Tuesday, July 14, 2026

TT 234: How often? A look at the midday frequencies of Melbourne's buses


Most cities have bus routes that vary from infrequent to frequent. While the majority of routes may be infrequent and a minority frequent, you will typically find it is the frequent network that caters for a disproportionate number of trips. Either due to them serving a popular or densely populated corridor or because their better service induces higher usage. 

The quieter less frequent routes tend to have a 'safety net' coverage function while the busier frequent routes present a stronger case for further service and infrastructure upgrades that further boost usage. Examples include higher frequencies, wider operating hours along with reinforcing land use policy such as location of major destinations, denser housing, road space allocation and parking requirements.  

Frequent routes are are also more marketable - something important for cities that wish to grow bus usage. Marketability is one reason transit agencies may differentiate frequent routes from the others. Examples of differentiation may include special bus livery, better bus stops, greater prominence on network maps, and/or distinctive route numbering.  

Route number memorability and frequency

Last week Adam Bain discussed whether some route numbers are more memorable than others and whether the more memorable numbers also happened to be the more frequent routes. This analysis included a chart colour coding each route, listed in order, by its midday weekday frequency. 

High frequency routes included the high frequency university shuttles (mostly x01 numbers), Smartbuses (900-908), inner urban routes (mostly 200s). Distinctive patterns were noted for 20 minute headways (some middle northern, middle south-eastern and outer suburbs), 30 minute intervals (north, east and south-east) and 40 minute gaps (outer suburbs). 

My video here talks you through this in more detail. 


The frequency of frequencies

While people sometimes describe public transport networks in terms of number of routes, that tells us nothing about how long and how frequent each route is (and thus its population catchment and usefulness).

As I mention here fairer metrics to give a high level idea of the network's usefulness include annual service kilometres and the proportion of people near frequent service. Dividing annual service kilometres by metropolitan population tells you about service intensity provided while patronage (and especially patronage productivity) data reveals something about whether the service provided is being used. 

Last week I looked at the patronage productivity of various bus routes in Melbourne. Amongst the most productive bus routes were often those that were more frequent. From this you could deduce a non-linear relationship between service levels and patronage. Not only do frequent routes carry more passengers as they are frequent but because they are also more productive the number of passengers is disproportionately higher. 

That causes you to get a pattern where a small proportion of bus routes (say 20% - I haven't crunched the numbers) account for say half or more of bus passengers. And in Melbourne's case it's helped but not entirely due to our three very long orbitals. (Those who study tax systems would likely find a similar pattern with income taxes - in a progressive system most taxes come from the top 10 or 20% of regular wage earners, not only due to their higher incomes but also because they pay a higher proportion).  

Jarrett Walker often mentions that under conditions of constrained resources a bus network optimised for coverage has a high number of infrequent routes while one optimised for frequency might sacrifice coverage for frequency. Most cities would have bus networks that sit somewhere in between these extremes with a mix of frequent and infrequent routes.

One (admittedly imperfect) way of analysing a bus network is to examine the number of routes in each frequency band. That helps you understand the character of a network, ie one that's simple, direct, frequent (and possibly more widely spaced) versus one that is complex, indirect, infrequent but with short walking distances to the nearest (sometimes poorly used) route. 

Through manual counting I converted Adam's coloured chart to a frequency distribution for midday weekday bus routes in Melbourne (below). 

The big picture is that Melbourne has very few all day frequent bus routes. The network is characterised by a large number of infrequent routes, a feature which marginalises buses compared to trains and trams despite the bus network's extensive coverage.  

Most notable is the dominance of routes operating in the 31 to 60 minute frequency range. The vast majority of these are either 40 or 60 minutes with 40 minutes far more common than 60 minutes. Melbourne (and Victoria's) love of 40 minute bus frequencies is notable compared to Brisbane and Perth which have a lot of weekday 60 minute frequencies. 

Frequent routes running every 15 minutes or better are uncommon in Melbourne, accounting for just 7% of the total on weekdays. On weekends this slumps to under 2% of routes with only the 234, 246, 732 (part), 905 and 907 complying. 

While it is common for cities to have more infrequent routes than they do frequent routes, Melbourne's fall-off is particularly extreme. This can be put down to:

(a) Some skewing of data due to the use of trams on corridors that in other cities would be frequent buses and our long orbital bus routes.

(b) Our weaker political and institutional support for bus reform than Auckland and Perth who prioritised the creation of frequent routes from multiple less frequent routes. This reluctance has caused us to have fewer 10 minute frequency routes than is otherwise possible within existing budgets. 

(c) A tendency to favour 20 over 15 minute frequencies, largely due to our base 10/20/40 minute headway hierarchy on most railway lines. 20 minute service is a big improvement over 30 or 40 minute service but does not generally qualify as turn-up-and-go frequent service like 15 min might and 10 min probably will.  

On weekends this is the most influential of the lot: 

(d) legacy of a 'small city' bus funding culture that like Adelaide (but not Sydney, Brisbane or Perth) schedules even main routes at half frequency on Saturdays and (even moreso) Sundays. 

The graph's numbers are tabulated below (with routes every 20 min or better indentified): 

Every 61 min or worse:  34

Every 31 - 60 min: 167

Every 21 - 30 min: 72

Every 16 - 20 min: 56
153 154 170 180 190 200 207 232 250 251 270 390 406 408 420 460 465 467 471 475 477 501 503 505 506 508 510 512 517 527 528 529 533 537 540 541 546 561 570 582 603 604 605 630 732 733 767 791 798 800 825 828 831 893 897 898

Every 11 - 15 min: 18
201 216 220 223 234 305 472 552 670 703 900 901 902 903 905 906 907 908

Every 1 - 10 min: 7
235 237 241 246 301 402 601

Note: 695F excluded, 745 counted as 1, 900 series night network excluded

A reminder that the above relates to midday weekday frequencies. Over half of those listed fall to 30 or 40 minute headways on weekends.

The number of routes that are better than every 15 minutes or better seven days is so low as to be counted on one hand (234, 246, 905, 907 and part of 732). 

Frequency of frequencies with reform 

Bus network reform such as required to massively increase bus usage would almost certainly change the mix of service frequencies. There would be fewer limited service routes with long gaps while more routes would run more frequently. 

The chart below indicates potential directions of change. 

Early priorities would likely concentrate on closing the longest waits, addressing operating hours issues such as early finishes or lack of weekend service and boosting weekend service on otherwise frequent routes.

Weekend services key

While that might not cause the above weekday-oriented graph to change much I would rate the creation of more 7 day frequent routes as being key to to boosting bus usage. Indeed going from 4 to say 40 all week frequent routes would transform the bus network with these routes driving patronage growth. The graph would likely still contain high numbers of less frequent routes but with the majority of bus trips being made on a more defined frequent network with an Auckland-style maximum wait service guarantee the passenger experience would be transformed. 

Network reform and route consolidation

Further gains are possible (with even lower costs per route) with network reform. This would seek opportunities to consolidate routes with overlapping catchment into more direct and frequent routes. The biggest single shift here would likely be the creation of many more 20 minute frequency routes from existing 21 - 30 and 31 - 60 minute routes. Some of this would be straight service upgrades while in other cases network reform would reduce costs.

Going from every 30 to 20 min needs 1 extra bus per hour added. As does moving from 20 to 15 min. Whereas moving from 20 to 10 min needs 3 extra buses per hour. Expressed in another way, assuming you're starting at a 30 minute frequency you can have three times as much route upgraded to run every 20 minutes as every 10 minutes. 

Still the travel experience of 10 min frequencies are so good (and rare for buses in Melbourne) that all opportunities to do it cost-effectively with network reform such as may be possible along corridors like Murray Rd and/or Bell St should be explored, while also reviving probably the single highest patronage potential element of the now sidelined northern and north-east bus reform. 

The above would also be consistent with Victoria's Bus Plan whose priorities were local reform followed by buses being a mass transit option, ie more routes running every 10 minutes seven days. This would be a radical step compared to now where the current network has no seven day routes every 10 minutes or better and just four seven day routes every 15 minutes or better. 

Interaction with train frequencies

Auckland opted to reform their buses before it reformed train frequencies. While some connections were messy (20 min trains to buses every 15 min) the bus reform was an overall greater good with patronage rises. Perth already had 15 minute train frequencies compatible with its 15/30/60 min bus hierarchy (though it now also has some 10 minute bus frequencies). 

In Melbourne's eastern suburbs the potential pace of bus reform is constrained by weekday train timetables which remain on a 15/30 min off-peak pattern, contrary to the 10/20 minute pattern applicable elsewhere (including the Sandringham line from later this year). This is because if trains remain at current frequencies the case for improving their busier bus routes from 30 to 20 min is weaker than with harmonised 10/20 minute frequencies.

There is also a general fall-off in population density when you go more than 1km east of Stud Rd such that it is hard to argue for 10 or 15 minute frequencies but 30 minutes is inadequate. In this context 20 minute bus frequencies on main roads are justifiable especially if supported by similar train frequencies. Which in turn meshes well with the very strong case for stations like Box Hill and Ringwood to have 10 (rather than 15 minute) midday rail frequencies.

The older parts of Melton is a contrasting example. In their case trains got boosted to every 20 min on weekdays. Later its trains got boosted from every 60 to every 40 minutes. No bus upgrades accompanied its weekday train boosts. Thus some buses that had 2 trips per hour were a poor fit for the upgraded 3 trains per hour. The opportunity to upgrade these to 3 buses per hour (as well as simplify routes to run along main roads) was lost, unlike the case of Wyndham in 2015 that got a new bus network when Regional Rail Link commenced.

However much more recently when weekend Melton trains improved there was a genuine attempt at multimodal planning with many bus routes improving from every 60 to every 40 min to harmonise. Creating an interesting case where some bus routes are more frequent on weekends than they are on weekdays (where an hourly service still remains).  

Overall Melbourne has been weak at this sort of multimodal thinking. There have been many cases of infrastructure upgrades (such as level crossing removals) that have not been followed by commensurate rail service boosts or a reappraisal of bus networks to take advantage of road improvements such as grade separations. 

Summary

Melbourne has very few frequent bus routes. Operating more of them, whether through straight service boosts (particularly weekend) or bus network reform is key to unlocking the potential of buses to carry millions more passenger trips per month. 

While it has limitations, analysing frequency data per route can help us quantify the network's extreme bias towards low frequency and less productive services and drive interest in getting more from our investment in bus services.  


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Thursday, July 09, 2026

UN 238: Another look at our most productive bus routes

There is significant unmet demand for bus services.

Boost service on a existing popular (but underserviced) bus route and usage will rise in proportion. Higher frequency and longer hours induce new demand, just like the 200% rise in Saturday use of Dandenong's Route 800 bus when weekend trips were added. 

Such underservicing is common even on our most important bus routes, with headways of 30, 40 and even 60 minutes widespread, especially on weekends. I looked at this back in 2023, when 2022 data was available. 

Our most productive bus routes

Last week Mohan Wadia released similar analysis, based on data from 2023. 

This compared patronage with service hours per route to arrive at a productivity number. This averages 18.3 passengers per live bus hour across the network with wide variations. 

Though we need to be careful with patronage numbers. The Auditor-General found that, even after accounting for non touch ons, DTP bus usage data was inaccurate and actual bus ridership could be substantially higher than stated. 

As for service hours, there are two things that can make that number high. That is the time a route takes from start to finish and the number of trips per week. Both are high for the long SmartBus orbitals. 

The analysis starts by listing the 20 highest productivity/highest overall hours bus routes. Starting with the most productive first they are: 

902, 182, 703, 900, 907, 733, 170, 901, 495, 623, 506, 485, 160, 150, 497, 903, 630, 481, 406, 246. 

These can be separated into the following: 

* Orbital SmartBuses: 901, 902, 903
* Other SmartBuses: 703, 900, 907
* High productivity regular routes: 246, 406, 506, 623, 630, 733
* Wyndham routes: 150, 160, 170, 182, 495, 497
* Sunbury routes: 481, 485

I pointed out back in 2019 that high productivity, such as all these routes exhibit, is a sign of underservicing. All justify higher service but, for the longer routes, not necessarily along all of their length as segments can have widely varying productivity and/or inefficiently overlap other routes. 


I will now discuss each grouping of routes and recommend actions arising to further improve productivity and service levels.  

Orbital SmartBuses

While 903 has the highest patronage (and some sections with more intensive service), it is beaten by both 901 and 902 on productivity. This is likely due to 903 west of Northland being inefficiently overlapped by multiple other routes (eg 527, 465, 411, 232 and more) as well as having some low patronage industrial catchment in the west. These factors make it ripe for breaking up as an orbital with western and northern parts merged with other routes to provide a consistent seven day 10-15 minute frequency on most sections. 

The 901 also suffers from some overlap with 902 in the Templestowe and Greensborough areas, serves an industrial catchment in Dandenong South and has territory between South Morang and Greensborough that likely do not justify a frequent service. 

902 likely tops the productivity list due to its extremely high usage around Glen Waverley and Springvale as well as duplicating fewer routes on its way across to the north and north-west. It may however benefit from some improved directness near Greensborough and operation to Melbourne Airport instead of Airport West Shopping Centre (whose catchment is more localised). 

Usage on the orbitals has been the fastest to rebound after the pandemic with usage in 2023 within 5% of 2019's number. It may well be higher now due to the reduced attractiveness of driving due to higher fuel prices. 

Shorter term recommendation: Operate short workings to boost the busier parts of the SmartBus orbitals to every 15 min during the day on weekends. Add after 9pm Sunday service on these portions. Existing service levels on Route 907 could be adopted as a template on both these counts. 

Longer term recommendation: Split SmartBus routes into more manageable shorter segments typically operating every 10 minutes or better on their busiest portions. Consolidate with overlapping routes for best legibility, economy, productivity and evenness of service. 

Other SmartBuses

All three (703, 900 and 907) are in the top five performers for productivity. Route 907 has steadily got service increases over the years. It has long operating hours including (rare for Melbourne) 15 minute weekend frequency and after 9pm Sunday service. Its next step is possibly an improvement to daytime frequency to 10 minutes and late evenings to every 15 or 20 minutes. 

The other two far lag the 907 in service. 900 was meant to be the substitute for a promised railway to Rowville. However it does not have train-standard frequencies on weekends and evenings with 30 minute gaps typical. It also stops around 9pm Sundays. The 900 gets most of its productivity from the busy Caulfield - Chadstone - Monash area. Productivity at the Rowville end is hampered by poor quality feeder services east of Stud Road and bad walking connectivity between the shopping centre's bus interchange and the Route 900 stop. 

703 is even further behind in service with this the only pilot SmartBus that did not get upgraded to the full SmartBus service levels on weekdays during the day or in evening finishes. While it does not serve any big shopping centres it does serve Monash University which contributes greatly to its high productivity. 

Recommendation: Upgrade operating hours and weekend frequency on Routes 703 and 900 to match 907's current service level. Upgrade 907's service level to every 10 min or better during the day all week and every 15 - 20 min at all other times. 

High productivity regular routes 

These routes are the unsung heroes of the bus network. They didn't get the special branding of SmartBus but have well above average productivity. Most are on straight alignments or serve major destinations such as universities and shopping centres. With the exception of the 733 (part of which got a boost to every 15 min on weekdays) none of these routes has had significant timetable improvements in the last few years. 

406, 623 and 733 are most notable for the large shopping centres served. Their weekend loadings are particularly high indicating that their typical 30 to 60 minute service is insufficient. Despite inconvenient access to trains at Richmond (because the nearest station entrance is kept closed at non-event times) the 246 is a strong patronage performer due to its very direct main road alignment along Punt Rd/Hoddle St. It is also one of a handful of routes that runs a 10 minute frequency on weekdays with 'rapid running' or headway-based timetables. 

630 has a weak western terminus but still performs well due to Monash University at its other end. 506 is an east-west route centred on Brunswick. It is the only route out of the top 20 not to run on Sundays.

The above confirms, as did the 2021 Bus Plan, that in Melbourne there is often a mismatch between a bus route's patronage (or patronage potential) and the service levels provided. Cities such as Perth, where timetables are continuously reviewed and there is a conscious effort to form a seven day high frequency network every 15 minutes or better from high performing routes, suffer from this less. 

Shorter term recommendation: Upgrade weekend services levels on all routes to match weekday frequencies. Extend operating hours to midnight.  

Longer term recommendation: Network reform and straightening on all routes (406 more direct between Footscray and Highpoint, 506 removing Brunswick West kink, 623 potential amalgamation with part of 624 and routing via Caulfield Station, 630 a stronger western terminus, 733 southern terminus extended through Clarinda to Cheltenham instead of Oakleigh) with further service upgrades. 

Wyndham routes

These are also high productivity routes but are uniquely concentrated in a local government area that got almost its entire bus network redrawn in 2013 (Point Cook) and 2015 (Hoppers Crossing/Werribee/Wyndham Vale/Tarneit). 

Five of the six routes (150, 160, 182, 495 and 497) drop to a 40 minute service outside peak times. While there have been Wyndham area bus upgrades in the last few years they have not benefited these routes despite scope to deliver 20 minute headways (such as their routes run in peaks) with the existing bus fleet. The continued existence of productive main road routes running only every 40 minutes lends weight to those who assert that Melbourne's west has been short-changed by Daniel Andrews political strategies that prioritised swing seats in the east. 

The other Wyndham route in this list is the 170. Unlike the others this has a 7 day 20 minute service. It's a main road route between Werribee Station, Werribee Plaza and Tarneit Station. It possibly justifies a tram-like 10 minute frequency given its usage. 

Recommendation: Upgrade routes 150, 160, 182, 495 and 497 to every 15 min peak (to match proposed late 2026 Werribee line train timetable with its 7.5 min service) and 20 min off-peak seven days. Extend operating hours to midnight to match service levels recently implemented on routes such as 153, 154 and 192.  Upgrade Route 170 to run every 10 min day, 20 min night to form a tram-like corridor. 

Sunbury routes

481 and 485 are short local feeder routes in Sunbury, typically operating every 40 minutes. I'm surprised they made the top 20 most productive as Sunbury demograpics are slightly different from the high bus using mix seen in areas like Wyndham, Brimbank, Craigieburn and Greater Dandenong. 



Better version of above chart is here.

Other comments

The analysis also plots routes on a scatter graph. 

601, the Monash University - Huntingdale express shuttle, stands out as the most productive route. This is achieved by short run times, high frequency and a high volume corridor. It didn't make the list of 20 charted above as its shortness means it doesn't require many bus hours, despite its high frequency.

Other strong performers noted include the 402, 737 and 767 with the 737 (which serves major destinations in the east such as Monash University, Glen Waverley, Knox City, Boronia and Croydon) singled out as being worthy of improvement. 

Route 788 (Frankston - Portsea) is identified as an example of a low productivity route out of the top 50 (as measured by service hours). This can be attributed to several factors. First of all it is a long route - so its service hours will inevitably be long even if its frequency is not high. Parts are slow, with speed humps and significant local traffic in parts. That's important as slowness hurts productivity. 

The 788 is also overlapped by significant service on routes 781, 784 and 785 between Frankston and at least Mornington. Parts of its catchment is low density, whether inland, the part hugging the bay (fish don't tend to ride buses) or parts west of Sorrento. The route is also partly paralleled by an express bus (887). 

However the 788, as the Mornington Peninsula's main public transport spine, goes to many useful places and has a steady hop on and hop off usage. It is possible that the reformed Mornington network that started on 5 July will nudge more people to get the 788 as the Barkly St bus interchange now has fewer buses. That, and the potential to make a new connection from Hastings due to the new 886, should somewhat improve the route's productivity. 

I mentioned the 18.3 passengers/hour average productivity. It should be noted that there is what statisticians call a 'long tail'. Many routes are significantly below average. Sometimes this is unavoidable if it is agreed that coverage in a hard to reach area should be retained for equity reasons. But on the other hand there are parts of the bus network where inefficiencies such as overlapping routes or excessive service levels (in a few cases) could be tackled to improve productivity. Some of the latter is the sort of more complex bus network reform that successive governments have often found difficult. 

Summary

The pattern of high productivity bus routes remains similar to last reviewed. That is routes that serve major shopping centres, large universities and run directly between train stations on at least two lines are highly productive. 

But just because a route is already productive does not mean it can't help even more people get around. This is possible by cutting maximum waits, increasing operating hours, and, particularly on orbital SmartBuses that serve weak catchments or overlap other routes, simplifying the bus network so that corridors have a smaller number of routes running more frequently. 

There has been welcome acknowledgement by government that there is a place for routes that are consistently more frequent 7 days with longer operating hours as shown by funding in recent state budgets for service upgrades to some Wyndham buses and other key routes like 508 and 561 to run every 20 minutes all week. 

However an opportunity remains for Melbourne to (i) both expand this frequent network to more routes,  (ii) present a more consistent service offer (our main routes still vary hugely on service levels, reducing legibility), (iii) adopting a more frequent turn-up-and-go standard for our top tier routes, and (iv) publicly defining and selling the frequent network more like we used to do with SmartBus.

Sydney's All Day Frequent Network (every 10 min or better), Perth's High Frequency Bus Services (every 15 min or better) and Auckland's Frequent Transit Network (every 15 min or better) all represent best practice Monday to Sunday examples from this part of the world.

Perth's model is most notable for how it forms its frequent buses - it continuously reviews the bus network and goes out of its way to optimise resources to upgrade or consolidate regular routes until they are frequent enough all week to qualify for High Frequency status (after which they get a 900 route number). This means that even in times when there is not a lot of new funding for bus services new frequent routes can be added, as happened earlier this week when existing Route 100 was upgraded to the more consistently frequent 920.

With Melbourne's historically much slower rate of bus network reform, the opportunities to do this here are far higher here than in Perth, with political will seemingly the only barrier.  


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Thursday, July 02, 2026

UN 237: A new Melbourne PT frequency map


Melbourne's public transport has its share of disruptions, wildly varying service levels and (for buses) limited operating hours and indirect routes. 

But parts of the network are pretty good, with tourists awed by the size of our train and tram systems. 

Every route is equal - how Transport Victoria maps

However, although charged with network marketing, DTP through its Transport Victoria brand has a habit of allowing the good parts of the network be lumped with the bad parts. 'Use the journey planner' is their normal refrain, with no thought given to expanding would-be users' ideas of what is possible first

Especially for buses, which have the highest patronage growth potential of the three main modes yet low social licence (as revealed in internal Bus Plan documents tabled in parliament), fixing these perceptions requires (i) changing reality by chopping out the bad bits through bus network reform and (ii) accentuating the positive through good information and marketing. 

Auckland has done both. Its bus network is probably now the best of any similar city in Australia/NZ and, with 15 minute 7 day frequencies on its main routes, certainly beats Melbourne's. AT also understands messaging with it defining a 'frequent promise' with main routes highlighted on maps.  

DTP/Transport Victoria presents buses more or less the same, regardless of how useful or useless they are in reality. This is exacerbated by our wide variation in bus service levels. The Knox example below displays the main road 901 (every 15 min weekdays, 30 min weekends over long hours) at equal prominence to the 757 (8 trips on weekdays, none on weekends). The former is useful for many trips, the latter for only a few.  


If you're house hunting and want to know whether a bus route is useful without having to pore through hundreds of timetables, you won't get much help from DTP/Transport Victoria. They provide basic information (equal for all bus routes) on a take it or leave it basis. Unlike a more dynamic private sector company or even a government business enterprise they appear not to have much of a stake in whether people use buses or not.  

Frequent routes are more useful - some independent maps 

Fortunately there are independently-produced frequency maps for Melbourne's public transport that start where TV's local maps finish. 

There's my interactive frequent network maps here (that has just had an update with Bus 140A added). 

But today's topic is to introduce the amazing new Melbourne frequency map developed by Adam Bain. Available at ptmapmelb.com it is based on midday weekday frequencies. Switchable layers exist for 10, 15, 20 and 40-60 minute frequencies. It is inspired by similar maps for Seattle and Miami.

Just like with Melbourne, Seattle had a disconnect between what was important for passengers and information that was published by the siloed transit bureaucracy. Creating a gap filled by independent map makers and activists.  

You really need to spend some time with ptmapmelb.com. Achieving something that a hundred timetable lookups or journey planner searches will never do, it will change how you view Melbourne's PT network. You can zoom in for more detail but at no point does it become overwhelming. 

To get an idea of high and low service areas I suggest first ticking the 10 minute box and looking at the network. You'll see many (but not all) tram corridors and a few train lines. It's overwhelmingly a radial  inner suburban network with only a handful of cross-radial routes. You'll need to look carefully to see any buses. 

Ticking 15 minutes adds the rest of the tram network, some extra Metro lines in the east and quite a few buses, with the SmartBus orbitals being most prominent. But remember this is a weekday map with services on the latter (especially) collapsing on weekends. 

A substantial growth, particularly in the west and north comes when 20 minutes is selected. Apart from the outer-east this substantially completes the Metro train network, Melton and Geelong V/Line and adds many bus routes. But you will still see large populated areas without coverage. Most prominent gaps include Point Cook, Melton, large parts of Brimbank, Wollert, Epping, Thomastown, Mernda, the entire outer east, Greater Dandenong, Pakenham and Frankston. 

Adding 30 minutes brings up the Belgrave and Lilydale Metro lines as well as large parts of the bus network in the north and east. This include a lot of odd frequencies like 22 and 25 minutes around Epping and Reservoir where connections with trains are particularly poor. 

The much finer drawn 40-60 minute range includes most of the rest of the bus network including the areas listed as missing out on 20 minute service. In the west, north and outer south-east this may be due to an unwillingness to schedule buses every 30 min as they do not meet trains typically running every 20 minutes. If there is not the interest to run buses every 20 minutes then this confines large areas with (at best) a 40 minute service. As well as being good for its own sake, moving to a Metro rail network based on 10 minute core frequencies (as per the NDP) allows a wider range of connecting bus frequencies. 

The final two boxes are for limited service or FlexiRide routes. These routes are common in parts of the outer east (eg around Knox) eg 681, 682, 757, 758 and more. Although developed around 30 or more years ago these areas never got a full bus network then and still don't have one today. If an area has a lot of complex peak, limited service or FlexiRide routes it is likely to be crying out for bus network reform, as in the Reservoir and Knox examples below.  


The frequency finder

I said before that Adam's map was based on midday weekday frequencies. That's a problem because weekend frequencies in Melbourne can vary between 0.25 and 1.5 times weekday interpeak frequencies with Sunday service sometimes a fraction of Saturdays. 

Frequencies may also vary across the day between peak, interpeak and night time bands. Buses (especially) lack consistent operating hours so services may not run when you need to travel. 

However help is at hand through the companion Frequency Finder for trams and buses. 

Frequency Finder lets you find frequency by route by day of week and time of day. There's also a handy span guide and a map that changes colour (to indicate frequency) by line selected.

I deliberately selected a complex route (824) to test whether the graphic would show the more frequent Moorabbin part of the route (every 20 min) differently to the Keysborough end (every 40 min). It did.

However the frequency finder is limited to a single route and not a corridor. Thus overlaps like 250/251, 411/412 or 811/812 will not be shown as higher frequency here unlike they are on the map. 

Conclusion

This map and the accompanying frequency finder will encourage people to see the Melbourne public transport network differently with service have and have not areas really made apparent. This will make it a useful planning and advocacy tool. 


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