dynamick wrote: » any other ideas?
dynamick wrote: » If transport spending continues as it has in the past with 2:1 ratio for roads then I'd guess that 1.1bn will go on road improvements like rural bypasses leaving 600m for rail projects like resignalling, electrification & track improvements to remove speed restrictions.
bk wrote: » certainly nothing crazy like DOOR.
Sponge Bob wrote: » DOOR will be considered in segments not as one project according to Leos DoT briefing. If I was ever widening our very first motorway from 30 years agao , (the Naas Bypass to the M9) I would perhaps consider re engineering a junction to start it off from .
bk wrote: » Now that the interurban motorway network has now been completed, I would expect that investment should flip 1:2 in favour of public transport. Perhaps even more like 1:4. We really don't need that much more road development. A few bits here and there like Newlands Cross, etc. but certainly nothing crazy like DOOR.
I assume all the money will go to Metro North if it goes ahead. However I agree we should also do all the small/cheap projects you mentioned.
OurLadyofKnock wrote: » I can't decide it this is the most pathetic or soul destroying thread in the history of boards. No DU/MN - but hey look on the bright side. We can have car pooling instead! Be like a holiday with our chums going to work each day. Perhaps we can make music tapes to sing along on our way to the job! Who needs public transport! Who Needs metros and DARTS!!! We have car pooling. We will be just like Americans then. Except we won't have the guns to blow our brains out when it dawns on us how ****ty and pointless our existance is. Stick a fork in Ireland. We are done.
DWCommuter wrote: » The internet is the encyclopedia of the future.
OurLadyofKnock wrote: » I'm stealing that.
DWCommuter wrote: » Just like "my talent is my pension". Take the words. Use them. They are free because they can inspire and inspiration is the greatest payback any of us can ask for.
DWCommuter wrote: » It could get even worse than pathetic and soul destroying. It could become a boards infrastructure forum that discusses cycling initiatives, Greenways, carpooling and how to screw social welfare pass holders to the wall so their buddies don't benefit. Now thats real infrastructure talk alright.:D
veryangryman wrote: » Keep it above the waist doc....
monument wrote: » Commuter trips in the Greater Dublin Area:In the city centre (within the canals) 88% of trips under 10km, including 72% under 5km. In the inner suburban areas (within the M50, but outside the canals) 81.2% of journeys are under 10km, including 50% under 5km. Outer suburban areas (outside the M50) has 58.8% of journeys under 10km, including 33.9% under 5km. Large hinterland towns have 40.5% of trips under 10km, including 27.2% under 5km. Rural Hinterland has 51.3% under 10km, including 42.9% under 5km. While cycling isn't suitable for everybody, there's loads of scope to switch a large amount of the type of journeys listed above to cycling. There's also a small amount of people who will / can / do cycle further than 10km and there's ways around other people's problems from electric-assisted bicycles to cargo bicycles to panniers (bags which clip onto bicycles). As I've said on another thread, cycling is a great way to increase the catchment area of railway stations and tram stops without having car parks or increasing the size of current car parks or where there's no room for expanding car parks. A government agency in the Netherlands claims: "Of all train travellers, no fewer than 40% use the bicycle to get between home and the station." Deutsche Bahn has its own bike rental system mainly to allow train passengers to complete their journeys. With only 500 bicycles in a fairly small area, Dublin Bikes records a few thousand trips a day -- an average of 5,000 trips on weekdays in the summer and 4,000 in the winter. It recently nearly generated nearly 6,000 trips in one day. There's loads of governments around the world investing in cycling as a cost effective, health and congestion reducing form of transport. Not very pathetic or funny if you really look at it in a factual, measured way.
DWCommuter wrote: » I take all this cycling stuff for granted. Its so cheap to do that it should have been done years ago with no fuss. You can be factual and measured all you like, but as a nation that has come from having billions available for public transport to virtually nothing, (while achieving little) I find it pathetic and funny that the forum has reached a level whereby the discussion of "infrastructure" has been reduced to cycling projects. I expected more anger re MN and DU.:rolleyes:
dynamick wrote: » Which affordable transport projects should go ahead in 2011-2014?
DoesNotCompute wrote: » 1. Dublin Metro 2. Integrate the Irish Rail Smart Card with Dublin Bus and Luas Ones 3. Dart Underground 4. Extend Dart Underground/Dublin Metro/whateva out to Maynooth
dynamick wrote: » Also the electric car scheme is on hold while Pat Rabbitte decides whether to authorise the grants. Apparently 400 Nissan Leafs have been ordered, subject to grant approval.
dynamick wrote: » Any other bypasses due?