Title: PUBLIC TRANSPORT IN LDCS
1PUBLIC TRANSPORT IN LDCS T. R. Lakshmanan (Part
A) - Urban and Transportation Development
and Overview - The Socioeconomic Context of
Developing Countries - Urban Transportation
Demands in Globalizing Developing Countries -
Conditions of Urban Transport in LDCs -
Evolution Experience of Urban Transport in
North America Europe - Implications for
LDCs (Part B) - Overview of Principles and
Guidelines of Urban Transit Planning and
Management in Brief
2Global and Regional Trends
3Urban Population in Industrial Developing
Regions, Selected Years
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8Current Megatrends Affecting Transit A.
Economic Restructuring in the West ?
Concentration Dispersal B. Rapid
Urbanization in Developing Countries Explosion
of Motorization C. Changing Nature of
Travel D. Problems of an Auto-dependent World
? Congestion ? Pollution
? Global Climate Change ?
Traffic Accidents ? Social Costs
E. Implications for Transit in the North
and South
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10Survey of Urban Transport in LDCs
11Road Supply as a Percentage of Urbanized Areas
12Vehicle Ownership and Household Income, India,
1988
MTWmotorized two-wheeler
13Vehicle Ownership and Household Income, Two
African Cities, 1992
14Global Car Ownership, 1993
15Global Vehicle Ownership, Selected Countries
16Modal Split of Daily Trips, Selected Cities
in Developing Countries
City Modal Split ( of daily
trips) NMT Public Private
Other (motorized) Bobo
Dioulasso, Burkina Faso 87 3 10 0 Alger, Algeria,
1990 67 18 15 0 Jaipur, India 66 21 12 1 Bamako,
Mali, 1984 63 12 26 0 Beijing, China,
1992 62 33 5 0 Havana, Cuba, 1998 57 27 6 11 Yao
undé, Cameroon, 1982 55 22 23 0 Hanoi, Vietnam,
1995 54 4 42 0 Ouagadougou, Burkina
Faso 52 3 45 0 Dakar, Senegal,
1987 50 32 17 0 Douala Cameroon,
1982 36 37 27 0 Cairo, Egypt, 1998 36 47 17 0 Sã
o Paulo, Brazil, 1997 35 33 31 1 Abidjan, Côte
d'Ïvoire, 1988 30 58 12 0 Bouake, Côte
d'Ïvoire 27 62 11 0 Santiago, Chile,
1991 20 56 16 9 Caracas, Venezuela,
1991 16 50 34 1 Pretoria, S. Africa,
1996 11 57 30 2 Buenos Aires, Argentina,
1992 9 60 24 7
17Modal Split of Daily Motorized Trips (),
Selected Cities in Developing Countries
(a) survey date not mentioned in the reference
18Daily Motorized Trips by Public Private
Transport, Selected Cities in Developing
Countries
19Trip Purpose, Selected Cities
20Door to Door Travel Times, all Modes, São Paulo,
1997
(1) illegal paratransit (2) individual
use only source CMSP, 1998
21Car and Bus Travel Times
(a) door-to-door travel times, average for all
trips
22General Costs to Own and Use Vehicles in Asian
Cities (US 1992 values)
Source World Bank, 1995
23Absolute and Relative Transport Expenses by
Income Level, São Paulo, 1997
(1) all modes considering that 50 of users
receive travel vouchers from employers (2)
automobiles
24Transport Expenses and Family Income, Accra
25Traffic Fatalities and Rates, Selected Countries
26Pedestrian Fatalities as a Percentage of Total
Traffic Fatalities, Several Regions
27Large Cities in Developing Countries Exceeding
WHO Pollution Levels
(a) Figures show concentration surpassing limits
by a factor of up to 2 (lt2) or by more than 2
(gt2). 90-100 per cent from transport sources, 2)
80-100 per cent from transport sources, 3) 60-70
per cent from transport sources Source World
Bank, 1996, and UN, 1996
28Average SPM Concentration, Cities in a Developing
Developed Countries
29Transit History Evolution
The Horse Car Era (1840-90) The
Electric Street Car (1890 1920)
Interurban Suburban Railroads (1900-1930)
Expressways Beltways (1950 )
30Post World War II Transit The Interstate
Program Home Mortgage Subsidy Program
The G. I. Bill The Parking Policies
Increasing Female Labor Force Participation
The Decline of Transit Public Support of
Transit
31Five major tends in transit ridership are evident
since 1900. A period of initial growth between
1890-1920, followed by a period of fluctuation
between 1920-1939 during which an initial growth
in ridership gave way to a decline during the
Great Depression years. This loss in ridership
was offset by dramatic growth during the war
years 1940-1945. Ridership declined dramatically
from 1946-1972 with the rapid suburbanization of
metropolitan areas and a public reference for the
automobile. The years from 1972 to the present
have seen a modest increase in ridership as a
result of growing awareness and support for
alternatives to the automobile.
32Share of Transit Trips in Large Metropolitan
Areas, All Modes (a), and Rail Modes only (b),
1993.
33Car Ownership Rate in Selected Countries, 1970-92
(number of cars per thousand persons)
34Summery of Operating Cost Breakdowns by Country
35Urban Transport Crisis in Europe/N. America
36Transportation Indicators in Selected Cities, by
Regional Average, 1990
37Recent Evolution of Urban Transport in LDCs
1. Post World War II and Post Colonial History
- Increasing Urbanization and City Sizes -
Variably Increasing Real per Capita Incomes -
Institutional and Policy Characteristics of
Public Transport - Behavioral and Cultural
Factors 2. Public Transport Buses in
LDCs 2 million vehicles (urban) 1 million
vehicles (non urban) carry 6.5 trillion
(6.5x1012) passengers km. per year Paratransit
over 2 million paratransit vehicles in cities
38Public Transport continued
A. Formal and Informal Bus and Other Services
- Decline of Large Bus Operations ? municipal
and large by systems ? fare control,
investment declines, poorer service ?
corruption and political control ? failures
Lagos State Transportation Corporation
Pakistan Road Transport Corporation Central
Transport Board - Para Trasit Services B. Urban
Transit Options - Technology - Operational
Form - Amenity Levels - Management Form -
Costs
39Bus Services Characteristics and Costs Private
and Public Bus Services Operating in the Same
City (1985 data)
40Characteristics of Third World Busways
41Characteristics of Selected Light Rail Transit
Systems
42Conventional Tramways Major Systems
43Suburban Railways Major Systems
44Metro Financial Performance (US million per
year)
45Maximum Passenger Flow
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47A Comparison of Transit Modes
48Regional MRT Strategy
Key ? applicable (?)sometimes applicable ?
acceptability questionable
49Performance of Public and Private Bus Operators
50Public and Private Bus Operators
51Indian State Transport Undertakings Cost
Structure
52Basic Busway Data in Latin America
1 data in link with highest frequency 2
Trolleybus padron68, articulated 10 Diesel
padron 88, articulated 23 3 additional lane
at bus stops
53Basic Busway Data in Curitiba, Brazil
Commercial speed including an average of 5
minutes dwell time at terminals. The actual
operating speed is 21-22km/hr.
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55Basic Busway Data in Quito, Ecuador
- Maximum volume per day was 214,857 on 44/33/99
- Articulated buses, for 174 passengers (124
standing) - The Trole operates with 3 routes or circuits.
56Basic Busway Data in Bogota, Colombia
- Peak hour factor of 9.82
- Highest load n both directions
- Average speed at peak hour
- Buses per our per direction
- CConventional. These buses in Bogota can carry
between 80 - 120 passengers Bsmall buses, up
to 32 passengers Mminibus up to 15 passengers,
no standees - Buses in mixed traffic
- A few bus stops are defined by enforcement is
null. For practical purposes, buses stop
anywhere. - Gross estimate from available data.
- Two lanes per direction are for buses in mixed
traffic. Additional there are another 2 lanes per
direction for cars and trucks. - The busway has 2 lanes per direction for the
exclusive use of buses. Additionally, there are
another 2 lanes for cars, trucks other
off-service buses.
57After World War II, there was an enormous spread
of suburban growth. The sequence of growth was
one of radial expansion along urban expressways,
followed by a filling-in of the areas between
them. Freeways and beltways fostered the
development of suburban centers that competed
with the central business district as places of
employment and locations for commercial,
financial, and professional services.
58During the mid-1800s, urban growth spread along
the radial routes of the early streetcars.
Residential growth spread northward along Lake
Michigan and to the northwest. The lines of
urban expansion set the initial structure for the
development of metropolitan Chicago.
59The introduction of the electric streetcar
reinforced the radial pattern of growth for the
city. By 1900, the radial patterns were less
pronounced as a result of residential growth in
the interstitial areas.
60SUCCESSFUL CASE STUDIES IN PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION
Adaptive Cities Industrialized Countries -
Portland, Oregon - San Diego,
California Developing Countries Curitiba,
Brazil Mexico City Adaptive Transit (Tailoring
Transit to Serve Cities Suburbs) - Technology
- based Solutions (Karlsruhe, Germany) -
Service Innovations (Adelaide, Australia) -
Small Vehicle Private Services
61Portland, A Transit Metropolis
Favorable Factors - Metropolis Governance
- Farsighted Comprehensive Plan - Prosperous
Growing CBD - Urban Growth Boundaries -
Parking Policies - Proactive Station Planning
Process MAX (Metropolitan Area Extension) -
Density Considerations - Public Policy Market
Needs
62Evolution of Curitibas Integrated Transit
Network 1974-1982.
63Curitiba Cobweb Service Structure
64Land Uses and Densities along Trinary Roads. A
cross sectional perspective
65Residential Densities in Curitibas Structural
Axes and Adjoining Neighborhoods, 1992
66Daily Motorized Trips in Greater Mexico City 1994
67Mexico Citys Hierarchy of Paratransit Services,
1994
68Mexico Citys Metro Network, 1997
69Issues and Guiding Principles in Urban Transit
Planning
Three underlying objectives 1. Plan to serve
requirement of a metro region involved in
globalization processes vital to economic
sustainability 2. Plan Framework must aim at
equitable access to all including poor (to
overcome public policy regimes typically
favoring private motor transport). 3. Plan
must promote environmental quality and safety.
70General Principles and Guidelines
- Mode Complementarity Principle
- Innovations in Public Transport Mode
- Economic and Financial Sustainability
- Land Development and Land Use Guidance
- Improving Personal Safety
- Environmental Sustainability
- Design of a Governance Structure (Institutional
Capacity)
71Mode Complementarity Principle
- Different Transit Modes Vary in
- cost
- speed
- seating capacity
- flexibility
- other performance characteristics
- broad regimes where mode has advantages
- over others
72Mode Complementarity Principle continued
View an urban passenger trip as an intermodal
trip coordinating modes seamlessly from point A
to point B A functional combination of heavy,
medium and light modes This will reduce the
fragmentation of metro population into different
locations with different incomes and access
potentials
73Innovations in Public Transport Modes
A core mode of a multi tier metro hierarchical
network of transit Modes which (a) provides
accessibility services to entire metro Region and
(b) is crucial in restraining the use of a
private car.
Choices
1. Underground transport or elevated system
US 100 million/km 2. Busway Systems with
a network of feeder buses, special loading
platforms, business centers US 1-3
million/km (up to 25,000 passengers/hr/direction.
Curitiba, Bogota, São Paulo)
74Economic and Financial Sustainability
Key Issues
Bus or Paratransit (charette) Productivity Cost
Recovery and Fare System Financing
Incentives Externality Changes (congestion,
pollution, etc.) Demand Management
75Bus Productivity a Function of
? Passenger - km traversed/day ? Salary
Levels ? Employees/bus ? 5 in private Brazilian
buses, 11.5 in Mumbai (India) 28 in
Accra (Ghana) ? Fare setting Income Levels ?
Pricing ? Externality