fbpx
Wikipedia

Bus rapid transit

Bus rapid transit (BRT), also referred to as a busway or transitway, is a bus-based public transport system designed to have much more capacity, reliability and other quality features than a conventional bus system.[3] Typically, a BRT system includes roadways that are dedicated to buses, and gives priority to buses at intersections where buses may interact with other traffic; alongside design features to reduce delays caused by passengers boarding or leaving buses, or paying fares. BRT aims to combine the capacity and speed of a light rail transit (LRT) or mass rapid transit (MRT) system with the flexibility, lower cost and simplicity of a bus system.

TransJakarta in Jakarta, Indonesia. It is the longest BRT system in the world (251.2 km).[1]
30 meter long Transmetro in Guatemala City for 300 passengers[2]

The world's first BRT system was the Busway in Runcorn New Town, England, which entered service in 1971.[4][5] As of March 2018, a total of 166 cities in six continents have implemented BRT systems, accounting for 4,906 km (3,048 mi) of BRT lanes[6] and about 32.2 million passengers every day.

The majority of these are in Latin America, where about 19.6 million passengers ride daily, and which has the most cities with BRT systems, with 54, led by Brazil with 21 cities.[6] The Latin American countries with the most daily ridership are Brazil (10.7 million), Colombia (3.0 million), and Mexico (2.5 million).

In the other regions, China (4.3 million) and Iran (2.1 million) stand out.[6] Currently, TransJakarta is the largest BRT network in the world, with about 251.2 kilometres (156.1 mi) of corridors connecting the Indonesian capital city.[1]

Terminology edit

Bus Rapid Transit is a mode of mass rapid transit (MRT)[7] and describes a high-capacity urban public-transit system with its own right of way, vehicles at short headways, platform-level boarding, and preticketing.[3]

The expression "BRT" is mainly used in the Americas and China; in India, it is called "BRTS" (BRT System); in Europe it is often called a "busway" or a "BHLS" (stands for Bus with a High Level of Service);.[8] The term transitway was originated in 1981 with the opening of the OC Transpo transitway in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

Critics[who?] have charged that the term "bus rapid transit" has sometimes been misapplied to systems that lack most or all the essential features which differentiate it from conventional bus services. The term "bus rapid transit creep" has been used to describe severely degraded levels of bus service which fall far short of the BRT Standard promoted by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP) and other organizations.

Reasons for use edit

Compared to other common transit modes such as light rail transit (LRT), bus rapid transit (BRT) service is attractive to transit authorities because it does not cost as much to establish and operate: no track needs to be laid, bus drivers typically require less training and less pay than rail operators, and bus maintenance is less complex than rail maintenance.[citation needed]

Moreover, buses are more flexible than rail vehicles, because a bus route can be altered, either temporarily or permanently, to meet changing demand or contend with adverse road conditions with comparatively little investment of resources.[9]

History edit

 
Elevated busway at Runcorn Shopping City

The first use of a protected busway was the East Side Trolley Tunnel in Providence, Rhode Island. It was converted from trolley to bus use in 1948.[10][11] However, the first BRT system in the world was the Busway in Runcorn, England.[4] First conceived in the Runcorn New Town Masterplan in 1966, it opened for services in October 1971 and all 22 kilometres (14 mi) were operational by 1980.[5] The central station is at Runcorn Shopping City where buses arrive on dedicated raised busways to two enclosed stations.[12] Arthur Ling, Runcorn Development Corporation's Master Planner, said that he had invented the concept while sketching on the back of an envelope.[13] The town was designed around the transport system, with most residents no more than five minutes walking distance, or 500 yards (460 m), from the Busway.[14]

 
The Rede Integrada de Transporte in Curitiba, Brazil, was opened in 1974. The RIT was inspired by the National Urban Transport Company of Peru.

The second BRT system in the world was the Rede Integrada de Transporte (RIT, integrated transportation network), implemented in Curitiba, Brazil, in 1974. The Rede Integrada de Transporte was inspired by the previous transport system of the National Urban Transport Company of Peru (In Spanish: ENATRU), which only had quick access on Lima downtown, but it would not be considered[by whom?] BRT itself.[6] Many of the elements that have become associated with BRT were innovations first suggested by Carlos Ceneviva, within the team of Curitiba Mayor Jaime Lerner.[15][16] Initially just dedicated bus lanes in the center of major arterial roads, in 1980 the Curitiba system added a feeder bus network and inter-zone connections, and in 1992 introduced off-board fare collection, enclosed stations, and platform-level boarding. Other systems made further innovations, including platooning (three buses entering and leaving bus stops and traffic signals at once) in Porto Alegre, and passing lanes and express service in São Paulo.[17]

In the United States, BRT began in 1977, with Pittsburgh's South Busway,[18] operating on 4.3 miles (6.9 km) of exclusive lanes. Its success led to the Martin Luther King Jr. East Busway in 1983, a fuller BRT deployment including a dedicated busway of 9.1 miles (14.6 km), traffic signal preemption, and peak service headway as low as two minutes. After the opening of the West Busway, 5.1 miles (8.2 km) in length in 2000, Pittsburgh's Busway system is today over 18.5 miles long.

The OC Transpo BRT system in Ottawa, Canada, was introduced in 1983.[19] The first element of its BRT system was dedicated bus lanes through the city centre, with platformed stops. The introduction of exclusive separate busways (termed 'Transitway') occurred in 1983. By 1996, all of the originally envisioned 31 km Transitway system was in operation; further expansions were opened in 2009, 2011, and 2014. As of 2019, the central part of the Transitway has been converted to light rail transit, due to the downtown section being operated beyond its designed capacity.[20]

In 1995, Quito, Ecuador, opened MetrobusQ its first BRT trolleybuses in Quito, using articulated trolleybuses.[citation needed] The TransMilenio in Bogotá, Colombia, opening in 2000, was the first BRT system to combine the best elements of Curitiba's BRT with other BRT advances, and achieved the highest capacity and highest speed BRT system in the world.

In 2017 Marrakesh, Morocco, opened its first BRT Marrakesh trolleybus system (BHNS De Marrakesh) trolleybuses Corridors of 8 km (5.0 mi), of which 3 km (1.9 mi) of overhead wiring for operation as trolleybus.

In January 2004 the first BRT in Southeast Asia, TransJakarta, opened in Jakarta, Indonesia. As of 2015, at 210 kilometres (130 mi), it is the longest BRT system in the world.[21]

 
A Mercedes-Benz O305 travelling on the O-Bahn in Adelaide, Australia

Africa's first BRT system was opened in Lagos, Nigeria, in March 2008 but is considered a light BRT system by many people.[22] Johannesburg, South Africa, BRT Rea Vaya, was the first true BRT in Africa, in August 2009, carrying 16,000 daily passengers.[23] Rea Vaya and MIO (BRT in Cali, Colombia, opened 2009) were the first two systems to combine full BRT with some services that also operated in mixed traffic, then joined the BRT trunk infrastructure.[24]

Main features edit

BRT systems normally include most of the following features:

Dedicated lanes and alignment edit

 
TransJakarta buses use separate lanes to avoid congested roads.
 
Elevated BRT system in Xiamen
 
A Viva bus in York Region, north of Toronto, Canada, demonstrates many features of BRT; elaborate stations, comfortable express buses, unique branding, and coloured 'lines' rather than route numbers.

Bus-only lanes make for faster travel and ensure that buses are not delayed by mixed traffic congestion. A median alignment bus-only keeps buses away from busy curb-side side conflicts, where cars and trucks are parking, standing and turning. Separate rights of way may be used such as the completely elevated Xiamen BRT. Transit malls or 'bus streets' may also be created in city centers.

Off-board fare collection edit

Fare prepayment at the station, instead of on board the bus, eliminates the delay caused by passengers paying on board. Use of a payment card which must be touched briefly to a card-reader is also fast.

For the system to work, users can receive "credit" on the electronic cards: in this manner, passengers who have no money left on the cards can take the bus at sidewalk stops where there is no possibility to recharge these cards. This means that the balance in the card can be negative, up to two ticket fares, so passengers can take the bus in the street and recharge the card once they reach a main line station. As the card itself costs more than the maximum negative balance, the passenger has no incentive to default on negative credit.[25] Transmilenio in Bogotá followed suit in 2014 also creating routes that can use main line stations and regular sidewalk stations,[26] but instead of giving credit to passengers to allow boarding the bus on sidewalks, published a map readable in smart phones giving the location of a dense[27] network of 4,000 recharging points, located in internet cafes and other business, that use a swipe-card terminal for recharging. This system has the additional benefit of diminishing queues on main line stations.[28]

Bus priority, turning and standing restrictions edit

Prohibiting turns for traffic across the bus lane significantly reduces delays to the buses. Bus priority will often be provided at signalized intersections to reduce delays by extending the green phase or reducing the red phase in the required direction compared to the normal sequence. Prohibiting turns may be the most important measure for moving buses through intersections.

Platform-level boarding edit

 
Cultural Centre busway station in Brisbane, Australia

The station platforms for BRT systems should be level with the bus floor for quick and easy boarding, making it fully accessible for wheelchairs, disabled passengers and baby strollers, with minimal delays.

High-level platforms for high-floored buses makes it difficult to have stops outside dedicated platforms, or to have conventional buses stop at high-level platforms, so these BRT stops are distinct from street-level bus stops. Similar to rail vehicles, there is a risk of a dangerous gap between bus and platform, and is even greater due to the nature of bus operations. Kassel curbs or other methods may be used to ease quick and safe alignment of the BRT vehicle with a platform.

A popular compromise is low-floor buses with a low step at the door, which can allow easy boarding at low-platform stops compatible with other buses. This intermediate design may be used with some low- or medium-capacity BRT systems.

The MIO system in Santiago de Cali, Colombia, pioneered in 2009 the use of dual buses, with doors on the left side of the bus that are located at the height of high-level platforms, and doors on the right side that are located at curb height. These buses can use the main line with its exclusive lanes and high level platforms, located on the center of the street and thus, boarding and leaving passengers on the left side. These buses can exit the main line and use normal lanes that share with other vehicles and stop at regular stations located on sidewalks on the right side of the street.

Additional features edit

 
ART level-boarding station in the center of a public roadway with guideways on either side and a dedicated traffic signal in Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States

Groups of criteria form the BRT Standard 2016, which is updated by the Technical Committee of the BRT Standard.[29]

High capacity vehicles edit

 
Double decker bus at Mexico City with capacity for 130 passengers
 
TransMilenio vehicles carry up to 270 people.

High-capacity vehicles such as articulated or even bi-articulated buses may be used, typically with multiple doors for fast entry and exit. Double-decker buses[citation needed] or guided buses may also be used. Advanced powertrain control may be used for a smoother ride.

Quality stations edit

 
Ticket barriers at the entrance to a TransMilenio station in Bogotá

Bottleneck BRT stations typically provide loading areas for simultaneous boarding and alighting of buses through multiple doors coordinated via displays and loudspeakers.

An example of high-quality stations include those used on TransMilenio in Bogotá since December 2000,[30][verification needed] the MIO in Cali since November 2008,[31] Metrolinea in Bucaramanga since December 2009,[32] Megabús in Pereira since May 2009.[33] This design is also used in Johannesburg's Rea Vaya.[34]

The term "station" is more flexibly applied in North America and ranges from enclosed waiting areas (Ottawa and Cleveland) to large open-sided shelters (Los Angeles and San Bernardino).

Prominent brand or identity edit

A unique and distinctive identity can contribute to BRT's attractiveness as an alternative to driving cars,[35] (such as Viva, Max, TransMilenio, Metropolitano, Metronit, Select) marking stops and stations as well as the buses.[36]

Large cities usually have big bus networks. A map showing all bus lines might be incomprehensible, and cause people to wait for low-frequency buses that may not even be running at the time they are needed. By identifying the main bus lines having high-frequency service, with a special brand and separate maps, it is easier to understand the entire network.[citation needed]

Public transit apps are more convenient than a static map, featuring services like trip planning, live arrival and departure times, up-to-date line schedules, local station maps, service alerts, and advisories that may affect one's current trip. Transit and Moovit are examples of apps that are available in many cities around the world. Some operators of bus rapid transit systems have developed their own apps, like Transmilenio.[37] These apps even include all the schedules and live arrival times and stations for buses that feed the BRT, like the SITP (Sistema Integrado de Transporte Público or Public Transit Integrated System) in Bogotá[citation needed].

In tunnels or subterranean structures edit

 
Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel in Seattle, Washington – bus routes were rerouted to the surface, replaced by full light rail service in March 2019.
 
An outbound Silver Line bus at Courthouse station in Boston, Massachusetts

A special issue arises in the use of buses in metro transit structures. Since the areas where the demand for an exclusive bus right-of-way are apt to be in dense downtown areas where an above-ground structure may be unacceptable on historic, logistic, or environmental grounds, use of BRT in tunnels may not be avoidable.

Since buses are usually powered by internal combustion engines, bus metros raise ventilation issues similar to those of motor vehicle tunnels. Powerful fans typically exchange air through ventilation shafts to the surface; these are usually as remote as possible from occupied areas, to minimize the effects of noise and concentrated pollution.

A straightforward way to reduce air quality problems is to use internal combustion engines with lower emissions. The 2008 Euro V European emission standards set a limit on carbon monoxide from heavy-duty diesel engines of 1.5 g/kWh, one third of the 1992 Euro I standard. As a result, less forced ventilation will be required in tunnels to achieve the same air quality.

Another alternative is to use electric propulsion, which Seattle's Metro Bus Tunnel and Boston's Silver Line Phase II implemented. In Seattle, dual-mode (electric/diesel electric) buses manufactured by Breda were used until 2004, with the center axle driven by electric motors obtaining power from trolley wires through trolley poles in the subway, and with the rear axle driven by a conventional diesel powertrain on freeways and streets. Boston is using a similar approach, after initially using trolleybuses pending delivery of the dual-mode vehicles that was completed in 2005.[38]

In 2004, Seattle replaced its "Transit Tunnel" fleet with diesel-electric hybrid buses, which operate similarly to hybrid cars outside the tunnel and in a low-noise, low-emissions "hush mode" (in which the diesel engine operates but does not exceed idle speed) when underground.[39] The need to provide electric power in underground environments brings the capital and maintenance costs of such routes closer to those of light rail, and raises the question of building or eventually converting to light rail. In Seattle, the downtown transit tunnel was retrofitted for conversion to a shared hybrid-bus and light-rail facility in preparation for Seattle's Central Link Light Rail line, which opened in July 2009. In March 2019, expansion of the light rail in the tunnel moved busses back to surface streets.[40]

Bi-articulated battery electric buses cause no problems in tunnels anymore but provide BRT capacity.[41]

Performance edit

A BRT system can be measured by a number of factors. The BRT Standard was developed by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP) to score BRT corridors, producing a list of rated BRT corridors meeting the minimum definition of BRT. The highest rated systems received a "gold" ranking. The latest edition of the standard was published in 2016.[42]

Other metrics used to evaluate BRT performance include:

  • The vehicle headway is the average time interval between vehicles on the same line. Buses can operate at headways of 10 seconds or less, but average headways on TransMilenio at busy intersections are 13 seconds,[43] 14 seconds for the busiest section of the Metrobus (Istanbul), 7 seconds in Belo Horizonte,[44] 6 seconds in Rio de Janeiro.[45]
  • Vehicle capacity, which can range from 50 passengers for a conventional bus up to some 300 for a bi-articulated vehicle or 500.[46][2]
  • The effectiveness of the stations to handle passenger demand. High volumes of passengers on vehicles require large bus stations and more boarding areas at busy interchange points. This is the standard bottleneck of BRT (and heavy rail).[47]
  • The effectiveness of the feeder system: can these deliver people to stations at the required speed?
  • Local passenger demand. Without enough local demand for travel, the capacity will not be used.

Based on this data, the minimum headway and maximum current vehicle capacities, the theoretical maximum throughput measured in passengers per hour per direction (PPHPD) for a single traffic lane is some 150,000 passengers per hour (250 passengers per vehicle, one vehicle every 6 seconds). In real world conditions BRT Rio (de Janeiro, BRS Presidente Vargas) with 65.000 PPHPD holds the record, TransMilenio Bogotá and Metrobus Istanbul perform 49,000 – 45,000 PPHPD, most other busy systems operating in the 15,000 to 25,000 range.[44][43][45]

Location System name Peak passengers per
hour per direction
Passengers per day Length
(km)
Tanzania Dar es Salaam bus rapid transit 18,000[48] 180,000[49] (-2,500,000)[50] 21[51]
Bogotá TransMilenio 49,000[52] 2,154,961[52] 113[52]
Ahmedabad Janmarg (Ahmedabad BRT) 450,000[53] 125[53]
Guangzhou Guangzhou Bus Rapid Transit 26,900[54] 1,000,000 22
Curitiba, Brazil Rede Integrada de Transporte 13,900 – 24,100 508,000[55] (2,260,000 inc. feeder lines[56]) 81
Mexico City, Mexico Mexico City Metrobus 18,500[citation needed] 1,800,000[57] 140[58][59]
Belo Horizonte, Brazil Sistema MOVE 15,800 – 20,300[60] 1,100,000 24
Istanbul Metrobus (Istanbul) 45,000[61] 1,000,000[61] 52
New Jersey Lincoln Tunnel XBL 15,500[62] 62,000 (4-hour morning peak only)
Brisbane South East Busway 15,000[63] 191,800[64] 23
Jakarta Transjakarta 3,600[65] 1,006,000[66] 251.2
New York Select Bus Service 30,195

Research of the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP) shows a capacity ranking of MRT modes, based on reported performance of 14 light rail systems, 14 heavy rail systems (just 1-track + 3 2-track-systems "highest capacity") and 56 BRT systems.

The study concludes, that BRT-"capacity on TransMilenio exceeds all but the highest capacity heavy rail systems, and it far exceeds the highest light rail system."[67]

Performance data of 84 systems show

  1. 37,700 passengers in peak hour per direction (PPHPD) in the best BRT system
  2. 36,000 in the best 1-track-heavy rail system
  3. 13,400 in the best light rail system

More topical are these BRT data

  • 45,000 PPHPD in a 1-lane-system using articulated buses (2020 in Istanbul)
  • 320 busses per hour per direction in the corridor Nossa Senhora de Copacabana in Rio de Janeiro for the year 2014 meaning a bus every 11 seconds.
  • 65,400 PPHPD in 600 buses in the corridor Presidente Vargas in Rio de Janeiro for the years 2012 resp. 2014, which means 10 buses per minute or a bus every 6 seconds.[68][69]

Comparison with light rail edit

[70]After the first BRT system opened in 1971, cities were slow to adopt BRT because they believed that the capacity of BRT was limited to about 12,000 passengers per hour traveling in a given direction during peak demand. While this is a capacity rarely needed in the US (12,000 is more typical as a total daily ridership), in the developing world this capacity constraint (or rumor of a capacity constraint) was a significant argument in favor of heavy rail metro investments in some venues.

When TransMilenio opened in 2000, it changed the paradigm by giving buses a passing lane at each station stop and introducing express services within the BRT infrastructure. These innovations increased the maximum achieved capacity of a BRT system to 35,000 passengers per hour.[71] The single-lane roads of Istanbul Metrobus had been frequently blocked by Phileas buses breaking down, causing delays for all the buses in a single direction.[72][73][verification needed] After focusing on Mercedes-Benz buses, capacity increased to 45,000 pph.[61] Light rail, by comparison, has reported passenger capacities between 3,500 pph (mainly street running) to 19,000 pph (fully grade-separated).[74]

There are conditions that favor light rail over BRT, but they are fairly narrow. These conditions are a corridor with only one available lane in each direction, more than 16,000 passengers per direction per hour but less than 20,000, and a long block length, because the train cannot block intersections. These conditions are rare, but in that specific instance, light rail might have a minimal operational advantage.

The United States Government Accountability Office (U.S. GAO) summarized in the report "Mass Transit – Bus Rapid Transit Shows Promise", the U.S. Federal Transit Administration (FTA) provided funding for the construction of heavy rail and of light rail at that time, but not of BRT. The FTA funding of BRT "rather focuses on obtaining and sharing information on projects being pursued by local transit agencies".[70] In spite of this different funding the capital costs of BRT systems were lower in many US communities than those of light rail systems and performance often similar.[70] The GAO stated, BRT systems were generally more flexible compared to light rail[70] and faster.[70] "While transit officials noted a public bias toward Light Rail, research has found that riders have no preference for rail over bus when service characteristics are equal."[attribution needed][70]

Comparison with heavy rail edit

Fjellstrom/Wright distributed a map of the mid-term goal to expand Bogota's BRT system, TransMilenio, so that 85% of the city's 7 million inhabitants live within 500m distance to a TransMileneo line. Such an expansion program would be unrealistic for a rail-based MRT-system, according to Bogota's mayor.[75]

An additional use of BRT is the replacement of heavy rail services, due to infrastructure damage, reduced ridership, or a combination of both where lower maintenance costs are desired while taking advantage of an existing dedicated right of way. One such system in Japan consists of portions of the JR East Kesennuma and Ofuanto Lines, which were catastrophically damaged during the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, and later repaired as a bus lane over the same right of way, providing improved service with much lower restoration and maintenance costs.[76] Another system set to open in August 2023 is a portion of the JR Kyushu Hitahikosan Line, which was damaged due to torrential rain in 2017.[77] In both cases, ridership had dropped considerably since the lines opened, and the higher capacity of a rail line is no longer needed or cost-effective compared to buses on the same alignments.

Comparison with conventional bus services edit

 
Conventional bus services being delayed by traffic congestion on Chang'an Avenue in Beijing

Conventional scheduled bus services use general traffic lanes, which can be slow due to traffic congestion, and the speed of bus services is further reduced by long dwell times.[citation needed]

In 2013, the New York City authorities noted that buses on 34th Street, which carried 33,000 bus riders a day on local and express routes, traveled at 4.5 miles per hour (7.2 km/h), only slightly faster than walking pace. Even despite the implementation of Select Bus Service (New York City's version of a bus rapid transit system), dedicated bus lanes, and traffic cameras on the 34th Street corridor, buses on the corridor were still found to travel at an average of 4.5 mph.[78]

In the 1960s, Reuben Smeed predicted that the average speed of traffic in central London would be 9 miles per hour (14 km/h) without other disincentives such as road pricing, based on the theory that this was the minimum speed that people will tolerate. When the London congestion charge was introduced in 2003, the average traffic speed was indeed 14 kilometres per hour (8.7 mph) which was the highest speed since the 1970s.[79] By way of contrast, typical speeds of BRT systems range from 17 to 30 miles per hour (27 to 48 km/h).[80]

Cost edit

 
Kesennuma Line in Japan damaged in 2011 tsunami. JR converted sections of the line into a dedicated bus rapid transit (BRT) route due to the cost of reconstructing the railway.

The capital cost of implementing BRT is lower than for light rail: A study by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) from 2000 found that the average capital cost per mile for busways was $13.5 million while light rail average cost was $34.8 million.[81] The total investment varies considerably due to factors such as cost of the roadway, amount of grade separation, station structures and traffic signal systems.

In 2003, a study edited by the German GTZ compared various MRT systems all over the world and concluded ″Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) can provide high-quality, metro-like transit service at a fraction of the cost of other options″.[82]

In 2013, the analysis of a database of nineteen LRT projects, twenty-six HRT projects, and forty-two BRT projects specified "In higher income countries ... an HRT alternative is likely to cost up to 40 times as much as a BRT alternative".[83] and a surface LRT alternative about 4 times that of a BRT alternative.

Operational cost of running a BRT system is generally lower than light rail, though the exact comparison varies, and labor costs depend heavily on wages, which vary between countries. For the same level of ridership and demand, higher labor costs in the developed world relative to developing countries will tend to encourage developed world transit operators to prefer operate services with larger but less frequent vehicles. This will allow the service to achieve the same capacity while minimizing the number of drivers. This may come as a hidden cost to passengers in lower demand routes who experience significantly lower frequencies and longer waiting times and limit gain of ridership.

In the study done by the U.S. GAO, BRT systems usually had lower cost as well based on "operating cost per vehicle hour", as on "operating cost per revenue mile", and on "operating cost per passenger trip", mainly because of lower vehicle cost and lower infrastructure cost.[81]

An ambitious light rail system runs partly grade separated (e.g. underground), which gives free right-of-way and much faster traffic compared to passing the traffic signals needed in a surface level system. Underground BRT was suggested as early as 1954.[84] As long as most buses still run on diesel, air quality can become a significant concern in tunnels, but the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel is an example of using hybrid buses, which switch to overhead electric propulsion while they are underground, eliminating diesel emissions and reducing fuel usage. Alternatives are elevated busways or - more expensive - elevated railways.[7]

 
Prominent articulated "tram-like" Van Hool vehicles are used in Metz, France.[85]

Criticism edit

BRT systems have been widely promoted by non-governmental organizations such as the Shell-funded EMBARQ program, Rockefeller Foundation[86] and Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP), whose consultant pool includes the former mayor of Bogota (Colombia), Enrique Peñalosa (former president of ITDP).

Supported by contributions of bus-producing companies such as Volvo,[87] the ITDP not only established a proposed "standard" for BRT system implementation, but developed intensive lobby activities around the world to convince local governments to select BRT systems over rail-based transportation models (subways, light trains, etc.).[88]

"Fake" BRT systems (BRT creep) edit

 
S79 SBS bus at Staten Island Mall. The degradation of Select Bus Service (SBS) is cited as an example of BRT creep. Note the lack of ticket machines or level boarding.

Bus rapid transit creep is a phenomenon commonly defined as a bus rapid transit (BRT) system that fails to meet the requirements to be considered "true BRT". These systems are often marketed as a fully realized bus rapid transit system, but end up being described as more of an improvement to regular bus service by proponents of the "BRT creep" term. Notably, the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP) published several guidelines in an attempt to define what constitutes the term of "true BRT", known as the BRT Standard, in an attempt to avert this phenomenon.

The most extreme versions of BRT creep lead to systems that cannot even truly be recognized as "Bus Rapid Transit". For example, a rating from the ITDP determined that the Boston Silver Line was best classified as "Not BRT" after local decision makers gradually decided to do away with most BRT-specific features.[89]: 45  The study also evaluates New York City's Select Bus Service (which is supposed to be BRT-standard) as "Not BRT".[89]: 47 

Environmental issues edit

Unlike electric-powered trains commonly used in rapid transit and light rail systems, bus rapid transit often uses diesel- or gasoline-fueled engines. The typical bus diesel engine causes noticeable levels of air pollution, noise and vibration.[90] It is noted however that BRT can still provide significant environmental benefits over private cars. In addition, BRT systems can replace an inefficient conventional bus network for more efficient, faster and less polluting BRT buses. For example, Bogotá previously used 2,700 conventional buses providing transportation to 1.6 million passengers daily,[91] while in 2013 TransMilenio transported 1.9 million passengers using only 630 BRT buses,[92] a fleet less than a quarter in size of the old fleet, that circulates at twice the speed, with a huge reduction in air pollution.

To reduce direct emissions some systems use alternative forms of traction such as electric or hybrid engines. BRT systems can use trolleybuses to lower air pollution and noise emissions such as those in Beijing and Quito.[93] The price penalty of installing overhead lines could be offset by the environmental benefits and potential for savings from centrally generated electricity, especially in cities where electricity is less expensive than other fuel sources. Trolleybus electrical systems can be potentially reused for future light rail conversion. TransJakarta buses use cleaner compressed natural gas-fueled engines, while Bogotá started to use hybrid buses in 2012; these hybrid systems use regenerative braking to charge batteries when the bus stops and then use electric motors to propel the bus up to 40 km/h, then automatically switching to the diesel engine for higher speeds, which allows for considerable savings in fuel consumption and pollutant dispersion.[94]

Overcrowding and poor quality service edit

 
Traffic jam at TransMilenio's dedicated line

Many BRT systems suffer from overcrowding in buses and stations as well as long wait times for buses. In Santiago de Chile, the average of the system is six passengers per square meter (5/sq yd) inside vehicles. Users have reported days where the buses take too long to arrive, and are too overcrowded to accept new passengers.[95] As of June 2017, the system has an approval rating of 15% among commuters, and it has lost 27% of its passengers, who have turned mostly to cars.[96]

In Bogotá the overcrowding was even worse; the average of TransMilenio was eight passengers per square meter (7/sq yd).[97] Only 29% felt satisfied with the system. The data also showed that 23% of the citizens agreed with building more TransMilenio lines, in contrast of the 42% who considered that a rapid transit system should be built.[98] Several cases of sexual assault had been reported by female users in TransMilenio. According to a 2012 survey made by the secretary of the woman of Bogota, 64% of women said they had been victims of sexual assault in the system.[99] The system had even been ranked as the most dangerous transport for women.[100] The poor quality of the system had occasioned an increment in the number of cars and motorcycles in the city; citizens preferred these transport means over TransMilenio. According to official data, the number of cars increased from approximately 666,000 in 2005 to 1,586,700 in 2016. The number of motorcycles was also growing, with 660,000 sold in Bogota in 2013, two times the number of cars sold.[101]
At the end of 2018 Transmilenio ordered 1383 new buses as a replacement of the older ones in service. 52% were compressed natural gas (CNG) buses made by Scania with Euro 6 emission rating, 48% were diesel engine made by Volvo with Euro 5 emission rating. More (or renewed?) orders have produced an impressive result: "To improve public and environmental health, the City of Bogotá has assembled a fleet of 1,485 electric buses for its public transportation system—placing the city among the three largest e-bus fleets outside of China."[102][103]
In the year 2022 Bogotá has won the Sustainable Transport Award, thanks to their BRT system and their urban cycling strategy.[104][105][106]

The system in Jakarta had also been experiencing issues, with complaints of overcrowding in buses and stations and low frequency of the routes.[107] There were extensive safety concerns as well; rampant sexual harassment has been reported,[108] and the fire safety of the buses has been under scrutiny after one of the buses, a Zhongtong imported from China, suddenly and spontaneously caught on fire.[109] The quality of the service was so bad that the then-governor of Jakarta, Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, in March 2015 publicly apologized for the poor performance of the system.[110]

Failures and reversals edit

 
Protests in TransMilenio at the Terreros station, 12 February 2016

A criticism of BRT systems was that they might not accomplish their promise of an efficient, rapid flow of passengers along their dedicated bus lanes. The unpopularity of Delhi's BRT(2016)[111] and the riots and spontaneous user demonstrations in Bogotá(2016)[112] raised temporary doubts about the ability of BRTs to tackle issues such as traffic jams. Overcrowded stations and BRT vehicles might fail to keep pace with increased ridership. The speed of increased BRT ridership confirms the research to (the myth of) a general preference for rail over bus, see the end of chapter "Comparison with light rail". Bogota however has regained pace according to the Sustainable Transport Award 2022.

The lack of permanence of BRT has also been criticized, with some arguing that BRT systems can be used as an excuse to build roads that others later try to convert for use by non-BRT vehicles. Examples of this can be found in Delhi, where a BRT system was scrapped,[113] and in Aspen, Colorado, where drivers are lobbying the government to allow mixed-use traffic in former BRT lanes as of 2017, although in other US cities, such as Albuquerque, New Mexico, the opposite is true.[114] Despite this, the lack of permanence is one factor in favour of BRT due to its flexibility. [115]

Experts also attribute a failure of BRT to land use structure.[116][117] Some cities that are sprawled and have no mixed use have insufficient ridership to make BRT economically viable.[118] In Africa, the African Urban Institute criticized the viability of ongoing BRTs across the continent.[119]

Impact edit

A 2018 study found that the introduction of a BRT network in Mexico City reduced air pollution, as measured by emissions of CO, NOX, and PM10.[120]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Koridor". Transjakarta.
  2. ^ a b "Volvo launches the world's largest bus". 25 November 2016.
  3. ^ a b "What is BRT?". Institute for Transportation and Development Policy. 24 July 2014.
  4. ^ a b Lesley, Lewis (1983). "Runcorn - A Rapid Transit New Town?". Built Environment. 9 (3/4): 234. JSTOR 23286723.
  5. ^ a b . rudi.net. Archived from the original on 18 October 2014. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d EMBARQ – The WRI Center for Sustainable Transport (November 2016). . BRTdata.org. Archived from the original on 8 February 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
  7. ^ a b By Lloyd Wright and Karl Fjellstrom, Published by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH, Retrieved 2022-10-10, impact of vertical alignment on cost see chapter 4.1 table 5
  8. ^ "Buses with a High Level of Service". UITP.
  9. ^ Fjellstrom, Karl. "Mass Transit Options, 4.4:Flexibility". www.gtz.de. Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  10. ^ Agrawal, Asha Weinstein; Goldman, Todd; Hannaford, Nancy (April 2012). "Shared-Use Bus Priority Lanes on City Streets: Case Studies in Design and Management" (PDF). Mineta Transportation Institute. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
  11. ^ Levinson, Herbert S.; Hoey, William F.; Sanders, David B.; Wyn, F. Houston (1973). Bus Use of Highways: State of the Art (PDF). National Cooperative Highway Research Program Report 143 (Report). Highway Research Board. Retrieved 4 November 2021.
  12. ^ Couch, Chris; Fowles, Steven (2006). "Britain: Runcorn — A Tale of Two Centres". Built Environment. 32 (1): 88–102. doi:10.2148/benv.32.1.88. JSTOR 23289488.
  13. ^ Crabtree, Gordon (6 August 1971). "Runcorn Busway creates worldwide interest". Commercial Motor. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  14. ^ Ling, Arthur (1967). (PDF). Runcorn Development Corporation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 June 2018. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  15. ^ . EMBARQ. Archived from the original on 25 August 2015. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  16. ^ . Congresosibrt.org. 8 May 2013. Archived from the original on 11 November 2013. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  17. ^ Latin American Experience With Bus Rapid Transit Gerhard Menckhoff, World Bank. August 2005. Retrieved 08–15–13.
  18. ^ Lotshaw, Stephanie (20 June 2011). . Streetsblog USA. Archived from the original on 3 February 2015. Retrieved 1 September 2015. Pittsburgh's leadership on the urban sustainability front is not a recent phenomenon – in fact, it was the first city in the United States to implement elements of bus rapid transit, and it paved the way for more robust U.S. BRT systems. In 1977, only three years after Curitiba, Brazil implemented the world's first BRT system, Pittsburgh opened the South Busway, 4.3 miles of exclusive bus lanes, running through previously underserved areas of the city, from the western suburbs to the downtown. The city was concerned about worsening traffic congestion, and, lacking the funds to rehabilitate the city's streetcar lines, took inspiration from Curitiba and created the South Busway. Funding for the system came from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, the state of Pennsylvania and Allegheny County. The Port Authority of Allegheny County, a county-owned, state-funded agency, operates the system. The success of the South Busway helped the city leverage funding for the expansion of the network, and in 1983, the Martin Luther King, Jr. East Busway opened. The East Busway began as a 6.8-mile network, with an additional 2.3 miles added in 2003, connecting the eastern suburbs with downtown. Fifteen bus routes run along its corridor. Its current weekday ridership is 25,600, with annual ridership close to 7 million. The East Busway built on the success of its predecessor and offered fundamental BRT features including a dedicated busway, service as frequent as every two minutes during peak period, signal prioritization, and direct service operations (more on that soon). However, there is no off-board fare collection. Instead, passengers pay upon entrance for in-bound trips and upon exit for outbound trips, which helps reduce delays in service because of fare collection.
  19. ^ "Ottawa, Ontario: BRT Case Study" (PDF). Transportation Research Board. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  20. ^ . OC Transpo. Archived from the original on 18 August 2016.
  21. ^ Bambang Nurbianto (12 September 2015). "Train service has moved forward, can Transjakarta follow?". The Jakarta Post.
  22. ^ Kaenzig, Robin; Mobereola, Dayo; Brader, Colin (4 February 2011). "Africa's First Bus Rapid Transit System". Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board. 2193: 1–8. doi:10.3141/2193-01. S2CID 109346601.
  23. ^ Adewumi, Emmanuel; Allopi, Dhiren (July 2013). "Rea Vaya: South Africa's first bus rapid transit system". South African Journal of Science. 109 (7/8): 3. doi:10.1590/sajs.2013/a0029.
  24. ^ Venter, Christoffel (2016). "Assessing the potential of bus rapid transit-led network restructuring for enhancing affordable access to employment – The case of Johannesburg's Corridors of Freedom". Research in Transportation Economics. 59: 441–449. doi:10.1016/j.retrec.2016.05.006. hdl:2263/60793.
  25. ^ "Terminos y condiciones tarjeta MIO". mio.com.co. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  26. ^ . www.transmilenio.gov.co. Archived from the original on 18 October 2015. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  27. ^ . www.tullaveplus.com. Archived from the original on 10 August 2015. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  28. ^ "Tarjetas de TransMilenio ya se pueden recargar en todos los puntos SITP". Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  29. ^ "The Scorecard - Institute for Transportation and Development Policy". 24 July 2014.
  30. ^ . Transmilenio. Archived from the original on 19 September 2015. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  31. ^ "Cali inauguró el MÍO". El País. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  32. ^ "Arrancó inauguración de Metrolínea". Vanguardia Liberal. 22 December 2009. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  33. ^ "Pereira se monta al Megabús". El Espectador. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  34. ^ "Home". reavaya.org.za.
  35. ^ Characteristics of BRT for decision making. 15 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine page ES-8. Federal Transit Administration (August 2004).
  36. ^ What is Select Bus Service? NYC Metropolitan Transit Authority. Retrieved 12 March 2010
  37. ^ "Conozca la 'app' que le brinda información sobre Sitp y TransMilenio (in Spanish)". El Tiempo. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
  38. ^ Duncan Allen (2005). "MBTA Silver Line". www.nycsubway.org. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  39. ^ Metro Online (14 December 2007). "Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel and Changing Bus Technology". King County Metro. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  40. ^ Graham Johnson (22 March 2019). "Last day for buses in Seattle's downtown transit tunnel". KIRO 7.
  41. ^ "Solaris to deliver 14 bi-articulated e-buses in Denmark. They're powered by two motors and over 700 KWH battery". 29 October 2021.
  42. ^ "The BRT Standard". Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP). 21 June 2016. from the original on 11 April 2019. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
    . Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP). 24 July 2014. Archived from the original on 7 February 2015. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
  43. ^ a b "Applicability of Bogotá's TransMilenio BRT System to the United States" 26 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine NBRTI (May 2006). Retrieved 15 March 2010.
  44. ^ a b "Belo Horizonte". brtdata.org. Retrieved 14 November 2022.
  45. ^ a b "Rio de Janeiro". brtdata.org. Retrieved 14 November 2022.
  46. ^ "Chinese rail maker develops smart bus - Xinhua | English.news.cn". www.xinhuanet.com. Retrieved 14 November 2022.
  47. ^ "The BRT Planning Guide 4th edition, pp. 25-26 of 1076". 16 November 2017. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
  48. ^ "Peak load (passengers per hour per direction)". brtdata.org. 2018. Retrieved 9 June 2023.
  49. ^ "Daily demand (passengers per day)". brtdata.org. 2018. Retrieved 9 June 2023.
  50. ^ "DART gears up to serve 2.5 million passengers daily". Africa Press. 24 January 2021.
  51. ^ "Dar es Salaam". brtdata.org. Retrieved 2 September 2023.
  52. ^ a b c "Bogotá". brtdata.org. 2018. Retrieved 9 June 2023.
  53. ^ a b "Ahmedabad bus users down 25% in a decade!". The Times of India. 6 July 2018. Retrieved 6 March 2019.
  54. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 5 August 2010.
  55. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 February 2014. Retrieved 24 August 2014.
  56. ^ "Intermodal Connectivity to BRT: A Comparative Analysis of Bogotá and Curitiba" (PDF). Journal of Public Transportation. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  57. ^ "Ampliación de flota 33 autobuses". Metrobús.
  58. ^ Sum of km of all lines on [1], as of 6 March 2018.
  59. ^ Daniela Vega (28 February 2018). "Línea 7 de Metrobús inicia pruebas con servicio gratis; esta es su ruta" [Line 7 of Metrobús starts tests with free service; this is your route]. Uno TV (in Spanish). Retrieved 19 May 2019.
  60. ^ (PDF). Federal Transit Administration. 1 August 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 April 2016. Retrieved 8 February 2016. Exhibit 3-22: "Maximum observed peak hour bus flows, capacities, and passenger flows at peak load points on transitways"
  61. ^ a b c "Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) in Istanbul, Turkey: Metrobüs" (PDF). Mercedes-Benz. 23 July 2018. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  62. ^ American Public Transit Association (APTA). (PDF). APTA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 January 2013. Retrieved 26 April 2012. See p. 6, based on 62,000 people in the 4-hour morning rushhour
  63. ^ "Lord Mayor's Mass Transit Taskforce Report 2007". Brisbane City Council.[dead link]
  64. ^ Mulley, Corinne; Ma, Liang; Clifton, Geoffrey; Yen, Barbara; Burke, Matthew (June 2016). "Residential property value impacts of proximity to transport infrastructure: An investigation of bus rapid transit and heavy rail networks in Brisbane, Australia". Journal of Transport Geography. 54: 43. doi:10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2016.05.010. hdl:10072/142793. Retrieved 7 January 2022. 70 million passengers per year divided by 365
  65. ^ Carrigan, Aileen; King, Robin; Velasquez, Juan Miguel; Raifman, Matthew; Duduta, Nicolae. "Social, Environmental and Economic Impacts of BRT Systems" (PDF). EMBARQ. World Resources Institute. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  66. ^ "Achievement unlocked: Transjakarta breaks record for serving one million customers in a day". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  67. ^ https://www.itdp.org/2017/11/16/the-brt-planning-guide 4th edition, pp. 49-51 of 1076, Retrieved 2022-10-5
  68. ^ https://brtdata.org/indicators/corridors/peak_load_corridor_passengers_per_hour_per_direction Retrieved 2022-12-12
  69. ^ https://brtdata.org/indicators/systems/peak_frequency_buses_per_hour Retrieved 2022-12-12
  70. ^ a b c d e f "GAO-01-984 Mass Transit: Bus Rapid Transit Shows Promise" (PDF). United States General Accounting Office. pp. 25–33, 30. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
  71. ^ Hook, W.; Lotshaw, S.; Weinstock, A. (2013). "More Development For Your Transit Dollar. An Analysis of 21 North American Transit Corridors" (PDF). Institute for Transportation and Development Policy. p. 20.
  72. ^ "Happy with Metrobus, when there is no better alternative". Hurriyet Daily News. 22 July 2009. Retrieved 5 November 2011.
  73. ^ "Uzmanlar Uyarmıştı Ama Yanan Metrobüsün Faturası Ağır Oldu". Gurmedia Haberin Merkezi (in Turkish). 25 March 2015. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  74. ^ G. Gardner, J. C. Rutter and F. Kuhn (1994). The performance and potential of light rail transit in developing cities. Project Report No. PR69. Transport Research Laboratory, Crowthorne, UK.
  75. ^ Fjellstrom, Karl. "Mass Transit Options, 4.4:Flexibility". www.gtz.de. GTZ on Behalf of Bundesminister für wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit und Entwicklung. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  76. ^ "気仙沼線BRT・大船渡線BRT(バス高速輸送システム):JR東日本". JR東日本:東日本旅客鉄道株式会社 (in Japanese). Retrieved 14 July 2023.
  77. ^ "日田彦山線 BRTひこぼしライン 2023年8月28日 開業予定". 日田彦山線 BRTひこぼしライン (in Japanese). Retrieved 14 July 2023.
  78. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 June 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2013. Bus service along 34th Street is among the slowest in the city. Buses travel at an average of 4.5 miles per hour (7.2 km/h), only slightly faster than walking. Despite these slow speeds, 34th Street is a major east-west bus corridor, carrying over 33,000 bus riders a day on local and express routes.
  79. ^ "Impacts monitoring — fifty annual report" (PDF). Transport for London.
  80. ^ (PDF). Federal Transit Administration. 1 August 2004. p. ES-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 April 2016. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  81. ^ a b GAO (September 2001). (PDF). GAO. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 April 2015. Retrieved 16 March 2011.
  82. ^ https://www.itdp.org/2003/12/01/sustainable-transport-a-sourcebook-for-developing-cities/#Module-3a-Mass-Transit-Options Retrieved 2020-10-10
  83. ^ https://www.itdp.org/2017/11/16/the-brt-planning-guide 4th edition, p. 27 of 1076, Retrieved 2022-10-5 4th edition
  84. ^ "Metro's Primary Resources". 31 May 2023.
  85. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 June 2013. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  86. ^ Ross, Benjamin. "Big Philanthropy Takes the Bus". Dissent. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  87. ^ . Al Garete (in Spanish). 24 January 2016. Archived from the original on 1 May 2016.
  88. ^ . Al Garete (in Spanish). 7 March 2016. Archived from the original on 6 May 2016.
  89. ^ a b Weinstock, Annie; Hook, Walter; Replogle, Michael; Cruz, Ramon (May 2011). Recapturing Global Leadership in Bus Rapid Transit: A Survey of Select U.S. Cities (Report). Institute for Transportation and Development Policy. Retrieved 23 May 2014.
  90. ^ Office of Transportation and Air Quality (October 2008). (PDF) (Report). EPA. EPA420-F-08-026. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 February 2013. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
  91. ^ . Transmilenio, Alcaldía de Bogotá. Archived from the original on 19 September 2015. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  92. ^ (PDF). Transmilenio, Alcaldía de Bogotá. 2013. p. 18. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 October 2015. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  93. ^ "Edmonton Trolley Coalition". trolleycoalition.org.
  94. ^ . Alcaldía de Bogotá – Transmilenio. Archived from the original on 18 October 2015.
  95. ^ "El pecado original que determinó el fracaso del Transantiago". Diario UChile. 10 February 2017.
  96. ^ "10 años de Transantiago: su deterioro y su reemplazo". Algarete (in spanish). 30 June 2017.
  97. ^ "¿Por qué colapsó TransMilenio?". Revista Semana. 3 August 2014.
  98. ^ "El futuro de Transmilenio". Bogota como vamos. 28 August 2014.
  99. ^ "Preocupantes cifras de acoso a mujeres en Transmilenio". noticias RCN. 21 August 2013.
  100. ^ . Thomas Reuters Foundation News. 29 October 2014. Archived from the original on 22 November 2022. Retrieved 25 March 2018.
  101. ^ "Los 10 problemas más graves de Bogotá". Deustche Welle. 17 October 2016.
  102. ^ https://www.itdp.org/2022/02/09/bogota-wins-2022-sustainable-transport-award/ Retrieved 2022-09-28
  103. ^ https://www.itdp.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Presentation-Mobilize.pdf Retrieved 2022-09-28
  104. ^ https://www.itdp.org/2022/02/09/bogota-wins-2022-sustainable-transport-award/ Retrieved 2022-09-30
  105. ^ https://www.itdp.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/STA-2022-Award-Ceremony-Press-Release.docx-1.pdf Retrieved 2022-09-30
  106. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=taLkKIEYotg Retrieved 2022-09-30
  107. ^ . algarete (in spanish). 25 February 2016. Archived from the original on 14 April 2018. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  108. ^ . Jakarta Globe. 5 December 2012. Archived from the original on 22 January 2018. Retrieved 25 March 2018.
  109. ^ CoconutsJakarta (13 March 2015). "Ahok apologizes for disrupting Transjakarta service as 30 buses are grounded | Coconuts Jakarta". Coconuts. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  110. ^ "Jakarta governor apoligezes for less than optimal Transjakarta busway services". Global indonesian voices. 13 March 2015.
  111. ^ "Delhi's BRT Corridor to be demolished!". News Mobile. 18 January 2016.
  112. ^ "Bloqueo TransMilenio". El Tiempo (in Spanish).
  113. ^ Lalchandani, Neha (27 March 2015). "BRT will be scrapped, decides Arvind Kejriwal". The Times of India. Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  114. ^ Carroll, Rick (25 April 2017). "Aspen candidates mull citizen's proposal to open bus lanes to all vehicles". The Aspen Times. Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  115. ^ Fjellstrom, Karl. "Mass Transit Options, 4.4:Flexibility". www.gtz.de. Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  116. ^ Suzuki, Hiroaki; Cervero, Robert. "Transforming Cities with Transit: Transit and Land-Use Integration for Sustainable Urban Development" (PDF). The World Bank.
  117. ^ Venter, Christo. "South Africa needs to revamp its new public transport system". The Conversation. Retrieved 7 September 2018.
  118. ^ "Bus Rapid Transit system on road to nowhere in Gauteng". Retrieved 7 September 2018.
  119. ^ Muzenda, Archimedes. . African Urban Institute. Archived from the original on 7 September 2018.
  120. ^ Bel, Germà; Holst, Maximilian (1 April 2018). "Evaluation of the impact of Bus Rapid Transit on air pollution in Mexico City". Transport Policy. 63: 209–220. doi:10.1016/j.tranpol.2018.01.001. hdl:2445/119530. ISSN 0967-070X.

Further reading edit

  • Ghadirifaraz, B., Vaziri, M., Safa, A., & Barikrou, N. (2017). A Statistical Appraisal of Bus Rapid Transit Based on Passengers Satisfaction and Priority Case Study: Isfahan City, Iran (No. 17-05108).
  • Poku-Boansi, M and Marsden, G (2018) Bus Rapid Transit Systems as a Governance Reform Project. Journal of Transport Geography, 70. pp. 193–202. ISSN 0966-6923 DOI: Bus rapid transit systems as a governance reform project

External links edit

General information edit

  • The BRT Standard 2014 Edition Institute for Transportation and Development Policy
  • A very comprehensive 800 guide to creating a successful BRT system by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (available in English, Spanish and Portuguese)
  • Bus Rapid Transit, Volume 1: Case Studies in Bus Rapid Transit Transportation Research Board
  • Bus Rapid Transit, Volume 2: Implementation Guidelines Transportation Research Board
  • Cervero, Robert (2013). "Bus Rapid Transit: An Efficient and Competitive Mode of Public Transport" (PDF). European Automobile Manufacturers Association.
  • . National Bus Rapid Transit Association. 2009. Archived from the original on 18 February 2010. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  • Levinson, Herbert S. (2002). "Bus Rapid Transit: An Overview". Journal of Public Transportation. 5 (2): 1–30. doi:10.5038/2375-0901.5.2.1.
  • Across Latitudes and Cultures Bus Rapid Transit An international Centre of Excellence for BRT development
  • Transit Capacity and Quality of Service Manual Transportation Research Board
  • . University of Minnesota Center for Transportation Studies, Department of Mechanical Engineering

Country-specific information edit

  • Recapturing Global Leadership in Bus Rapid Transit – A Survey of Select U.S. Cities (available for download in pdf) Institute for Transportation & Development Policy (May 2011)
  • Wang Fengwu and James Wang (April 2004). (PDF). Public Transport International. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2010.
  • Vincent, William; Lisa Callaghan Jerram (April 2008). (PDF). Washington, DC: Breakthrough Technologies Institute. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 February 2014. Retrieved 22 April 2012. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Bus Rapid Transit Shows Promise 30 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine U.S. General Accounting Office
  • The National BRT Institute (USA)

Databases edit

  • Global BRT Data Database of Bus Rapid Transit systems around the world

rapid, transit, transitway, redirects, here, network, ottawa, transitway, ottawa, other, systems, list, rapid, transit, systems, also, referred, busway, transitway, based, public, transport, system, designed, have, much, more, capacity, reliability, other, qua. Transitway redirects here For the network in Ottawa see Transitway Ottawa For other BRT systems see List of bus rapid transit systems Bus rapid transit BRT also referred to as a busway or transitway is a bus based public transport system designed to have much more capacity reliability and other quality features than a conventional bus system 3 Typically a BRT system includes roadways that are dedicated to buses and gives priority to buses at intersections where buses may interact with other traffic alongside design features to reduce delays caused by passengers boarding or leaving buses or paying fares BRT aims to combine the capacity and speed of a light rail transit LRT or mass rapid transit MRT system with the flexibility lower cost and simplicity of a bus system TransJakarta in Jakarta Indonesia It is the longest BRT system in the world 251 2 km 1 30 meter long Transmetro in Guatemala City for 300 passengers 2 The world s first BRT system was the Busway in Runcorn New Town England which entered service in 1971 4 5 As of March 2018 update a total of 166 cities in six continents have implemented BRT systems accounting for 4 906 km 3 048 mi of BRT lanes 6 and about 32 2 million passengers every day The majority of these are in Latin America where about 19 6 million passengers ride daily and which has the most cities with BRT systems with 54 led by Brazil with 21 cities 6 The Latin American countries with the most daily ridership are Brazil 10 7 million Colombia 3 0 million and Mexico 2 5 million In the other regions China 4 3 million and Iran 2 1 million stand out 6 Currently TransJakarta is the largest BRT network in the world with about 251 2 kilometres 156 1 mi of corridors connecting the Indonesian capital city 1 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Reasons for use 3 History 4 Main features 4 1 Dedicated lanes and alignment 4 2 Off board fare collection 4 3 Bus priority turning and standing restrictions 4 4 Platform level boarding 5 Additional features 5 1 High capacity vehicles 5 2 Quality stations 5 3 Prominent brand or identity 5 4 In tunnels or subterranean structures 6 Performance 6 1 Comparison with light rail 6 2 Comparison with heavy rail 6 3 Comparison with conventional bus services 7 Cost 8 Criticism 8 1 Fake BRT systems BRT creep 8 2 Environmental issues 8 3 Overcrowding and poor quality service 8 4 Failures and reversals 9 Impact 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External links 13 1 General information 13 2 Country specific information 13 3 DatabasesTerminology editBus Rapid Transit is a mode of mass rapid transit MRT 7 and describes a high capacity urban public transit system with its own right of way vehicles at short headways platform level boarding and preticketing 3 The expression BRT is mainly used in the Americas and China in India it is called BRTS BRT System in Europe it is often called a busway or a BHLS stands for Bus with a High Level of Service 8 The term transitway was originated in 1981 with the opening of the OC Transpo transitway in Ottawa Ontario Canada Critics who have charged that the term bus rapid transit has sometimes been misapplied to systems that lack most or all the essential features which differentiate it from conventional bus services The term bus rapid transit creep has been used to describe severely degraded levels of bus service which fall far short of the BRT Standard promoted by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy ITDP and other organizations Reasons for use editCompared to other common transit modes such as light rail transit LRT bus rapid transit BRT service is attractive to transit authorities because it does not cost as much to establish and operate no track needs to be laid bus drivers typically require less training and less pay than rail operators and bus maintenance is less complex than rail maintenance citation needed Moreover buses are more flexible than rail vehicles because a bus route can be altered either temporarily or permanently to meet changing demand or contend with adverse road conditions with comparatively little investment of resources 9 History edit nbsp Elevated busway at Runcorn Shopping CityThe first use of a protected busway was the East Side Trolley Tunnel in Providence Rhode Island It was converted from trolley to bus use in 1948 10 11 However the first BRT system in the world was the Busway in Runcorn England 4 First conceived in the Runcorn New Town Masterplan in 1966 it opened for services in October 1971 and all 22 kilometres 14 mi were operational by 1980 5 The central station is at Runcorn Shopping City where buses arrive on dedicated raised busways to two enclosed stations 12 Arthur Ling Runcorn Development Corporation s Master Planner said that he had invented the concept while sketching on the back of an envelope 13 The town was designed around the transport system with most residents no more than five minutes walking distance or 500 yards 460 m from the Busway 14 nbsp The Rede Integrada de Transporte in Curitiba Brazil was opened in 1974 The RIT was inspired by the National Urban Transport Company of Peru The second BRT system in the world was the Rede Integrada de Transporte RIT integrated transportation network implemented in Curitiba Brazil in 1974 The Rede Integrada de Transporte was inspired by the previous transport system of the National Urban Transport Company of Peru In Spanish ENATRU which only had quick access on Lima downtown but it would not be considered by whom BRT itself 6 Many of the elements that have become associated with BRT were innovations first suggested by Carlos Ceneviva within the team of Curitiba Mayor Jaime Lerner 15 16 Initially just dedicated bus lanes in the center of major arterial roads in 1980 the Curitiba system added a feeder bus network and inter zone connections and in 1992 introduced off board fare collection enclosed stations and platform level boarding Other systems made further innovations including platooning three buses entering and leaving bus stops and traffic signals at once in Porto Alegre and passing lanes and express service in Sao Paulo 17 In the United States BRT began in 1977 with Pittsburgh s South Busway 18 operating on 4 3 miles 6 9 km of exclusive lanes Its success led to the Martin Luther King Jr East Busway in 1983 a fuller BRT deployment including a dedicated busway of 9 1 miles 14 6 km traffic signal preemption and peak service headway as low as two minutes After the opening of the West Busway 5 1 miles 8 2 km in length in 2000 Pittsburgh s Busway system is today over 18 5 miles long The OC Transpo BRT system in Ottawa Canada was introduced in 1983 19 The first element of its BRT system was dedicated bus lanes through the city centre with platformed stops The introduction of exclusive separate busways termed Transitway occurred in 1983 By 1996 all of the originally envisioned 31 km Transitway system was in operation further expansions were opened in 2009 2011 and 2014 As of 2019 the central part of the Transitway has been converted to light rail transit due to the downtown section being operated beyond its designed capacity 20 In 1995 Quito Ecuador opened MetrobusQ its first BRT trolleybuses in Quito using articulated trolleybuses citation needed The TransMilenio in Bogota Colombia opening in 2000 was the first BRT system to combine the best elements of Curitiba s BRT with other BRT advances and achieved the highest capacity and highest speed BRT system in the world In 2017 Marrakesh Morocco opened its first BRT Marrakesh trolleybus system BHNS De Marrakesh trolleybuses Corridors of 8 km 5 0 mi of which 3 km 1 9 mi of overhead wiring for operation as trolleybus In January 2004 the first BRT in Southeast Asia TransJakarta opened in Jakarta Indonesia As of 2015 update at 210 kilometres 130 mi it is the longest BRT system in the world 21 nbsp A Mercedes Benz O305 travelling on the O Bahn in Adelaide AustraliaAfrica s first BRT system was opened in Lagos Nigeria in March 2008 but is considered a light BRT system by many people 22 Johannesburg South Africa BRT Rea Vaya was the first true BRT in Africa in August 2009 carrying 16 000 daily passengers 23 Rea Vaya and MIO BRT in Cali Colombia opened 2009 were the first two systems to combine full BRT with some services that also operated in mixed traffic then joined the BRT trunk infrastructure 24 Main features editMain article BRT Standard BRT systems normally include most of the following features Dedicated lanes and alignment edit nbsp TransJakarta buses use separate lanes to avoid congested roads nbsp Elevated BRT system in Xiamen nbsp A Viva bus in York Region north of Toronto Canada demonstrates many features of BRT elaborate stations comfortable express buses unique branding and coloured lines rather than route numbers Bus only lanes make for faster travel and ensure that buses are not delayed by mixed traffic congestion A median alignment bus only keeps buses away from busy curb side side conflicts where cars and trucks are parking standing and turning Separate rights of way may be used such as the completely elevated Xiamen BRT Transit malls or bus streets may also be created in city centers Off board fare collection edit Fare prepayment at the station instead of on board the bus eliminates the delay caused by passengers paying on board Use of a payment card which must be touched briefly to a card reader is also fast For the system to work users can receive credit on the electronic cards in this manner passengers who have no money left on the cards can take the bus at sidewalk stops where there is no possibility to recharge these cards This means that the balance in the card can be negative up to two ticket fares so passengers can take the bus in the street and recharge the card once they reach a main line station As the card itself costs more than the maximum negative balance the passenger has no incentive to default on negative credit 25 Transmilenio in Bogota followed suit in 2014 also creating routes that can use main line stations and regular sidewalk stations 26 but instead of giving credit to passengers to allow boarding the bus on sidewalks published a map readable in smart phones giving the location of a dense 27 network of 4 000 recharging points located in internet cafes and other business that use a swipe card terminal for recharging This system has the additional benefit of diminishing queues on main line stations 28 Bus priority turning and standing restrictions edit Prohibiting turns for traffic across the bus lane significantly reduces delays to the buses Bus priority will often be provided at signalized intersections to reduce delays by extending the green phase or reducing the red phase in the required direction compared to the normal sequence Prohibiting turns may be the most important measure for moving buses through intersections Platform level boarding edit nbsp Cultural Centre busway station in Brisbane AustraliaThe station platforms for BRT systems should be level with the bus floor for quick and easy boarding making it fully accessible for wheelchairs disabled passengers and baby strollers with minimal delays High level platforms for high floored buses makes it difficult to have stops outside dedicated platforms or to have conventional buses stop at high level platforms so these BRT stops are distinct from street level bus stops Similar to rail vehicles there is a risk of a dangerous gap between bus and platform and is even greater due to the nature of bus operations Kassel curbs or other methods may be used to ease quick and safe alignment of the BRT vehicle with a platform A popular compromise is low floor buses with a low step at the door which can allow easy boarding at low platform stops compatible with other buses This intermediate design may be used with some low or medium capacity BRT systems The MIO system in Santiago de Cali Colombia pioneered in 2009 the use of dual buses with doors on the left side of the bus that are located at the height of high level platforms and doors on the right side that are located at curb height These buses can use the main line with its exclusive lanes and high level platforms located on the center of the street and thus boarding and leaving passengers on the left side These buses can exit the main line and use normal lanes that share with other vehicles and stop at regular stations located on sidewalks on the right side of the street Additional features edit nbsp ART level boarding station in the center of a public roadway with guideways on either side and a dedicated traffic signal in Albuquerque New Mexico United StatesGroups of criteria form the BRT Standard 2016 which is updated by the Technical Committee of the BRT Standard 29 High capacity vehicles edit nbsp Double decker bus at Mexico City with capacity for 130 passengers nbsp TransMilenio vehicles carry up to 270 people High capacity vehicles such as articulated or even bi articulated buses may be used typically with multiple doors for fast entry and exit Double decker buses citation needed or guided buses may also be used Advanced powertrain control may be used for a smoother ride Quality stations edit nbsp Ticket barriers at the entrance to a TransMilenio station in BogotaBottleneck BRT stations typically provide loading areas for simultaneous boarding and alighting of buses through multiple doors coordinated via displays and loudspeakers An example of high quality stations include those used on TransMilenio in Bogota since December 2000 30 verification needed the MIO in Cali since November 2008 31 Metrolinea in Bucaramanga since December 2009 32 Megabus in Pereira since May 2009 33 This design is also used in Johannesburg s Rea Vaya 34 The term station is more flexibly applied in North America and ranges from enclosed waiting areas Ottawa and Cleveland to large open sided shelters Los Angeles and San Bernardino Prominent brand or identity edit A unique and distinctive identity can contribute to BRT s attractiveness as an alternative to driving cars 35 such as Viva Max TransMilenio Metropolitano Metronit Select marking stops and stations as well as the buses 36 Large cities usually have big bus networks A map showing all bus lines might be incomprehensible and cause people to wait for low frequency buses that may not even be running at the time they are needed By identifying the main bus lines having high frequency service with a special brand and separate maps it is easier to understand the entire network citation needed Public transit apps are more convenient than a static map featuring services like trip planning live arrival and departure times up to date line schedules local station maps service alerts and advisories that may affect one s current trip Transit and Moovit are examples of apps that are available in many cities around the world Some operators of bus rapid transit systems have developed their own apps like Transmilenio 37 These apps even include all the schedules and live arrival times and stations for buses that feed the BRT like the SITP Sistema Integrado de Transporte Publico or Public Transit Integrated System in Bogota citation needed In tunnels or subterranean structures edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel in Seattle Washington bus routes were rerouted to the surface replaced by full light rail service in March 2019 nbsp An outbound Silver Line bus at Courthouse station in Boston MassachusettsA special issue arises in the use of buses in metro transit structures Since the areas where the demand for an exclusive bus right of way are apt to be in dense downtown areas where an above ground structure may be unacceptable on historic logistic or environmental grounds use of BRT in tunnels may not be avoidable Since buses are usually powered by internal combustion engines bus metros raise ventilation issues similar to those of motor vehicle tunnels Powerful fans typically exchange air through ventilation shafts to the surface these are usually as remote as possible from occupied areas to minimize the effects of noise and concentrated pollution A straightforward way to reduce air quality problems is to use internal combustion engines with lower emissions The 2008 Euro V European emission standards set a limit on carbon monoxide from heavy duty diesel engines of 1 5 g kWh one third of the 1992 Euro I standard As a result less forced ventilation will be required in tunnels to achieve the same air quality Another alternative is to use electric propulsion which Seattle s Metro Bus Tunnel and Boston s Silver Line Phase II implemented In Seattle dual mode electric diesel electric buses manufactured by Breda were used until 2004 with the center axle driven by electric motors obtaining power from trolley wires through trolley poles in the subway and with the rear axle driven by a conventional diesel powertrain on freeways and streets Boston is using a similar approach after initially using trolleybuses pending delivery of the dual mode vehicles that was completed in 2005 38 In 2004 Seattle replaced its Transit Tunnel fleet with diesel electric hybrid buses which operate similarly to hybrid cars outside the tunnel and in a low noise low emissions hush mode in which the diesel engine operates but does not exceed idle speed when underground 39 The need to provide electric power in underground environments brings the capital and maintenance costs of such routes closer to those of light rail and raises the question of building or eventually converting to light rail In Seattle the downtown transit tunnel was retrofitted for conversion to a shared hybrid bus and light rail facility in preparation for Seattle s Central Link Light Rail line which opened in July 2009 In March 2019 expansion of the light rail in the tunnel moved busses back to surface streets 40 Bi articulated battery electric buses cause no problems in tunnels anymore but provide BRT capacity 41 Performance editSee also BRT Standard A BRT system can be measured by a number of factors The BRT Standard was developed by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy ITDP to score BRT corridors producing a list of rated BRT corridors meeting the minimum definition of BRT The highest rated systems received a gold ranking The latest edition of the standard was published in 2016 42 Other metrics used to evaluate BRT performance include The vehicle headway is the average time interval between vehicles on the same line Buses can operate at headways of 10 seconds or less but average headways on TransMilenio at busy intersections are 13 seconds 43 14 seconds for the busiest section of the Metrobus Istanbul 7 seconds in Belo Horizonte 44 6 seconds in Rio de Janeiro 45 Vehicle capacity which can range from 50 passengers for a conventional bus up to some 300 for a bi articulated vehicle or 500 46 2 The effectiveness of the stations to handle passenger demand High volumes of passengers on vehicles require large bus stations and more boarding areas at busy interchange points This is the standard bottleneck of BRT and heavy rail 47 The effectiveness of the feeder system can these deliver people to stations at the required speed Local passenger demand Without enough local demand for travel the capacity will not be used Based on this data the minimum headway and maximum current vehicle capacities the theoretical maximum throughput measured in passengers per hour per direction PPHPD for a single traffic lane is some 150 000 passengers per hour 250 passengers per vehicle one vehicle every 6 seconds In real world conditions BRT Rio de Janeiro BRS Presidente Vargas with 65 000 PPHPD holds the record TransMilenio Bogota and Metrobus Istanbul perform 49 000 45 000 PPHPD most other busy systems operating in the 15 000 to 25 000 range 44 43 45 Location System name Peak passengers perhour per direction Passengers per day Length km Tanzania Dar es Salaam bus rapid transit 18 000 48 180 000 49 2 500 000 50 21 51 Bogota TransMilenio 49 000 52 2 154 961 52 113 52 Ahmedabad Janmarg Ahmedabad BRT 450 000 53 125 53 Guangzhou Guangzhou Bus Rapid Transit 26 900 54 1 000 000 22Curitiba Brazil Rede Integrada de Transporte 13 900 24 100 508 000 55 2 260 000 inc feeder lines 56 81Mexico City Mexico Mexico City Metrobus 18 500 citation needed 1 800 000 57 140 58 59 Belo Horizonte Brazil Sistema MOVE 15 800 20 300 60 1 100 000 24Istanbul Metrobus Istanbul 45 000 61 1 000 000 61 52New Jersey Lincoln Tunnel XBL 15 500 62 62 000 4 hour morning peak only Brisbane South East Busway 15 000 63 191 800 64 23Jakarta Transjakarta 3 600 65 1 006 000 66 251 2New York Select Bus Service 30 195Research of the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy ITDP shows a capacity ranking of MRT modes based on reported performance of 14 light rail systems 14 heavy rail systems just 1 track 3 2 track systems highest capacity and 56 BRT systems The study concludes that BRT capacity on TransMilenio exceeds all but the highest capacity heavy rail systems and it far exceeds the highest light rail system 67 Performance data of 84 systems show 37 700 passengers in peak hour per direction PPHPD in the best BRT system 36 000 in the best 1 track heavy rail system 13 400 in the best light rail systemMore topical are these BRT data 45 000 PPHPD in a 1 lane system using articulated buses 2020 in Istanbul 320 busses per hour per direction in the corridor Nossa Senhora de Copacabana in Rio de Janeiro for the year 2014 meaning a bus every 11 seconds 65 400 PPHPD in 600 buses in the corridor Presidente Vargas in Rio de Janeiro for the years 2012 resp 2014 which means 10 buses per minute or a bus every 6 seconds 68 69 Comparison with light rail edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message 70 After the first BRT system opened in 1971 cities were slow to adopt BRT because they believed that the capacity of BRT was limited to about 12 000 passengers per hour traveling in a given direction during peak demand While this is a capacity rarely needed in the US 12 000 is more typical as a total daily ridership in the developing world this capacity constraint or rumor of a capacity constraint was a significant argument in favor of heavy rail metro investments in some venues When TransMilenio opened in 2000 it changed the paradigm by giving buses a passing lane at each station stop and introducing express services within the BRT infrastructure These innovations increased the maximum achieved capacity of a BRT system to 35 000 passengers per hour 71 The single lane roads of Istanbul Metrobus had been frequently blocked by Phileas buses breaking down causing delays for all the buses in a single direction 72 73 verification needed After focusing on Mercedes Benz buses capacity increased to 45 000 pph 61 Light rail by comparison has reported passenger capacities between 3 500 pph mainly street running to 19 000 pph fully grade separated 74 There are conditions that favor light rail over BRT but they are fairly narrow These conditions are a corridor with only one available lane in each direction more than 16 000 passengers per direction per hour but less than 20 000 and a long block length because the train cannot block intersections These conditions are rare but in that specific instance light rail might have a minimal operational advantage The United States Government Accountability Office U S GAO summarized in the report Mass Transit Bus Rapid Transit Shows Promise the U S Federal Transit Administration FTA provided funding for the construction of heavy rail and of light rail at that time but not of BRT The FTA funding of BRT rather focuses on obtaining and sharing information on projects being pursued by local transit agencies 70 In spite of this different funding the capital costs of BRT systems were lower in many US communities than those of light rail systems and performance often similar 70 The GAO stated BRT systems were generally more flexible compared to light rail 70 and faster 70 While transit officials noted a public bias toward Light Rail research has found that riders have no preference for rail over bus when service characteristics are equal attribution needed 70 Comparison with heavy rail edit Fjellstrom Wright distributed a map of the mid term goal to expand Bogota s BRT system TransMilenio so that 85 of the city s 7 million inhabitants live within 500m distance to a TransMileneo line Such an expansion program would be unrealistic for a rail based MRT system according to Bogota s mayor 75 An additional use of BRT is the replacement of heavy rail services due to infrastructure damage reduced ridership or a combination of both where lower maintenance costs are desired while taking advantage of an existing dedicated right of way One such system in Japan consists of portions of the JR East Kesennuma and Ofuanto Lines which were catastrophically damaged during the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami and later repaired as a bus lane over the same right of way providing improved service with much lower restoration and maintenance costs 76 Another system set to open in August 2023 is a portion of the JR Kyushu Hitahikosan Line which was damaged due to torrential rain in 2017 77 In both cases ridership had dropped considerably since the lines opened and the higher capacity of a rail line is no longer needed or cost effective compared to buses on the same alignments Comparison with conventional bus services edit nbsp Conventional bus services being delayed by traffic congestion on Chang an Avenue in BeijingConventional scheduled bus services use general traffic lanes which can be slow due to traffic congestion and the speed of bus services is further reduced by long dwell times citation needed In 2013 the New York City authorities noted that buses on 34th Street which carried 33 000 bus riders a day on local and express routes traveled at 4 5 miles per hour 7 2 km h only slightly faster than walking pace Even despite the implementation of Select Bus Service New York City s version of a bus rapid transit system dedicated bus lanes and traffic cameras on the 34th Street corridor buses on the corridor were still found to travel at an average of 4 5 mph 78 In the 1960s Reuben Smeed predicted that the average speed of traffic in central London would be 9 miles per hour 14 km h without other disincentives such as road pricing based on the theory that this was the minimum speed that people will tolerate When the London congestion charge was introduced in 2003 the average traffic speed was indeed 14 kilometres per hour 8 7 mph which was the highest speed since the 1970s 79 By way of contrast typical speeds of BRT systems range from 17 to 30 miles per hour 27 to 48 km h 80 Cost editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Kesennuma Line in Japan damaged in 2011 tsunami JR converted sections of the line into a dedicated bus rapid transit BRT route due to the cost of reconstructing the railway The capital cost of implementing BRT is lower than for light rail A study by the U S Government Accountability Office GAO from 2000 found that the average capital cost per mile for busways was 13 5 million while light rail average cost was 34 8 million 81 The total investment varies considerably due to factors such as cost of the roadway amount of grade separation station structures and traffic signal systems In 2003 a study edited by the German GTZ compared various MRT systems all over the world and concluded Bus Rapid Transit BRT can provide high quality metro like transit service at a fraction of the cost of other options 82 In 2013 the analysis of a database of nineteen LRT projects twenty six HRT projects and forty two BRT projects specified In higher income countries an HRT alternative is likely to cost up to 40 times as much as a BRT alternative 83 and a surface LRT alternative about 4 times that of a BRT alternative Operational cost of running a BRT system is generally lower than light rail though the exact comparison varies and labor costs depend heavily on wages which vary between countries For the same level of ridership and demand higher labor costs in the developed world relative to developing countries will tend to encourage developed world transit operators to prefer operate services with larger but less frequent vehicles This will allow the service to achieve the same capacity while minimizing the number of drivers This may come as a hidden cost to passengers in lower demand routes who experience significantly lower frequencies and longer waiting times and limit gain of ridership In the study done by the U S GAO BRT systems usually had lower cost as well based on operating cost per vehicle hour as on operating cost per revenue mile and on operating cost per passenger trip mainly because of lower vehicle cost and lower infrastructure cost 81 An ambitious light rail system runs partly grade separated e g underground which gives free right of way and much faster traffic compared to passing the traffic signals needed in a surface level system Underground BRT was suggested as early as 1954 84 As long as most buses still run on diesel air quality can become a significant concern in tunnels but the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel is an example of using hybrid buses which switch to overhead electric propulsion while they are underground eliminating diesel emissions and reducing fuel usage Alternatives are elevated busways or more expensive elevated railways 7 nbsp Prominent articulated tram like Van Hool vehicles are used in Metz France 85 Criticism editBRT systems have been widely promoted by non governmental organizations such as the Shell funded EMBARQ program Rockefeller Foundation 86 and Institute for Transportation and Development Policy ITDP whose consultant pool includes the former mayor of Bogota Colombia Enrique Penalosa former president of ITDP Supported by contributions of bus producing companies such as Volvo 87 the ITDP not only established a proposed standard for BRT system implementation but developed intensive lobby activities around the world to convince local governments to select BRT systems over rail based transportation models subways light trains etc 88 Fake BRT systems BRT creep edit nbsp S79 SBS bus at Staten Island Mall The degradation of Select Bus Service SBS is cited as an example of BRT creep Note the lack of ticket machines or level boarding Main article Bus rapid transit creep Bus rapid transit creep is a phenomenon commonly defined as a bus rapid transit BRT system that fails to meet the requirements to be considered true BRT These systems are often marketed as a fully realized bus rapid transit system but end up being described as more of an improvement to regular bus service by proponents of the BRT creep term Notably the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy ITDP published several guidelines in an attempt to define what constitutes the term of true BRT known as the BRT Standard in an attempt to avert this phenomenon The most extreme versions of BRT creep lead to systems that cannot even truly be recognized as Bus Rapid Transit For example a rating from the ITDP determined that the Boston Silver Line was best classified as Not BRT after local decision makers gradually decided to do away with most BRT specific features 89 45 The study also evaluates New York City s Select Bus Service which is supposed to be BRT standard as Not BRT 89 47 Environmental issues edit Unlike electric powered trains commonly used in rapid transit and light rail systems bus rapid transit often uses diesel or gasoline fueled engines The typical bus diesel engine causes noticeable levels of air pollution noise and vibration 90 It is noted however that BRT can still provide significant environmental benefits over private cars In addition BRT systems can replace an inefficient conventional bus network for more efficient faster and less polluting BRT buses For example Bogota previously used 2 700 conventional buses providing transportation to 1 6 million passengers daily 91 while in 2013 TransMilenio transported 1 9 million passengers using only 630 BRT buses 92 a fleet less than a quarter in size of the old fleet that circulates at twice the speed with a huge reduction in air pollution To reduce direct emissions some systems use alternative forms of traction such as electric or hybrid engines BRT systems can use trolleybuses to lower air pollution and noise emissions such as those in Beijing and Quito 93 The price penalty of installing overhead lines could be offset by the environmental benefits and potential for savings from centrally generated electricity especially in cities where electricity is less expensive than other fuel sources Trolleybus electrical systems can be potentially reused for future light rail conversion TransJakarta buses use cleaner compressed natural gas fueled engines while Bogota started to use hybrid buses in 2012 these hybrid systems use regenerative braking to charge batteries when the bus stops and then use electric motors to propel the bus up to 40 km h then automatically switching to the diesel engine for higher speeds which allows for considerable savings in fuel consumption and pollutant dispersion 94 Overcrowding and poor quality service edit nbsp Traffic jam at TransMilenio s dedicated lineMany BRT systems suffer from overcrowding in buses and stations as well as long wait times for buses In Santiago de Chile the average of the system is six passengers per square meter 5 sq yd inside vehicles Users have reported days where the buses take too long to arrive and are too overcrowded to accept new passengers 95 As of June 2017 the system has an approval rating of 15 among commuters and it has lost 27 of its passengers who have turned mostly to cars 96 In Bogota the overcrowding was even worse the average of TransMilenio was eight passengers per square meter 7 sq yd 97 Only 29 felt satisfied with the system The data also showed that 23 of the citizens agreed with building more TransMilenio lines in contrast of the 42 who considered that a rapid transit system should be built 98 Several cases of sexual assault had been reported by female users in TransMilenio According to a 2012 survey made by the secretary of the woman of Bogota 64 of women said they had been victims of sexual assault in the system 99 The system had even been ranked as the most dangerous transport for women 100 The poor quality of the system had occasioned an increment in the number of cars and motorcycles in the city citizens preferred these transport means over TransMilenio According to official data the number of cars increased from approximately 666 000 in 2005 to 1 586 700 in 2016 The number of motorcycles was also growing with 660 000 sold in Bogota in 2013 two times the number of cars sold 101 At the end of 2018 Transmilenio ordered 1383 new buses as a replacement of the older ones in service 52 were compressed natural gas CNG buses made by Scania with Euro 6 emission rating 48 were diesel engine made by Volvo with Euro 5 emission rating More or renewed orders have produced an impressive result To improve public and environmental health the City of Bogota has assembled a fleet of 1 485 electric buses for its public transportation system placing the city among the three largest e bus fleets outside of China 102 103 In the year 2022 Bogota has won the Sustainable Transport Award thanks to their BRT system and their urban cycling strategy 104 105 106 The system in Jakarta had also been experiencing issues with complaints of overcrowding in buses and stations and low frequency of the routes 107 There were extensive safety concerns as well rampant sexual harassment has been reported 108 and the fire safety of the buses has been under scrutiny after one of the buses a Zhongtong imported from China suddenly and spontaneously caught on fire 109 The quality of the service was so bad that the then governor of Jakarta Basuki Tjahaja Purnama in March 2015 publicly apologized for the poor performance of the system 110 Failures and reversals edit nbsp Protests in TransMilenio at the Terreros station 12 February 2016A criticism of BRT systems was that they might not accomplish their promise of an efficient rapid flow of passengers along their dedicated bus lanes The unpopularity of Delhi s BRT 2016 111 and the riots and spontaneous user demonstrations in Bogota 2016 112 raised temporary doubts about the ability of BRTs to tackle issues such as traffic jams Overcrowded stations and BRT vehicles might fail to keep pace with increased ridership The speed of increased BRT ridership confirms the research to the myth of a general preference for rail over bus see the end of chapter Comparison with light rail Bogota however has regained pace according to the Sustainable Transport Award 2022 The lack of permanence of BRT has also been criticized with some arguing that BRT systems can be used as an excuse to build roads that others later try to convert for use by non BRT vehicles Examples of this can be found in Delhi where a BRT system was scrapped 113 and in Aspen Colorado where drivers are lobbying the government to allow mixed use traffic in former BRT lanes as of 2017 although in other US cities such as Albuquerque New Mexico the opposite is true 114 Despite this the lack of permanence is one factor in favour of BRT due to its flexibility 115 Experts also attribute a failure of BRT to land use structure 116 117 Some cities that are sprawled and have no mixed use have insufficient ridership to make BRT economically viable 118 In Africa the African Urban Institute criticized the viability of ongoing BRTs across the continent 119 Impact editA 2018 study found that the introduction of a BRT network in Mexico City reduced air pollution as measured by emissions of CO NOX and PM10 120 See also edit nbsp Buses portalAutonomous Rail Rapid Transit Bus lane Park and Ride List of bus rapid transit systems Quality Bus Corridor Queue jump Sustainable transport Traffic engineering transportation Transit bus Transit Elevated BusReferences edit a b Koridor Transjakarta a b Volvo launches the world s largest bus 25 November 2016 a b What is BRT Institute for Transportation and Development Policy 24 July 2014 a b Lesley Lewis 1983 Runcorn A Rapid Transit New Town Built Environment 9 3 4 234 JSTOR 23286723 a b Runcorn New Town 7 3 Transport rudi net Archived from the original on 18 October 2014 Retrieved 24 July 2020 a b c d EMBARQ The WRI Center for Sustainable Transport November 2016 Global BRT Data Worldwide and Key indicators per region BRTdata org Archived from the original on 8 February 2014 Retrieved 27 November 2016 a b By Lloyd Wright and Karl Fjellstrom Published by Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Technische Zusammenarbeit GTZ GmbH Retrieved 2022 10 10 impact of vertical alignment on cost see chapter 4 1 table 5 Buses with a High Level of Service UITP Fjellstrom Karl Mass Transit Options 4 4 Flexibility www gtz de Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Technische Zusammenarbeit Retrieved 24 February 2023 Agrawal Asha Weinstein Goldman Todd Hannaford Nancy April 2012 Shared Use Bus Priority Lanes on City Streets Case Studies in Design and Management PDF Mineta Transportation Institute Retrieved 3 November 2021 Levinson Herbert S Hoey William F Sanders David B Wyn F Houston 1973 Bus Use of Highways State of the Art PDF National Cooperative Highway Research Program Report 143 Report Highway Research Board Retrieved 4 November 2021 Couch Chris Fowles Steven 2006 Britain Runcorn A Tale of Two Centres Built Environment 32 1 88 102 doi 10 2148 benv 32 1 88 JSTOR 23289488 Crabtree Gordon 6 August 1971 Runcorn Busway creates worldwide interest Commercial Motor Retrieved 25 July 2020 Ling Arthur 1967 Runcorn New Town Master Plan PDF Runcorn Development Corporation Archived from the original PDF on 21 June 2018 Retrieved 25 July 2020 Bus Rapid Transit EMBARQ Archived from the original on 25 August 2015 Retrieved 24 February 2014 Architect of possible dreams Congresosibrt org 8 May 2013 Archived from the original on 11 November 2013 Retrieved 24 February 2014 Latin American Experience With Bus Rapid Transit Gerhard Menckhoff World Bank August 2005 Retrieved 08 15 13 Lotshaw Stephanie 20 June 2011 Profiles of American BRT Pittsburgh s South Busway and East Busway Streetsblog USA Archived from the original on 3 February 2015 Retrieved 1 September 2015 Pittsburgh s leadership on the urban sustainability front is not a recent phenomenon in fact it was the first city in the United States to implement elements of bus rapid transit and it paved the way for more robust U S BRT systems In 1977 only three years after Curitiba Brazil implemented the world s first BRT system Pittsburgh opened the South Busway 4 3 miles of exclusive bus lanes running through previously underserved areas of the city from the western suburbs to the downtown The city was concerned about worsening traffic congestion and lacking the funds to rehabilitate the city s streetcar lines took inspiration from Curitiba and created the South Busway Funding for the system came from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation the state of Pennsylvania and Allegheny County The Port Authority of Allegheny County a county owned state funded agency operates the system The success of the South Busway helped the city leverage funding for the expansion of the network and in 1983 the Martin Luther King Jr East Busway opened The East Busway began as a 6 8 mile network with an additional 2 3 miles added in 2003 connecting the eastern suburbs with downtown Fifteen bus routes run along its corridor Its current weekday ridership is 25 600 with annual ridership close to 7 million The East Busway built on the success of its predecessor and offered fundamental BRT features including a dedicated busway service as frequent as every two minutes during peak period signal prioritization and direct service operations more on that soon However there is no off board fare collection Instead passengers pay upon entrance for in bound trips and upon exit for outbound trips which helps reduce delays in service because of fare collection Ottawa Ontario BRT Case Study PDF Transportation Research Board Retrieved 16 April 2020 History Looking Back OC Transpo Archived from the original on 18 August 2016 Bambang Nurbianto 12 September 2015 Train service has moved forward can Transjakarta follow The Jakarta Post Kaenzig Robin Mobereola Dayo Brader Colin 4 February 2011 Africa s First Bus Rapid Transit System Transportation Research Record Journal of the Transportation Research Board 2193 1 8 doi 10 3141 2193 01 S2CID 109346601 Adewumi Emmanuel Allopi Dhiren July 2013 Rea Vaya South Africa s first bus rapid transit system South African Journal of Science 109 7 8 3 doi 10 1590 sajs 2013 a0029 Venter Christoffel 2016 Assessing the potential of bus rapid transit led network restructuring for enhancing affordable access to employment The case of Johannesburg s Corridors of Freedom Research in Transportation Economics 59 441 449 doi 10 1016 j retrec 2016 05 006 hdl 2263 60793 Terminos y condiciones tarjeta MIO mio com co Retrieved 20 August 2015 Inicia Operacion la Carrera 7 con Buses Duales Transmilenio www transmilenio gov co Archived from the original on 18 October 2015 Retrieved 20 August 2015 Tullave plus www tullaveplus com Archived from the original on 10 August 2015 Retrieved 20 August 2015 Tarjetas de TransMilenio ya se pueden recargar en todos los puntos SITP Retrieved 20 August 2015 The Scorecard Institute for Transportation and Development Policy 24 July 2014 Historia Transmilenio Archived from the original on 19 September 2015 Retrieved 20 August 2015 Cali inauguro el MIO El Pais Retrieved 20 August 2015 Arranco inauguracion de Metrolinea Vanguardia Liberal 22 December 2009 Retrieved 20 August 2015 Pereira se monta al Megabus El Espectador Retrieved 20 August 2015 Home reavaya org za Characteristics of BRT for decision making Archived 15 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine page ES 8 Federal Transit Administration August 2004 What is Select Bus Service NYC Metropolitan Transit Authority Retrieved 12 March 2010 Conozca la app que le brinda informacion sobre Sitp y TransMilenio in Spanish El Tiempo Retrieved 6 June 2017 Duncan Allen 2005 MBTA Silver Line www nycsubway org Retrieved 13 July 2010 Metro Online 14 December 2007 Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel and Changing Bus Technology King County Metro Retrieved 13 July 2010 Graham Johnson 22 March 2019 Last day for buses in Seattle s downtown transit tunnel KIRO 7 Solaris to deliver 14 bi articulated e buses in Denmark They re powered by two motors and over 700 KWH battery 29 October 2021 The BRT Standard Institute for Transportation and Development Policy ITDP 21 June 2016 Archived from the original on 11 April 2019 Retrieved 19 May 2019 The BRT Standard Institute for Transportation and Development Policy ITDP 24 July 2014 Archived from the original on 7 February 2015 Retrieved 19 May 2019 a b Applicability of Bogota s TransMilenio BRT System to the United States Archived 26 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine NBRTI May 2006 Retrieved 15 March 2010 a b Belo Horizonte brtdata org Retrieved 14 November 2022 a b Rio de Janeiro brtdata org Retrieved 14 November 2022 Chinese rail maker develops smart bus Xinhua English news cn www xinhuanet com Retrieved 14 November 2022 The BRT Planning Guide 4th edition pp 25 26 of 1076 16 November 2017 Retrieved 5 October 2022 Peak load passengers per hour per direction brtdata org 2018 Retrieved 9 June 2023 Daily demand passengers per day brtdata org 2018 Retrieved 9 June 2023 DART gears up to serve 2 5 million passengers daily Africa Press 24 January 2021 Dar es Salaam brtdata org Retrieved 2 September 2023 a b c Bogota brtdata org 2018 Retrieved 9 June 2023 a b Ahmedabad bus users down 25 in a decade The Times of India 6 July 2018 Retrieved 6 March 2019 International Public Transport Conference 2010 Case Study of the Guangzhou BRT Archived from the original on 13 July 2011 Retrieved 5 August 2010 BRT Data Latin America Brazil Curitiba Archived from the original on 8 February 2014 Retrieved 24 August 2014 Intermodal Connectivity to BRT A Comparative Analysis of Bogota and Curitiba PDF Journal of Public Transportation Retrieved 24 March 2014 Ampliacion de flota 33 autobuses Metrobus Sum of km of all lines on 1 as of 6 March 2018 Daniela Vega 28 February 2018 Linea 7 de Metrobus inicia pruebas con servicio gratis esta es su ruta Line 7 of Metrobus starts tests with free service this is your route Uno TV in Spanish Retrieved 19 May 2019 Characteristics of BRT for decision making PDF Federal Transit Administration 1 August 2004 Archived from the original PDF on 15 April 2016 Retrieved 8 February 2016 Exhibit 3 22 Maximum observed peak hour bus flows capacities and passenger flows at peak load points on transitways a b c Bus Rapid Transit BRT in Istanbul Turkey Metrobus PDF Mercedes Benz 23 July 2018 Retrieved 19 September 2023 American Public Transit Association APTA Public Transportation Moving America Forward PDF APTA Archived from the original PDF on 2 January 2013 Retrieved 26 April 2012 See p 6 based on 62 000 people in the 4 hour morning rushhour Lord Mayor s Mass Transit Taskforce Report 2007 Brisbane City Council dead link Mulley Corinne Ma Liang Clifton Geoffrey Yen Barbara Burke Matthew June 2016 Residential property value impacts of proximity to transport infrastructure An investigation of bus rapid transit and heavy rail networks in Brisbane Australia Journal of Transport Geography 54 43 doi 10 1016 j jtrangeo 2016 05 010 hdl 10072 142793 Retrieved 7 January 2022 70 million passengers per year divided by 365 Carrigan Aileen King Robin Velasquez Juan Miguel Raifman Matthew Duduta Nicolae Social Environmental and Economic Impacts of BRT Systems PDF EMBARQ World Resources Institute Retrieved 20 February 2022 Achievement unlocked Transjakarta breaks record for serving one million customers in a day The Jakarta Post Retrieved 8 April 2020 https www itdp org 2017 11 16 the brt planning guide 4th edition pp 49 51 of 1076 Retrieved 2022 10 5 https brtdata org indicators corridors peak load corridor passengers per hour per direction Retrieved 2022 12 12 https brtdata org indicators systems peak frequency buses per hour Retrieved 2022 12 12 a b c d e f GAO 01 984 Mass Transit Bus Rapid Transit Shows Promise PDF United States General Accounting Office pp 25 33 30 Retrieved 5 October 2023 Hook W Lotshaw S Weinstock A 2013 More Development For Your Transit Dollar An Analysis of 21 North American Transit Corridors PDF Institute for Transportation and Development Policy p 20 Happy with Metrobus when there is no better alternative Hurriyet Daily News 22 July 2009 Retrieved 5 November 2011 Uzmanlar Uyarmisti Ama Yanan Metrobusun Faturasi Agir Oldu Gurmedia Haberin Merkezi in Turkish 25 March 2015 Retrieved 31 August 2023 G Gardner J C Rutter and F Kuhn 1994 The performance and potential of light rail transit in developing cities Project Report No PR69 Transport Research Laboratory Crowthorne UK Fjellstrom Karl Mass Transit Options 4 4 Flexibility www gtz de GTZ on Behalf of Bundesminister fur wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit und Entwicklung Retrieved 24 February 2023 気仙沼線BRT 大船渡線BRT バス高速輸送システム JR東日本 JR東日本 東日本旅客鉄道株式会社 in Japanese Retrieved 14 July 2023 日田彦山線 BRTひこぼしライン 2023年8月28日 開業予定 日田彦山線 BRTひこぼしライン in Japanese Retrieved 14 July 2023 34th Street Select Bus Service Archived from the original on 23 June 2017 Retrieved 31 March 2013 Bus service along 34th Street is among the slowest in the city Buses travel at an average of 4 5 miles per hour 7 2 km h only slightly faster than walking Despite these slow speeds 34th Street is a major east west bus corridor carrying over 33 000 bus riders a day on local and express routes Impacts monitoring fifty annual report PDF Transport for London Characteristics of BRT for decision making PDF Federal Transit Administration 1 August 2004 p ES 5 Archived from the original PDF on 15 April 2016 Retrieved 8 February 2016 a b GAO September 2001 Bus Rapid Transit Shows Promise PDF GAO Archived from the original PDF on 30 April 2015 Retrieved 16 March 2011 https www itdp org 2003 12 01 sustainable transport a sourcebook for developing cities Module 3a Mass Transit Options Retrieved 2020 10 10 https www itdp org 2017 11 16 the brt planning guide 4th edition p 27 of 1076 Retrieved 2022 10 5 4th edition Metro s Primary Resources 31 May 2023 Van Hool presents the ExquiCity Design Mettis Archived from the original on 5 June 2013 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Ross Benjamin Big Philanthropy Takes the Bus Dissent Retrieved 30 November 2016 Penalosa y su trancon de intereses Al Garete in Spanish 24 January 2016 Archived from the original on 1 May 2016 Si Penalosa no va a la ciudad la ciudad va a Penalosa Al Garete in Spanish 7 March 2016 Archived from the original on 6 May 2016 a b Weinstock Annie Hook Walter Replogle Michael Cruz Ramon May 2011 Recapturing Global Leadership in Bus Rapid Transit A Survey of Select U S Cities Report Institute for Transportation and Development Policy Retrieved 23 May 2014 Office of Transportation and Air Quality October 2008 Average In Use Emissions from Urban Buses and School Buses PDF Report EPA EPA420 F 08 026 Archived from the original PDF on 2 February 2013 Retrieved 19 May 2019 Historia Transmilenio Alcaldia de Bogota Archived from the original on 19 September 2015 Retrieved 20 August 2015 Informe de gestion de Transmilenio PDF Transmilenio Alcaldia de Bogota 2013 p 18 Archived from the original PDF on 18 October 2015 Retrieved 20 August 2015 Edmonton Trolley Coalition trolleycoalition org Inicio de operacion de buses hibridos Alcaldia de Bogota Transmilenio Archived from the original on 18 October 2015 El pecado original que determino el fracaso del Transantiago Diario UChile 10 February 2017 10 anos de Transantiago su deterioro y su reemplazo Algarete in spanish 30 June 2017 Por que colapso TransMilenio Revista Semana 3 August 2014 El futuro de Transmilenio Bogota como vamos 28 August 2014 Preocupantes cifras de acoso a mujeres en Transmilenio noticias RCN 21 August 2013 EXCLUSIVE POLL Latin American cities have most dangerous transport for women NYC best Thomas Reuters Foundation News 29 October 2014 Archived from the original on 22 November 2022 Retrieved 25 March 2018 Los 10 problemas mas graves de Bogota Deustche Welle 17 October 2016 https www itdp org 2022 02 09 bogota wins 2022 sustainable transport award Retrieved 2022 09 28 https www itdp org wp content uploads 2022 07 Presentation Mobilize pdf Retrieved 2022 09 28 https www itdp org 2022 02 09 bogota wins 2022 sustainable transport award Retrieved 2022 09 30 https www itdp org wp content uploads 2022 02 STA 2022 Award Ceremony Press Release docx 1 pdf Retrieved 2022 09 30 https www youtube com watch v taLkKIEYotg Retrieved 2022 09 30 Transjakarta Otro caso de exito algarete in spanish 25 February 2016 Archived from the original on 14 April 2018 Retrieved 13 April 2018 Another Alleged Sexual Harassment at TransJakarta Station Jakarta Globe 5 December 2012 Archived from the original on 22 January 2018 Retrieved 25 March 2018 CoconutsJakarta 13 March 2015 Ahok apologizes for disrupting Transjakarta service as 30 buses are grounded Coconuts Jakarta Coconuts Retrieved 6 April 2021 Jakarta governor apoligezes for less than optimal Transjakarta busway services Global indonesian voices 13 March 2015 Delhi s BRT Corridor to be demolished News Mobile 18 January 2016 Bloqueo TransMilenio El Tiempo in Spanish Lalchandani Neha 27 March 2015 BRT will be scrapped decides Arvind Kejriwal The Times of India Retrieved 23 May 2017 Carroll Rick 25 April 2017 Aspen candidates mull citizen s proposal to open bus lanes to all vehicles The Aspen Times Retrieved 23 May 2017 Fjellstrom Karl Mass Transit Options 4 4 Flexibility www gtz de Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Technische Zusammenarbeit Retrieved 24 February 2023 Suzuki Hiroaki Cervero Robert Transforming Cities with Transit Transit and Land Use Integration for Sustainable Urban Development PDF The World Bank Venter Christo South Africa needs to revamp its new public transport system The Conversation Retrieved 7 September 2018 Bus Rapid Transit system on road to nowhere in Gauteng Retrieved 7 September 2018 Muzenda Archimedes Is Harare ready for Bus Rapid Transit System African Urban Institute Archived from the original on 7 September 2018 Bel Germa Holst Maximilian 1 April 2018 Evaluation of the impact of Bus Rapid Transit on air pollution in Mexico City Transport Policy 63 209 220 doi 10 1016 j tranpol 2018 01 001 hdl 2445 119530 ISSN 0967 070X Further reading editGhadirifaraz B Vaziri M Safa A amp Barikrou N 2017 A Statistical Appraisal of Bus Rapid Transit Based on Passengers Satisfaction and Priority Case Study Isfahan City Iran No 17 05108 Poku Boansi M and Marsden G 2018 Bus Rapid Transit Systems as a Governance Reform Project Journal of Transport Geography 70 pp 193 202 ISSN 0966 6923 DOI Bus rapid transit systems as a governance reform projectExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bus rapid transit General information edit The BRT Standard 2014 Edition Institute for Transportation and Development Policy Bus Rapid Transit Planning Guide 2007 A very comprehensive 800 guide to creating a successful BRT system by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy available in English Spanish and Portuguese Bus Rapid Transit Volume 1 Case Studies in Bus Rapid Transit Transportation Research Board Bus Rapid Transit Volume 2 Implementation Guidelines Transportation Research Board Cervero Robert 2013 Bus Rapid Transit An Efficient and Competitive Mode of Public Transport PDF European Automobile Manufacturers Association Characteristics of Bus Rapid Transit National Bus Rapid Transit Association 2009 Archived from the original on 18 February 2010 Retrieved 3 March 2010 Levinson Herbert S 2002 Bus Rapid Transit An Overview Journal of Public Transportation 5 2 1 30 doi 10 5038 2375 0901 5 2 1 Across Latitudes and Cultures Bus Rapid Transit An international Centre of Excellence for BRT development Transit Capacity and Quality of Service Manual Transportation Research Board BRT Technologies Assisting Drivers Operating Buses on Road Shoulders University of Minnesota Center for Transportation Studies Department of Mechanical EngineeringCountry specific information edit Recapturing Global Leadership in Bus Rapid Transit A Survey of Select U S Cities available for download in pdf Institute for Transportation amp Development Policy May 2011 Wang Fengwu and James Wang April 2004 BRT in China PDF Public Transport International Archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2009 Retrieved 10 March 2010 Vincent William Lisa Callaghan Jerram April 2008 Bus Rapid Transit and Transit Oriented Development Case Studies on Transit Oriented Development Around Bus Rapid Transit Systems in North America and Australia PDF Washington DC Breakthrough Technologies Institute Archived from the original PDF on 7 February 2014 Retrieved 22 April 2012 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Bus Rapid Transit Shows Promise Archived 30 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine U S General Accounting Office The National BRT Institute USA Databases edit Global BRT Data Database of Bus Rapid Transit systems around the world Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bus rapid transit amp oldid 1207031850, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.