Hi,
Focusing on Public transport alone while neglecting private vehicles is never going to solve the problem. Many people would rather pay the premium to be independent and ride their own 2 wheeler or car to go from place A to place B.
Yes Public transport needs to step up - but having your own conveyance is a personal necessity (not even a luxury).
Pune's growth as a center for Education, Industry, Technology, Commerce and Healthcare has very much to do with the improved quality of living one can enjoy in the city. That includes an upgraded road network. People rode the 2 wheeler revolution in the late 80s through this day to travel - but the roads and the traffic system couln't keep up with the speed of growth in private vehicle ownership. That does not mean the private vehicles should be banned and taken off the roads. Private vehicles and public transport can peacefully co-exist. The ramp up though needs to be in both - not exclusively in one.
And US is not destroying its infrastructure - even as we speak the 405 in Los Angeles is being expanded, the interstate and freeways are the heart and soul of America (minus New York Area). Indian cities desperately need to remove passing traffic (people commuting longer distances/trucks transporting goods/ST buses) out of regular surface streets to access controlled road. (hence the PCMC Pune-Mumbai grade separator has been a really good example).
Once these roads and an upgraded public transportation system come to existence, you can find ways to regulate how people use it- As of now its a free for all on the arterial roads - where people die every day like ants. People have no choice between choosing to risk their lives in crowded public transport or risking lives on unsafe roads.
Discouraging use of private vehicles is never going to solve anything. - the biggest example is the Mumbai suburban local train system - Some European cities have championed bike friendly cities in summer and tram friendly cities in Winter - but to achieve anything like that would require cities to forgo suburbanization and moving back to a tiny 10km radius city space. Also Europe does not have a burgeoning and increasing urban population.
With India's breakneck speed of urbanization, suburbs are here to stay and no matter how much money one spends, all suburbs cannot be serviced by public transport. With 200 million people being added to India's population every decade, the only way out is to make sure that both private vehicles and public transport will co-exist. Moreove vehicle sales both 2 and 4 wheeler are drivers for industrialization.
For a City like Pune to be attractive to investments and jobs and have vibrant local commerce, the only solution is to have freeway like high speed access roads available to all - and some sort of reliable public transport with sufficient safe parking spaces for people to park thier 2-wheelers/cars and ride to hubs and get back home quickly.
~Shriniwas
On Tuesday, July 10, 2012 12:10:17 PM UTC-7, Jayant Joshi wrote:
Couldn't agree more! We seem to be hell-bent on copying US transportation thinking from the sixties, while conveniently forgetting / ignoring that US has learnt from it's mistakes and moved on! Building a new freeway now in US is next to impossible. And building it in a river is unimaginable! In fact, many US cities already have or are planning to take down urban freeways. But not here in this great country of ours !!
Non-profitability in another red herring! It becomes a problem for improving public transport, but is never an issue when providing highly subsidized or totally free parking in the middle of the city for private cars.
Metro and light rail aren't bad per se, but they can't be done INSTEAD of improving bus system and non-motorized transport. The only reason these are being pushed is their money-making potential for the politicos. If these were done as part of a larger comprehensive plan with enough public input, I am sure we wouldn't be having these debates here!!
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