kenmore area where I live:
-
Driving to most of these jobs would take 10 to 15 mins.
-
Parking is free and easy to find.
-
The potential jobs are not concentrated in any one area.
-
Most of the jobs are outside of easy walking distance.
-
A bike could be used to safely get to some parts of the area but, for other parts, the bike route is not safe.
-
Most of the area is hilly so active transport can mean arriving at work hot and sweaty.
-
Most of the public transport routes are low frequency. Getting from where I live to many other parts of the area would require trips on more than one bus.
-
Using one full peak travel zone of public transport would cost about $30/week compared with $6/week for a small car traveling 4 km to work.
There
are things that might be done to reduce some of the above problems.
For example:
-
Provide more safe bike routes.
-
Use e-bikes or scooters to fix the “arriving hot and sweaty problem.”
-
Replace low frequency bus routes that run all the way to the city with local, higher frequency feeder bus routes.
-
Merge some feeder bus routes to allow more of the area to be reached without having to change buses.
-
Make the feeder buses free like the city centre free bus loops.
-
Encourage the concentration of jobs in areas that are safe and easy to get to using public or active transport.
Even
if all of the above changes were done, driving a vehicle would still
be the quickest and most convenient way of getting to work for most
jobs in the Chapel Hill/Kenmore area.
Not
all “usual areas of residence” will have the same transport
problems or opportunities as Chapel Hill/Kenmore.
They need to be looked at on an area by area basis. Active and/or
public transport may/may not be a far more practical way of commuting
in some of these areas.
Other
“Working Outside the City
Centre” Jobs:
Only 11% of travel to work fell into this group of jobs. This makes
it hard to tell from the above information what the split between
travel modes is or what actions may be worthwhile taking to increase
active or public transport.
In some cases the issues and solutions will be similar to those
associated with travelling to the CBD or within the “usual area of
residence”.
For others the key problem is that the public transport system is CBD
centric and provides a very poor service for workers who have to
travel across the city instead of to and from the CBD. (For example,
at one stage I was working in the Archerfield industrial area. To
get there by 9 AM from where I live at Chapel Hill takes about 35
mins x 20km direct drive by car Vs 1.5 hrs using a longer public
transport journey that involved using 3 buses.)
Actions that make the public transport system less CBD centric are
desirable.
Discussion and Conclusions:
Public transport is not some magic answer to city transport problems.
High frequency public transport is a good way of moving lots of
people, particularly to an area where parking is limited or
expensive. For this reason, public transport makes sense for most of
the people who work in a place like the city centre. The 63% of city
centre workers who commuted using public transport reflects this.
On the other hand, high frequency public transport makes less sense
for moving smaller numbers of people relatively short distances to
jobs that are spread over a large area. The 65%+ of people who work
outside the city centre who commuted by car reflects this reality.
It may make sense for the BCC to spend money trying to encourage some
of the people who commute by car to switch to public transport.
However, we need to accept that there are circumstances where
commuting by private vehicle makes sense from the city, car user and
other transport user perspective.
One of the figures that stands out in table 1 is that 82.5% of car
commutes take place in driver only cars. A safe, weather proof
motor bike seems a more logical vehicle for these commuters. The BCC
should campaign for the setting of the standards and road rules
required to allow this type of vehicle to be legally used.
So what can we say about potential actions to increase public
transport usage?
Apart from some fare reduction proposals that will be discussed in a
separate note the most promising approaches involve making public
transport travel time and convenience more competitive. Combined
these changes with the promotion of public transport as a lower
stress, “time to do other things” form of transport compared with
driving makes sense.
Dedicated Lanes:
Public transport travel times can
be made more competitive by increasing the number of T2 lanes (that
can only be used by buses, commercial vehicles and cars with
passengers.) Keep in mind that dedicated lanes have no
effect on the travel times of those who aren't allowed to use them
provided that the section of road they are on is not a bottleneck.
The cost of setting up T2 lanes is negligible – nothing more than a
few signs.
Free feeder buses:
The feeder bus concept involves replacing low frequency bus routes
that go all the way into the city with much shorter, higher frequency
feeder bus routes that simply move people to high frequency transport
routes and local workplaces, shopping centres, parks etc.
Significant gains in frequency can be made without increasing the
size of the bus fleet. Merging some of these feeder routes will make
it easier to ride around a local area without having to change buses.
It is proposed that
feeder buses will be free like the city
centre free bus loops. Normal fares
would apply when passengers transfer to the normal public transport
routes. As a result there will be no loss of fares.
The key benefits of free feeder bus systems are:
-
It will increase the number of people who have access to high frequency transport.
-
It provides a system that will encourage people to use public transport instead of cars for travel within their local area.
-
The number of buses going into the city centre will be reduced.
Costs will be negligible unless a decision is made to add extra buses
to the service to increase frequency or extend the service.
NOTE: This note has concentrated on travel to work because
there was good data available for work travel. Breakdown
of CBD Travel
provides
some useful information on CBD related non-work travel and how
traffic volumes vary during the day. Feeder buses would provide
significant benefits for non-work travel.
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