Thingymebob wrote: » A friend posted an article on her Facebook which complained that Auckland NZ had the third most expensive public transport in the world... but then Dublin was listed at number two! I’ve lived in all three places in the top spots. Yes London’s crowded but it’s public transport is epic compared to Dublin (and Auckland!). I live on the Northside inside the M50, but have just one bus route within five minutes walk. It’s unreliable on weekends, and in peak times, you can’t get on the bus. It’s also expensive. All this and the odds of being stuck standing in the rain means I rarely use public transport in Dublin. In London I lived on the Zone 2/3 border (depending on if I was catching national rail or tube), and had four bus routes immediately outside my door, with another ten on the High Street five minutes walk. I used a car sharing club rarely. Public transport in Dublin needs to be more appealing, and not by putting more taxes on car users, but by making public transport so convenient and cheap that you’d be stupid to use anything else. www. nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12067987&ref=NZH_fb The 12 most expensive cities in the world for commuting by public transport 1. London - NZ$247 // €147.58 2. Dublin - $187.11 // €111.80 3. Auckland - $174.74 // €104.41 4. New York - $167.35 // €99.99 5. Tokyo - $157.39 // €94.04 6. Amsterdam - $154.41 // €92.26 7. Sydney - $154.12 // €92.09 8. Zurich - $154.12 // €92.09 9. Melbourne - $150 // €89.63 10. Toronto - $146.02 // €87.25 11. Chicago - $145.17 // €86.74 12. Wellington - $143.89 // €85.98 Source: Deutsche Bank, using prices from Expatistan, a site that tracks cost-of-living expenses in more than 200 countries. **converted from NZD to Euros using XE currency app, so rounding etc might mean small differences
Thingymebob wrote: » In the top three, yes monthly passes. In London that would include night buses and also the weekend tube. In Auckland the last buses and trains are just after midnight. In Amsterdam monthly ticket covers night services. Dublin and the rest not sure. Still horrified
facehugger99 wrote: » The money to pay the eye-watering salaries and inefficient working practices of the drivers has to come from somewhere
end of the road wrote: » can you name these inefficient working practices? what metric are you using to judge that the drivers earn eye-watering salaries? bus driving after all wouldn't be the most popular job in the world i'd imagine, so a good wage would likely need to be paid to attract staff. if dublin bus and others don't pay well they won't get staff.
Aegir wrote: » What zones in London though? All zones is a massive area compared to the others.
D3V!L wrote: » The Dublin price is the monthly tax saver ticket for the Luas.
Canard wrote: » Eh, no idea where that number for Dublin came from, not even a student pass is that 'cheap'. An adult day pass is a whopping €160.50. It's absolutely disgusting and I have no idea why we put up with the constantly rising prices and appalling service. I've taken to walking anywhere I need to go unless it's pouring rain, and it sometimes doesn't even take much longer given how infrequent the buses are and the constant delays / lack of actual connections like you would find in one central tube station. AND that huge price only includes buses. The helpful daily 'cap' on leapcards kicks in at €7 (and that's only if you haven't used the Dart / Luas as well, which pushes it up even further)... who even takes enough buses for that to become in any way useful? I just got back from living in Paris where you pay €75 and have access to the entire transport network in Paris *and* the surrounding areas. Your employer generally pays you half of it back (which means, looking at the above DB link, a month of Paris transport essentially equals a WEEK of Dublin Bus transport), and a student pays €300 per year, which is actually affordable. In Paris you might roll your eyes at a 3-4 minute wait for a metro; in Dublin any time <7 minutes feels like a blessing. (Yes, I have a deep-seated hatred for Dublin Bus.)
n!ghtmancometh wrote: » My yearly tax saver Dublin Bus ticket is 104 (around 3.40 per day) a month. Unlimited travel on any bus, including nightlink and airlink. Think it's fairly good value tbh.
rainbow kirby wrote: » £1.50 flat fare for bus journeys in London. Over €3 cash fare to get from my parents' area into Dublin City centre. Bus is once an hour on a Sunday. That's daft.
banie01 wrote: » . I live in Limerick, a city that is undertaking the "smarter travel" trials and TBH apart from some cycle routes I can not think of any meaningful impact it has made. The bus service is expensive, it's €4.60 for a return ticket to the city centre... On a usually crowded bus that is often late. I can drive to town, park for 1hr and drive home with any shopping and have change from the same €4.60 even with amortising insurance and maintenance costs into the equation. Leap card and day saver tickets can and do reduce the costs. But to ensure a meaningful uptake of public transport use, the customers have to see the benefit of use and at present, there really isn't any compelling reason to use public transport when a car is available.