It's all very well to mention these limitations but where's the evidence?
The trip below is an inbound trip somewhat later (around 9am). The estimated wait time was 35 minutes. Travel time to Tarneit Station was estimated at 17 minutes. Thus it would take the better part of an hour to go a few kilometres to the nearest station.
What happens if all the FlexiRide buses are used and it's not considered worthwhile to deviate one of the five buses out? Now you get a 'no available vehicles' message. The app include fixed routes with a suggestion to take Route 182 departing in 19 minutes. That doesn't go very near the destination with a 39 minute walk the other end. Alternatively, and quicker, you can just give up on the bus and walk the entire 3.7 km to your destination.
Both the last two trip plans were around 9am, which appears to be about peak demand for FlexiRide. As this subsided it was again possible to plan trips with shorter waiting times. More discussion here: https://twitter.com/MelbOnTransit/status/1595159838782545922
Conclusion
These tests demonstrate the basic volatility and unreliability of FlexiRide-type services in populated areas. Having the service come up as being unavailable at certain times indicates that it cannot reliably survive a morning peak in areas with significant travel activity like Tarneit.
Thus FlexiRide does not scale up well. That's a big problem if you wish to efficiently introduce buses to a large and growing area where you need to be able to satisfactorily serve the most numbers of passengers for the least cost.
It's true that existing fixed routes also degrade in performance when a lot of people use them. However this degradation is more gradual and starts at a higher patronage level. Unlike FlexiRide, which degrades at an earlier point, regular fixed route buses represent efficient passenger conveyance over a wide range of loadings, from several to several dozen. This wide versatility is one of the under-acknowledged benefits of fixed route buses.
Tarneit is the sort of area where you can put on a conventional route bus, even if not very frequent, and people will use it at rates higher than in many other parts of Melbourne. This involves passenger numbers more suitable for fixed routes. Thus, instead of FlexiRides, I would favour fixed routes introduced as early as possible and run as frequently as possible.
Flexible routes may have a use where an estate is very new and only a few scattered homes are inhabited. But as the road grid is completed and people move in then they are past their use by date. If flexible routes are introduced at all I suggest there is an exit strategy including close performance monitoring and a trigger where they get converted to fixed routes before availability and reliability degrades. For this reason performance data should be published for FlexiRide as it is now for fixed bus routes as public accountability is currently lacking.
Infrastructure Victoria correctly acknowledges in their recent bus discussion paper that flexible route buses are most appropriate for low demand or niche applications. However given actual performance I still think they over-sell their applicability, especially relative to fixed routes which can more reliably carry more passenger per hour. This is something you might wish to comment on if you put in a submission (deadline January 27, 2023).
1 comment:
I instinctively did not like the idea when I heard about 'bus on demand' but I didn't give it much thought. Thanks for informing me why it is a poor idea.
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