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The arrival/departure track of the train at the station.
Thinking larger for the overall specification, this could be bay (buses), gate(various), ramp(various), dock(ferries), platform (various), track (rail).
A stop as you describe would be a marriage of the scheduled location and the schedled track. At Metro-North, there are currently about 137 stops with atleast 4 tracks plus Grand Central terminal with 42 tracks. In total, that would grow the GTFS stops.txt to 590. Plus another 137 for no track assignment to 727 stops. Nevermind that 5 stops will have the same index in the shapes.txt. This would also be a different business process as the stops never change (unless cancelled) but the tracks do. There is also no documentation that states that a stop requires the metadata of track, platform, bay, etc. to be in the text of the stop name. In fact , it states "The stop_name field contains the name of a stop or station. Please use a name that people will understand in the local or tourist vernacular."
When planning trips, "Grand Central Terminal Track 117" to "New Haven Union Station Track 3" will yield no results. Frankly, in my opinion, that is not a normal form for a data structure.
Bottom line, a trip is made up of stops, not tracks, platforms ramps or bays. This is important on the day of travel, hence the need to add it for the realtime feed and not the schedule feed.
On your website, I looked for a trip from Monchengladbach to Koln at 0127, oddly, there we no tracks or platforms in the station selection. When I selected a trip, there were no track assignments either. There seems to be 6 tracks at Monchengladbach and 10 tracks at Koln.
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I think the parent station works well for mixed environments. For instance, Grand Central could be the parent stop fro Grand Central Terminal for Metro-North Railroad, Grand Central Terminal for Long Island Rail Road, Grand Central Station for NYCT Subways and 42nd Street at Park Avenue South for NYCT Bus.
We will be using an extension for the GTFS RT and have been assigned an extension number.
The stops dictate the list of available stops on routes in planning applications. Stating that Grand Central Terminal as the parent station and the 42 tracks as it's children seems tedious as this could and does frequently change. I would suppose that each stop would have a parent and a child even if it were just one track to follow the pattern. That would make it clear to use parent stations for the list of stops for planning trips.
Besides, I think the intent of the parent station was to aggregate disparate transit modes in one area to link them together as described above. It will work the way you state it but the specification does not state that it is or isn't intended for this or that usage.
Cheers!
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