This counts for Frankston more than other stations. This is because it's a railhead with a very large catchment extending 30 or more kilometres. Hence the buses that radiate from it do more than the 'last mile' coverage normal for middle suburban stations. The result is that failure to make the bus makes walking not an option and results in a very steep taxi fare.
These issues are exacerbated by Frankston's physical shoddiness as a transport interchange.
Buses do come tantalisingly close to trains. But try and walk between the two.
As you can see below, not having a middle and/or northern entrance increases walking distances and backtracking to some bus bays, including the one that the 781 leaves from.
I excluded routes that stopped running before 9pm (when trains are more frequent) and those that may have connections with other Frankston line stations. What remained was tabulated below.
Also (to the Department of Transport's credit) there are no ultra-tight <5 minute train - bus connections after 9pm at Frankston. But given that the journey planner allows 4 minutes to walk from train to bus, even a 5 minute connection is risky. The chance of failure is just too high with only a 1 minute leeway. Even just a few more minutes more can greatly reduce that risk.
There will always be some disruptions to trains and you cannot eliminate connection risk. But extending transfer time can usefully lessen it. It might even make the difference between experiencing a broken connection only a few times a year versus one or more nearly every week. They need to find a scheduling 'sweet spot' that gets the balance right. Whatever it is, it's pretty clear that the five minutes 781 allows isn't it.
For a large interchange like Frankston, where there can be significant walking times, I've assumed a 10 to 12 minute connection time as optimum. After deducting the assumed 4 minute walk time that drops to 6 to 8 minutes. If the bus is already at the stop and passengers can board early then waiting inside a stationary bus is better than waiting where there's no bus. Especially in winter.
13 to 15 minutes gives even more robustness at the cost of journey time. The former is more highly valued for longer than shorter trips. Especially if we're talking about the last trip of the night. Also beneficial is the opportunity it gives for a toilet break at Frankston. The three longer distant routes (especially the 788) where this is more important are identified in the table.
So much for the ideal, what's scheduled in practice? They couldn't be clearer. The 781's tight connection was the rule rather than the exception. Nearly 60% of after 9pm trips were equally tight, with just a 1 minute leeway. Only 4 out of 17 departures (ie less than 25%) had what I'd consider safe connection times at Frankston. And remember we're typically talking about the last trip where the time, money and convenience penalties for missing the bus are especially high.
The Department of Transport goes on about 'simple connected journeys'. However this analysis shows that, even when they recoordinate services, they are doing it to a specification that doesn't necessarily guarantee good results, whether measured by passenger success, travel speed or 'connection anxiety'.
There's basically two ways to improve 'last bus' connectivity. Neither involves more than minor costs. And since they typically involve the last trips in the busiest direction (ie outbound) there are fewer scheduling interactions than if you were attempting to reschedule trips earlier in the day.
I recommend:
1. Longer train > bus connection times where needed. These should include reasonable access times and a better contingency for trains arriving late. What appears to be the current DoT rule of 5 minutes is too short for an interchange like Frankston. Instead of 5 to 10 minutes, maybe train to bus connection specifications could be 8 to 12 minutes. 10 to 12 minutes might be preferred for less frequent routes, longer routes or if it's the last trip. In some cases (for a nominally hourly evening service) it may be acceptable to have 65 minutes between the second last and last trips so that more contingency is built in for train connections to the last bus.
2. A holding policy where the last bus is held if the train it is meant to connect to is delayed. This should apply on as many significant feeder routes as possible. Especially those that (a) meet trains at just one station and (b) do not form another trip in a popular direction. It should be publicised so passengers know which routes it will apply for and how long the bus will wait. An example already used at Frankston Station for Night Network routes could be extended to apply for the last trips of regular routes like those in the table above.
Conclusion
Two low-cost options, involving (i) more time at key interchanges and (ii) extending an existing bus holding policy to apply earlier in the night would quickly improve end-to-end journey reliability and make multimode trips involving buses easier and more reliable. Longer term priorities could include reform of bus networks and redesigned train / bus interchanges to further improve connectivity.
3 comments:
Plot twist: If the bus timetables really came from the shop in the image at the top, the shop's name is actually called Last Bus Connection Clearance store.
Reminds me of a tight regional coach connection I attempted once (I think the timetable has changed since to make it not possible anymore) and ended up having to spend the night in Shepparton and catch the early morning train to Melbourne. I was coming from Kyabram and was going to be there too late for the official last service (coach/train connection at Murchison East) so tried to change coaches in Mooroopna (to catch the coach running to connect with the train at Seymour, as the last service of the day) but couldn't get across the highway and saw it leave. And of course it wasn't possible to make this connection in Shepparton.
Follow-up: In February 2022 Route 781 was extended to Dromana. This provided some worthwile coverage improvements in previously unserved parts of Mt Martha. But was the timetable changed to fix the 'last bus connection' issue that was made an example of here? No it was not!
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