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How we think and talk about reducing car use in cities

  • 26-07-2018 2:49pm
    #1
    Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators Posts: 14,088 Mod ✭✭✭✭monument


    A few things in recent threads and discussions off boards has got me thinking...

    Most of the time when we talk about “restrictions on cars” we’re actually talking about “improvements for others” or reallocating priority and space to others.

    For anybody who supports a more liveable and sustainable city, it’s far more constructive to look at it from the perspective of providing a reallocation of priority and space.

    And I’m not just saying that from a perception perspective — as CF from the AA says, you can put up road blocks and the city won’t be any better. I actually think he’s half right. For the road blocks to be a positive, you need to be planning to improve walking, cycling, and public transport, not just disproving car access.

    But in other cities of a similar size to Dublin, the link between provision of public transport, “restrictions on cars”, and use of cars is at best weak or mixed or not as strange forward as people think.

    Amsterdam and Copenhagen put in significant relocation of space before having metro lines in place and Amsterdam has just used the opening of its new North-South metro line as an excuse to block east-west car movements — the link there is tenuous.

    In Dublin the volume of cars looks large but the numbers of people they are carrying is low compared to the numbers carred in bus lanes, tram lanes and narrow cycle lanes. Often you’re only taking about a few hundred people in cars per hour on many routes — easily transferred to other modes.

    Even in larger cities like Paris or London — with far greater public transport — they still get opposition to surface improvements on the bases that motorists will lose out, be they for buses or trams or decent cycle paths.

    Another thing is that Dublin already has around 10% cycling modal share and even if some of the planned major routes are built, that modal share will grow. Dutch cities have up to 50%+ but the NTA in Dublin has low enough targets for cycling.

    Also we have to look at modal shift as not as strange forward as most people think of it as.

    For example, one car driver might in reaction to a change in road layouts change to a different route and it might be any other driver on that route who switches to walking, cycling or public transport.

    If someone from far out switches to the bus, some guy who used to commute on the same route but living closer to the city centre might then switch from the bus to walking or cycling.

    Or some people already combine driving with cycling once they get near the city centre or get a lift to the edge of the city centre and then cycle etc.


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Comments

  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,167 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    it's probably also important to understand why people are driving into the city. are they driving in because they're already going to be coming a sizable distance where public transport is not feasible, but there aren't adequate park and ride facilities on the outskirts to complete the journey?
    or because they've a free parking space and 'may as well use it'?

    i have probably a typical amount of friends and family working in the city centre. none of them drive in, so i don't really know anyone who does to understand why other options are not open to them.
    the vast majority of the people i know would not have a parking space available, so driving would not be an option even if they wanted to.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Music Moderators, Politics Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 22,360 CMod ✭✭✭✭Dravokivich


    Get rid of on street parking in the city. You've loads of extra space right there. Multi story car parks are a potential solution that's not used, because you've still got cars coming into the city.

    A lot of major roads lead through the city. I'd suggest most of the traffic is through traffic. At least 95% of the time I'm driving there, Dublin City is not my destination. Someone will need to re-evaluate what was the purpose of the M50 and see what can be done to stop directing us "low capacity vehicles" into the city.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 896 ✭✭✭Bray Head


    Fares in Dublin are very high compared to most European cities (not London).

    Two adults and two children in and out of city centre on Dublin Bus is €12.40.

    That's comparable to fuel and parking for a few hours.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,946 ✭✭✭✭Zebra3


    I don’t drive but I know a lot of people who will drive through the city at weekends to avoid paying the M50 toll.

    So the road that was built to take traffic out of the city isn’t actually doing its’ job.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,907 ✭✭✭Stephen15


    Bray Head wrote: »
    Fares in Dublin are very high compared to most European cities (not London).

    Two adults and two children in and out of city centre on Dublin Bus is €12.40.

    That's comparable to fuel and parking for a few hours.

    True but the costs of owning a car are really a lot higher insurance, tax, maintence and NCT plus a whole lot more, it would be naive to think that fuel and parking charges are the only associated costs with owning a car.

    Although I do think we should schemes like kids go free at weekends.


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  • Moderators, Computer Games Moderators, Recreation & Hobbies Moderators Posts: 10,395 Mod ✭✭✭✭CatInABox


    Stephen15 wrote: »
    True but the costs of owning a car are really a lot higher insurance, tax, maintence and NCT plus a whole lot more, it would be naive to think that fuel and parking charges are the only associated costs with owning a car.

    Although I do think we should schemes like kids go free at weekends.

    The actual cost of a car journey may be higher once you factor everything in, but that's not how it feels when you leave your front door.

    Once you're paying for insurance, etc, you simply don't include them in the cost of a journey when your setting out.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,996 ✭✭✭✭Spanish Eyes


    I've often wondered why there are so many cars all joining up in the CC. Maybe they are not commuting, but going to hospitals, etc. and so on. The fact that there are free parking spaces for Civil Servants and City Council workers is a joke. But it will never be withdrawn will it?

    Anyway, like the buses most traffic ends up in "An Lar" and moves out somewhere else. A small minority might be shopping or something, but honestly anything you cannot carry on PT can be delivered. I doubt anyone goes to the City except for smaller items of shopping and that be done on PT.

    I really wish there was a survey of car drivers in rush hour (and all day too!) as to where they are going, what is their purpose, and why can they not use PT.

    I exclude those whose work involves carrying heavy equipment for work around the CC. Can't think of anything else. I see a lot of barristers and Court workers taking the bus from the CCCJ at Heuston back into town with their wheelie brief holders. Just as an example.

    The quays for example are absolutely jammers with cars. It is beyond belief now.

    But I don't think the will is there to do much more re cars TBH. I live in hope though as it is unsustainable right now.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 16,620 ✭✭✭✭dr.fuzzenstein


    Stephen15 wrote: »
    True but the costs of owning a car are really a lot higher insurance, tax, maintence and NCT plus a whole lot more, it would be naive to think that fuel and parking charges are the only associated costs with owning a car.

    Although I do think we should schemes like kids go free at weekends.

    But the others costs are always associated with car ownership.
    Your argument does make sense when not owning a car.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,907 ✭✭✭Stephen15


    CatInABox wrote: »
    The actual cost of a car journey may be higher once you factor everything in, but that's not how it feels when you leave your front door.

    Once you're paying for insurance, etc, you simply don't include them in the cost of a journey when your setting out.

    That's true alright but if there was better public transport in Dublin people would get rid of their cars altogether and use car sharing services such as GoCar whenever they need a car instead of owning a car that lies idle for most of the year. Obviously that wouldn't suit everyone but it could be a viable alternative post Bus Connects particularly if there are more orbital routes.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,795 ✭✭✭Isambard


    Get rid of on street parking in the city. You've loads of extra space right there. Multi story car parks are a potential solution that's not used, because you've still got cars coming into the city.

    A lot of major roads lead through the city. I'd suggest most of the traffic is through traffic. At least 95% of the time I'm driving there, Dublin City is not my destination. Someone will need to re-evaluate what was the purpose of the M50 and see what can be done to stop directing us "low capacity vehicles" into the city.

    from a Cork point of view, I often thought it would be good to stop parking in the South Mall and divert traffic from Patrick St down that way. However there is a huge amount of objection to making Patrick St pedestrian only, it seems so sensible to me to have no through traffic in the City's Main St.

    Just a small example of the problems limiting car access will bring. Most people will want everyone else limited but will want to drive where they want.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 438 ✭✭andrewfaulk


    Taking cars out of parts of the city centre would make a huge difference, particularly for cyclists and pedestrians.. South William/Grafton/Dawson street area could really do with being pedestrianised


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 16,620 ✭✭✭✭dr.fuzzenstein


    If I go to Bargaintown, can I bring a bed, a wardrobe and three piece suite on the bus with me?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,677 ✭✭✭PhoenixParker


    If I go to Bargaintown, can I bring a bed, a wardrobe and three piece suite on the bus with me?

    At least they'd fit in a bus though the driver & other passengers would object.
    They certainly wouldn't fit in my car.
    Luckily furniture places have delivery services.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,522 ✭✭✭✭Cookie_Monster


    If I go to Bargaintown, can I bring a bed, a wardrobe and three piece suite on the bus with me?
    do you do that every weekend?

    Once off things like that are easy to deal with, get it delivered or arrange to drive for that time. But in general you won't need the capacity of a small van every weekend for a coffee and some groceries...

    I agree with Dravokivich above, getting rid of on street parking would make a big difference, either more space for buses / cyclists or more space to make footpaths bigger or nicer with tress / cafe seating etc.
    A lot of Dublin CC is not a pleasent place to walk around due to 1) excess traffic and roads and slow pedestrian traffic lights and 2) the various rubbish, junkies and so forth. The above would address both of these to a large degree making it a whole lot nicer a place to walk around in.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,167 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    If I go to Bargaintown, can I bring a bed, a wardrobe and three piece suite on the bus with me?
    if you go to bargaintown in the city centre, will they stock those items in there? or will they store them in one of their suburban warehouses, where floor space is much cheaper?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,919 ✭✭✭orangerhyme


    Autonomous electric vehicles will be a reality in 5 years. Car ownership will fall off a cliff sometime in the 2020s.
    It costs approximately 10,000 a year to own a car.
    Cities will be transformed with far less space used for cars in transit and parking.

    I think people underestimate how quickly this will happen.
    As we speak almost every big tech company and car company is developing this technology.

    If the metro and bus plans happen and the proposed cycle routes, Dublin will be completely different.
    Very quiet streets and roads.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,167 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    Autonomous electric vehicles will be a reality in 5 years. Car ownership will fall off a cliff sometime in the 2020s.
    It costs approximately 10,000 a year to own a car.
    Cities will be transformed with far less space used for cars in transit and parking.
    colour me sceptical about claims being made for electric cars; many of the same benefits being touted for them (in terms of car sharing) is already available via schemes like go car, but if go car have even reached 1% of journeys made in dublin, i'll eat my catalytic converter (at least my corpse will be valuable)

    it doesn't cost €10,000 a year to run a car. that's worst case scenario figures for someone owning a car, working in the city centre, and having to park it on the street.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,719 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    CatInABox wrote: »
    The actual cost of a car journey may be higher once you factor everything in, but that's not how it feels when you leave your front door.

    Once you're paying for insurance, etc, you simply don't include them in the cost of a journey when your setting out.

    Correct.

    Drivers ignore the high fixed costs of driving when making a decision to drive or not. FC = cost of car, insurance, motor tax, etc.

    They focus on the marginal costs, e.g. toll, parking, fuel.

    We need to increase the MC and reduce the FC.

    Abolish VRT.

    Increase fuel duty.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,652 ✭✭✭Wildly Boaring


    One i don't understand is the lack of adequate park and ride facilities.

    A lot of people driving in are coming from well outside. Cavan, Laois, Kilkenny etc.

    Always believed if they had proper free parking outdide m50 and standard train fare in they'd avail happily.

    Lot of these people could be 20mins on a train instead of min 1 hour stuck in car and then a commute


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,075 ✭✭✭questionmark?


    Autonomous electric vehicles will be a reality in 5 years. Car ownership will fall off a cliff sometime in the 2020s.
    It costs approximately 10,000 a year to own a car.
    Cities will be transformed with far less space used for cars in transit and parking.

    I think people underestimate how quickly this will happen.
    As we speak almost every big tech company and car company is developing this technology.

    If the metro and bus plans happen and the proposed cycle routes, Dublin will be completely different.
    Very quiet streets and roads.

    I'm very much pro public transport but it does not cost €10,000 a year to run a car. Where in the name of God did they get that figure from!!!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,919 ✭✭✭orangerhyme


    I'm very much pro public transport but it does not cost €10,000 a year to run a car. Where in the name of God did they get that figure from!!!

    That's including depreciation, fuel, service, insurance, repairs, tax, parking, washing etc.
    There's numerous studies on this.

    https://www.theaa.ie/aa/motoring-advice/cost-of-motoring.aspx#


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,919 ✭✭✭orangerhyme


    colour me sceptical about claims being made for electric cars; many of the same benefits being touted for them (in terms of car sharing) is already available via schemes like go car, but if go car have even reached 1% of journeys made in dublin, i'll eat my catalytic converter (at least my corpse will be valuable)

    it doesn't cost €10,000 a year to run a car. that's worst case scenario figures for someone owning a car, working in the city centre, and having to park it on the street.

    https://www.theaa.ie/aa/motoring-advice/cost-of-motoring.aspx#


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,919 ✭✭✭orangerhyme



    That doesn't include time wasted dealing with car issues such as nct, insurance, driving, parking, cleaning etc.
    On top of that is the opportunity cost of both the money and time.

    There's a reason every major car company is working on autonomous vehicles, they know the Victor will take all the spoils.
    Right now Google and Tesla are in the best position.
    I can guarantee that in 5 years time that autonomous car sharing services will be available in many cities across the world. It's inevitable.
    These will be cheaper to use than owning a car and far less hassle, so why bother owning a car!?
    Your car spends only 4% of its time driving, the rest of the time it's parked. Why bother owning one!?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,522 ✭✭✭✭Cookie_Monster


    Right now Google and Tesla are in the best position.

    except they're not, Audi is. They are the only ones who will have a stage 3 vehicle on the road this year.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,919 ✭✭✭orangerhyme


    except they're not, Audi is. They are the only ones who will have a stage 3 vehicle on the road this year.

    Google/Wayma are starting an autonomous ride hauling service in Phoenix Az this year.

    In 5 years Tesla will have millions of cars on the road all collecting data. Tesla don't use lidar though which may be a mistake.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 896 ✭✭✭Bray Head


    My fixed costs of driving a car are very high (purchase, VAT, VRT, NCT, insurance, etc)

    The marginal cost of driving to and from Dublin city centre once a month (a round trip of 9km) are extremely low. The wear and tear of slow driving on city roads is insignificant compared to the fixed costs of ownership.

    I will be the very first to give up on car ownership and start using autonomous vehicles on subscription when it's viable. 

    There's a few reasons why Ireland won't be an early adopter:
    • It's a small market and Uber/Waymo/Tesla will go to bigger markets first
    • Ireland has no legal framework in place to allow it. It will need to be proven to be safe and reliable in several US states and EU countries before legislators will touch it
    • Autonomous vehicles will be easiest to implement in US cities with wide, straight streets set out in grids. The technical challenges of getting around boreens in Connemara are an order of magnitude harder. When autonomous vehicles do arrive in Ireland I suspect they will be available only on national roads and a few urban areas, limiting their appeal.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,167 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    just catching the end of it on miriam o'callaghan on radio 1 - she's talking to a chap called brendan, who appears to be a representative of the council, and a chap called frank (frank mcdonald?) about car use and managing traffic in galway. might be worth catching on the RTE player.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,167 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    That's including depreciation, fuel, service, insurance, repairs, tax, parking, washing etc.
    There's numerous studies on this.

    https://www.theaa.ie/aa/motoring-advice/cost-of-motoring.aspx#
    'garage/parking/miscellaneous expenses' at €4000? on average?
    over a tenner a day? or based on parking during working hours, nearly twenty quid a day.
    and owning or building a garage is not a cost of motoring. it's a cost of owning or building a garage.
    the AA is a lobby group, not a research institute. it's in their interest to exaggerate the costs to their members.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,652 ✭✭✭Wildly Boaring


    'garage/parking/miscellaneous expenses' at €4000? on average?
    over a tenner a day? or based on parking during working hours, nearly twenty quid a day.
    and owning or building a garage is not a cost of motoring. it's a cost of owning or building a garage.
    the AA is a lobby group, not a research institute. it's in their interest to exaggerate the costs to their members.

    My car costs me €7800 per annum plus incidentals (wear and tear).
    Incidentals currently at €925 for suspension work and will need a clutch either this year or next - another €1100

    That's €8700 to €10000 per annum for 30,000km.

    My car is over 5 years old so not depreciating too heavily (hopefully)
    I have no toll costs - easily another €1000 to most near Dublin
    Cars are not cheap to run


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  • Posts: 3,637 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    It’s gas the way people talk about the costs of car ownership vs public transport, as if even a notable minority of car owners are going to abandon their cars in favour of PT. Not happening. If I can afford a car, there’s no way I’m using public transport. Not in Dublin. LUAS green line isn’t even as good a service/experience as it was before extension. I’ll spend 3-4 times as much on a journey using my car before I’d inconvenience myself by opting for a bus or an overcrowded LUAS. Comfortable seat, air-con as I want it, radio, ability to chop and change plans and basically suit myself. Most of us with cars want the same, unless PT is much, much more convenient. Which it isn’t.

    I’m already ‘in’ for thousands a year to have the freedom to go anywhere I want, any time i want. More for parking, petrol and whatever isn’t going to make me change my behaviour.


  • Posts: 3,637 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    My car costs me €7800 per annum plus incidentals (wear and tear).
    Incidentals currently at €925 for suspension work and will need a clutch either this year or next - another €1100

    That's €8700 to €10000 per annum for 30,000km.

    My car is over 5 years old so not depreciating too heavily (hopefully)
    I have no toll costs - easily another €1000 to most near Dublin
    Cars are not cheap to run

    Do you intend on switching to public transport for 30k/annum? Hardly.

    So you’ll still have motoring costs. Is the saving you will make adequate to compensate for the inconvenience of PT and the experience overall? Probably not, in all honesty.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,928 ✭✭✭✭_Kaiser_


    - People use a car because in many cases, public transport is too unreliable, infrequent or inconvenient (even inside Dublin, never mind outside it) to depend on. It's also not cheap.

    - Many have also been priced further and further out of the city because of the rent/property mess and so are making longer journeys. A car is also pretty much essential outside Dublin. Even if P&R was available at the main intersections to the M50 (as I've talked about before), unless it was very cost-effective and bringing people quickly the rest of the way, it'd be pointless.

    - (New) car sales in Ireland are an "industry", which is why we got saddled with the ridiculous 1x1/1x2 reg-plate system to drive sales. The Government also collect a fortune in tax from motoring expenses (someone above mentioned hiking fuel costs, but fuel is ALREADY mostly tax). It's not in Government interest to push alternatives TOO heavily as people will balk at the idea of higher taxation elsewhere to make up the shortfalls.

    - Not everyone works 9-5 or goes to one destination only as part of their commute (eg: people picking up/dropping off kids on the way). A car is the only practical way to do this.. no, BusConnects won't change that! All this talk of mid-trip changes and A-B via C journeys will not win people over

    - The City Centre businesses will complain that they'll lose trade, and while I personally can't see any reason to bother trekking into the city to shop in an age of huge shopping centres in the suburbs and online delivery, they probably have a point.


    - And finally, many people LIKE cars (or at least the idea/projection of wealth and status they can project.. bit like our obsession with property really!). Why else are there so many BMW's, Audi's and Mercedes on the roads? A bus doesn't give that same feeling!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 896 ✭✭✭Bray Head


    JayZeus wrote: »
    I’m already ‘in’ for thousands a year to have the freedom to go anywhere I want, any time i want.  More for parking, petrol and whatever isn’t going to make me change my behaviour.

    Public transport should be made more appealing to car owners, to get them to use their car less. This is the relevant margin.

    There are much fewer people who are at the boundary between owning and not owning a car, contingent on public transport quality.

    People will only think about getting rid of their cars when autonomous vehicles on subscription are available. I think there are a lot of car owners like me who basically only do urban driving at evenings and weekends. Autonomous vehicles will be very useful, and to be honest, will take a lot of market share away from bus services.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,167 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    That's €8700 to €10000 per annum for 30,000km.
    i know we're going OT, but that's double the distance the AA used to get to their figures.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,167 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    JayZeus wrote: »
    It’s gas the way people talk about the costs of car ownership vs public transport, as if even a notable minority of car owners are going to abandon their cars in favour of PT. Not happening.
    i'm obviously the exception. living near DCU, office is in leopardstown, so i'm well served by PT.
    for four years, i left the car in the driveway, and commuted via PT (till last year - am now cycling it).
    public transport was typically an hour door to door (in the morning - bit slower in the evening), and far cheaper than driving. plus, much less stressful. driving would not have saved me much time.

    actual financial cost of PT was an annual luas and bus ticket, which was about €700 (with the taxsaver option)
    if i was to drive to work, i could have gone through the city, or around the M50. the M50 would have been about a fiver a day in petrol alone, not counting tolls (and wear and tear)


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,652 ✭✭✭Wildly Boaring


    JayZeus wrote: »
    Do you intend on switching to public transport for 30k/annum? Hardly.

    So you’ll still have motoring costs. Is the saving you will make adequate to compensate for the inconvenience of PT and the experience overall? Probably not, in all honesty.

    Oh I'm the last fella in the country that'll use public transport.

    That 30k km was a spreadsheet I did previously. I'll be nearer 80k km this year.
    In last 7 days been in cork Kilkenny carlow and Clare.
    Was only showing how much a car costs.

    But when I lived and worked in Dublin I happily parked the car and used train or bike.
    When in Meath working in Dublin I would have loved park and ride.

    Rural Ireland will never be achievable by public transport


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 620 ✭✭✭LeChienMefiant


    colour me sceptical about claims being made for electric cars; many of the same benefits being touted for them (in terms of car sharing) is already available via schemes like go car, but if go car have even reached 1% of journeys made in dublin, i'll eat my catalytic converter (at least my corpse will be valuable)
    Go Car is going to be a slow burner I reckon, I would have thought seriously before shelling out 5 figures on a car if I'd had a car across the street at my disposal at the time. They've lately offered to take cars as trade ins against credit. But it would take a long time to use up that credit using the value of the car. Plus, I'd be among the early adopters, they're not mainstream yet.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,795 ✭✭✭Isambard


    most of the costs of running a car are fixed, it's only fuel and servicing etc that are saveable by partially using public transport. Very few people will be able to completely ditch their car. I don't think the economic case stacks up for switching, even if the goalposts are moved a lot.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 620 ✭✭✭LeChienMefiant


    _Kaiser_ wrote: »
    - Not everyone works 9-5 or goes to one destination only as part of their commute (eg: people picking up/dropping off kids on the way). A car is the only practical way to do this.. no, BusConnects won't change that! All this talk of mid-trip changes and A-B via C journeys will not win people over
    Society need to re-think those practicalities for the benefit of all. It's not reasonable to spread one's daily life over this kind of area. Commuting aside.
    _Kaiser_ wrote: »
    - The City Centre businesses will complain that they'll lose trade, and while I personally can't see any reason to bother trekking into the city to shop in an age of huge shopping centres in the suburbs and online delivery, they probably have a point.
    The nature of retail is changing anyway. It's shifting online.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,719 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    JayZeus wrote: »
    It’s gas the way people talk about the costs of car ownership vs public transport, as if even a notable minority of car owners are going to abandon their cars in favour of PT. Not happening. If I can afford a car, there’s no way I’m using public transport. Not in Dublin. LUAS green line isn’t even as good a service/experience as it was before extension. I’ll spend 3-4 times as much on a journey using my car before I’d inconvenience myself by opting for a bus or an overcrowded LUAS. Comfortable seat, air-con as I want it, radio, ability to chop and change plans and basically suit myself. Most of us with cars want the same, unless PT is much, much more convenient. Which it isn’t.

    I’m already ‘in’ for thousands a year to have the freedom to go anywhere I want, any time i want. More for parking, petrol and whatever isn’t going to make me change my behaviour.

    If PT was substantially improved and a congestion charge introduced, would that change your mind?

    For example:

    Westlink toll abolished
    Fee to drive inside M50
    Another fee to cross canals into city centre

    DART every 10 mins
    DART on Maynooth and Kildare lines
    DART underground from Heuston to SSG and onto Docklands
    Several more tram lines
    BusConnects plan implemented


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  • Posts: 3,637 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Geuze wrote: »
    If PT was substantially improved and a congestion charge introduced, would that change your mind?

    For example:

    Westlink toll abolished
    Fee to drive inside M50
    Another fee to cross canals into city centre

    DART every 10 mins
    DART on Maynooth and Kildare lines
    DART underground from Heuston to SSG and onto Docklands
    Several more tram lines
    BusConnects plan implemented

    Try to penalise motorists and use the money you screw out of them to fund more restrictive/punitive measures against them and for PT projects, all you’ll do is end up mobilising them as a political weapon.

    If there were candidates running on a specifically pro-motorist manifesto, they’d already win my vote each and every election.

    There would be a lot less congestion in Dublin city if the buslanes were turned into normal traffic lanes again. Either way, I’d rather eat ramen noodles and wear Penneys clothing so I could drive my own car than have to share public transport.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 620 ✭✭✭LeChienMefiant


    What's the congestion charge revenue in London used for out of interest?


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,167 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    JayZeus wrote: »
    There would be a lot less congestion in Dublin city if the buslanes were turned into normal traffic lanes again.
    uuuhhhh....?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,907 ✭✭✭Stephen15


    JayZeus wrote: »
    It’s gas the way people talk about the costs of car ownership vs public transport, as if even a notable minority of car owners are going to abandon their cars in favour of PT. Not happening. If I can afford a car, there’s no way I’m using public transport. Not in Dublin. LUAS green line isn’t even as good a service/experience as it was before extension. I’ll spend 3-4 times as much on a journey using my car before I’d inconvenience myself by opting for a bus or an overcrowded LUAS. Comfortable seat, air-con as I want it, radio, ability to chop and change plans and basically suit myself. Most of us with cars want the same, unless PT is much, much more convenient. Which it isn’t.

    I’m already ‘in’ for thousands a year to have the freedom to go anywhere I want, any time i want. More for parking, petrol and whatever isn’t going to make me change my behaviour.

    I don't know about you but if it's quicker and more convient to drive to a place I will drive and if it's quicker and more convient to use public transport I will use public transport which it is in many cases when going into the city centre. When you're driving you also actually have to pay attention to the road and actually physically drive and you can listen to the radio with earphones and actually use your phone on the bus with free WiFi can't while driving. You can also go to the pub after work can't if you have the car with you.

    I own a car myself and I will use it when convienent when going somewhere not served by pt, When the car journey is quicker etc. but if I know traffic and parking will be a pain and there's a bus, a DART or a Luas going I will use it that seems like the most logical choice to me.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,674 ✭✭✭Skatedude


    Step one: Have public transport available for all the people to get to work, not just those who don't work full shift hours. we haven't even got that yet.

    You can add all the buses and trains you want, but no use if you still need your car because public transport dose not run at the times you need to get to work.


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators Posts: 14,088 Mod ✭✭✭✭monument


    JayZeus wrote: »
    Try to penalise motorists and use the money you screw out of them to fund more restrictive/punitive measures against them and for PT projects, all you’ll do is end up mobilising them as a political weapon.

    If there were candidates running on a specifically pro-motorist manifesto, they’d already win my vote each and every election.

    The fact is, taxes for motoring do not cover all the direct and indirect cost of motoring. Health from inactivity, health from air pollution, spending and costs not under normal motoring sources (ie from councils not from motor tax, rural department, education, hospitals, etc).

    Fringe motorists mobilising "as a political weapon" would result in a backlash from others and get more people giving decent support for sustainable and active transport.

    JayZeus wrote: »
    There would be a lot less congestion in Dublin city if the buslanes were turned into normal traffic lanes again. Either way, I’d rather eat ramen noodles and wear Penneys clothing so I could drive my own car than have to share public transport.

    That's so off-the-wall, I don't honestly know if you're taking the piss or not. In case you're not, you're wrong. You have a basic problem with maths and what modes can carry enough people.

    The number of cars entering Dublin City Centre is down 27,812 since 1997 while the number of commuters overall across all modes combined has increased from 180,000 in 1997 to nearly 211,500 commuters. There's also more people living within the canals and most of these households don't even own cars and even those who do, they don't always drive them.

    Here's the principal:

    456899.PNG

    Here's it in action along the quays:

    img_4378.jpg

    There's now a load of streets at peak times where bicycles are outnumbering or close to outnumbering cars -- this is before a single segregated cycle route in put in place into the city from a single suburb or even inner suburb.

    Skatedude wrote: »
    Step one: Have public transport available for all the people to get to work, not just those who don't work full shift hours. we haven't even got that yet.

    You can add all the buses and trains you want, but no use if you still need your car because public transport dose not run at the times you need to get to work.

    Do you know how much of the population does shift work when public transport doesn't run?

    I'll give you a clue: It's small enough to worry about everybody else first.


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators Posts: 14,088 Mod ✭✭✭✭monument


    And re switching from car to public transport or cycling or walking:

    People are already doing this -- a huge amount of people who get the bus or cycle have a car left in the driveway at home.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,045 ✭✭✭Hilly Bill


    monument wrote: »
    And re switching from car to public transport or cycling or walking:

    People are already doing this -- a huge amount of people who get the bus or cycle have a car left in the driveway at home.

    I'd say most of it is due to convenience though.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,611 ✭✭✭Mooooo


    The thing is the whole system has to be looked at. Housing has to start going up with public transport capacity and walk/ cycle facilities in to match. Planning in all areas of city life has to change


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,670 ✭✭✭IE 222


    It's unrealistic to think removing car's in the city centre is going to solve these issues by moving everyone onto buses and trams. The vast majority of car's traveling through are going cross city. All major routes lead into the city centre and all cross city routes are limited to 2 or 3 bridge crossings or forced onto the quays. The large number of one way streets and illegal turns has forced more and more traffic into detouring deeper into the city than they need to.

    There is a grown number of people working nights or early starts that PT won't cater for. As the commuter belt expands again and with more companies expanding to offices further out from the city we are going to see more cross city demand. It's not possible for PT serve a link between every town in the Dublin region.

    The focus needs to be put on creating routes for better flows and separation rather than making it difficult for car users. A road like the A12 in belfast sunk below the surface and cover were needs be orbiting along the canals would be ideal but unlikely to happen.

    It needs to be accepted that a certain percentage of traffic will remain as private car. PT will never wipe out the use of private car's regardless how well or good it works.


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