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The Metro may not be best answer to our urban traffic woes
Written By vinay_sreenivasa - 2 October, 2010
Namma Metro Media Reports Delhi Transportation public transport metro Metro Rail
Mobility, not metro, by Himanshu Burt, Business Standard, Oct 2:
The Metro may not be best answer to our urban traffic woes
Mobility is essential to city life. So how can we make getting around easier, better and more convenient for our cities? What are the options, and what are their costs and impacts? How equitable is each? And finally, how sustainable is each option, in terms of economics, public health and the environment? The answers to such questions offer a rational counterpoint to the metro mantra being chanted by city after Indian city, and now rising to a crescendo.
A sensible infrastructure solution is one that solves the problems (and does not create new ones), costs the least, benefits the largest number of people, does the least environmental and social damage, is reversible, and has the flexibility to adjust to changing needs in the future. Of course, no solution is perfect. There are always trade-offs. But how do we weigh those trade-offs? First we must thoroughly understand the problem and its context. Then we must decide on the criteria by which we judge how well the solution — in this case, a metro system — actually meets all the various requirements. Here below are some points to address.
Non-motorised transport
Non-motorised transportation deserves closer attention. Geetam Tiwari of the Transport Research and Injury Prevention Programme at IIT Delhi has estimated that, at peak hour, 30-70 per cent of all trips in our big cities are by foot or bicycle. (Related fact: most trips in Indian cities are also under 5 km, which is bicycling distance.)
People making these trips are ‘captive users’ — they cannot afford even subsidised public transport and are forced to walk or cycle. Therefore, a sustainable transportation policy would start by making mobility easier and safer for pedestrians and bicyclists (who together have the largest share of fatalities in road accidents).
Interestingly, this would benefit all road users. Those who use motorised transport, whether personal car, suburban train or city bus, also need to walk. Encouraging walking and bicycling through design and policy makes ecological and social sense. Both have almost zero energy costs and emissions, result in very little pollution, and boost public health.
And, in case you hadn’t already guessed, catering to pedestrians and cyclists will make our cities more beautiful.
Bus kya?
Buses are perhaps the only public transport system already at work in most Indian cities. This is not surprising, since buses require much smaller investments. They are also more flexible in answering demand, and can reach every corner of a city.
The metro is a First World concept. But the bus rapid transit system (BRTS) is a concept innovated in a Third World city — Curitiba in Brazil, where it has worked well.
The essential BRTS idea is dedicated bus lanes to which other vehicles have no or limited access. Ahmedabad has a ‘closed’ BRTS which has proved to be a success.
Planning on Ahmedabad’s system began in 2005, and operations started in October 2009. The system is estimated to cost ' 1,000 crore for the full 88 km. So far it has reached 35 km, with no cost overruns. Today 85,000-90,000 passengers a day use its 41 buses, says Shivanand Swamy of the Centre for Environmental Planning and Technology, Ahmedabad, who helped design the system.
“BRTS is pertinent for India,” says Vidyadhar Phatak, a former chief planner of the Mumbai Metropolitan Regional Development Authority, “but you cannot do it half-heartedly. There is always going to be a conflict between different conditions in the case of BRTS, but it can be addressed to arrive at the best resolution.”
Phatak adds that car users in Indian cities with BRTS believe that buses are taking over their roadspace. When there is no bus in the bus lane, car drivers feel that roadspace is being wasted. They don’t recognise that a single bus carries as many people as a jamful of cars. “Unfortunately, in India people who benefit from a system like BRTS rarely raise their voice in its favour,” he says.
Clear the road
The chief attraction of a metro is that it is disengaged from the chaotic road situation. “Metro projects are often promoted by saying that the roads are so congested, we have to go over or underground to get fast public transport,” says Sujit Patwardhan of Parisar, a Pune NGO fighting for sensible urban policies. “But this makes no sense. If there is a problem on the road, solve it, don’t run away from it. People don’t cause congestion on roads, cars do.”
Patwardhan’s argument forces us to consider an awkward possibility: that even after the huge expense on metros we might still be left with congested roads. After all, convincing evidence that car users will switch to the metro is thin (see box). Unless, that is, we solve the road problem by curbing cars, since it is cars that eat up scarce public space on roads. If we can do that, we might even find that we never did need the metro!
Metros and urban form
It is well known that a metro is many times more expensive than other public transit options. Its other costs are not so widely known, including damage to urban form and public space.
Urban form is no elite concern. It matters more to the poor pedestrian than to the rich in their cars. Our sense of comfort in a city depends on its legibility. Can we make sense of our street networks, orient ourselves, remember places we are walking through? Do we feel psychologically comfortable in a space?
In Mumbai, for instance, flyovers built in the late 1990s have chopped up each of a wonderful sequence of garden roundabouts. Chopped up, these spaces fail to register fully. The flyovers have mangled our experience of moving through. The looming concrete masses of the elevated sections of metro lines will do the same in many parts of cities like Mumbai. Remember, most metro lines in cities outside Delhi are going to be elevated.
What is wrong with the metro idea?
In a report titled ‘Mythologies, Metros & Future Urban Transport’, Dinesh Mohan of IIT Delhi reviews the national and international literature on the question of which public transport system is appropriate for Indian cities, and arrives at a critique of the metro. Here is a summary of his arguments.
# Metros do not carry the largest percentage of all trips in any city in the world. The largest shares are in cities that got public transport systems in the first half of the 20th century, when other options were not available. In such cities, like London, New York and Paris, the metro does not absorb more than 20 per cent of all trips. Tokyo and Hong Kong are exceptions. In Tokyo, 40 per cent of trips are on the metro; but car ownership is discouraged by limited parking and roadspace.
# Metros only work well in cities that have large concentrations of jobs in central business districts. London, Paris and New York meet this condition. Indian cities, which generally have a polynucleated character and no single business district, do not.
# A large population does not guarantee ridership. Shanghai compares with Mexico City but has just half the latter’s ridership. The Delhi Metro Rail Corporation claims that any city with over 3 million people needs a metro. Density and the nature of spread of a city are, however, as relevant as the population.
# It is not easy to wean car users away from their cars. It is difficult to beat the door-to-door travel time of a car, if you include time taken to reach the metro station, walk in the station and wait for a train.
# A study of 210 transport infrastructure projects worldwide has shown that costs are significantly underestimated and benefits exaggerated. (This is generally true of big-ticket projects, because they benefit the officials who commission them as well as the consultants and contractors who execute them.) We can take consolation from this: we are not alone in our misery.
# A properly designed BRTS does better on many criteria than any rail-based system.
The full report is available at www.iitd.ac.in/tripp
COMMENTS

lets join in for the BRT lobbying project
silkboard - 3 October, 2010 - 04:08
Great, look fwd to more people joining the developing BRT lobby project. Lets push for BRT, its needed. I am coming in from its needed to augment other modes (Metro etc), you or others may come in from I hate Metro angle :). But join in for BRT, lets lobby hard.

Metro - Do we have other options ?
Naveen - 3 October, 2010 - 11:26
For any city, BRT would of course be considered ahead of Metro due to it's flexibility & low cost, but this does not mean that Metro has no role in urban transport in India.
I think conclusions are being drawn with frivolous arguments & without due regard to or recognition of realities in Indian cities - BRT is being claimed as the mother of all choices, whilst Metro's role is being wholly negated.
I have great respect for Mr Dinesh Mohan for his efforts for planning BRT in Delhi, but I beg to differ with him about his views here :
# Metros do not carry the largest percentage of all trips in any city in the world. The largest shares are in cities that got public transport systems in the first half of the 20th century, when other options were not available. In such cities, like London, New York and Paris, the metro does not absorb more than 20 per cent of all trips. Tokyo and Hong Kong are exceptions. In Tokyo, 40 per cent of trips are on the metro; but car ownership is discouraged by limited parking and roadspace.
So with BRT, which also does not carry the largest percentage of all trips in any city in the world. In fact, Metro typically carries higher share than BRT in those cities that have both. Also, Metros in developing cities (mostly in Asia & S.America) carried about 11 billion journeys in 2000 - more than twice the ridership of commuter rail & over four times the ridership of LRT systems.
# Metros only work well in cities that have large concentrations of jobs in central business districts. London, Paris and New York meet this condition. Indian cities, which generally have a polynucleated character and no single business district, do not.
However true this might be, merely making such blanket assertions to substantiate the unsuitability of Metro for India isn't good enough. The more difficult question/s have remained unanswered :
What other option can be considered for Indian cities that are all known to have very narrow streets where planning BRT is practically impossible ?
Isn't it better to position elevated urban Metros now & then increase FSI along the tracks to accommodate the anticipated future urban growth beside Metro routes rather than continue with "polynuclearization" ?
# A large population does not guarantee ridership. Shanghai compares with Mexico City but has just half the latter’s ridership. The Delhi Metro Rail Corporation claims that any city with over 3 million people needs a metro. Density and the nature of spread of a city are, however, as relevant as the population.
Shanghai has very wide roads & as a result, car usage is larger, whereas Mexico city is congested with increased riders on Metro. An extensive BRT system might have been preferable in Shanghai, but they opted for Metro /Light rail - it's their choice !
Density & nature of spread are important no doubt, but packed & fully built up urban /CBD areas cannot be brought down to widen roads to position BRT - costs of compensation & the disruption caused would be higher than construction of Metro, perhaps.
# It is not easy to wean car users away from their cars. It is difficult to beat the door-to-door travel time of a car, if you include time taken to reach the metro station, walk in the station and wait for a train.
So with BRT ! & all other forms of public transport. Why single out Metro alone for this ???
# A study of 210 transport infrastructure projects worldwide has shown that costs are significantly underestimated and benefits exaggerated. (This is generally true of big-ticket projects, because they benefit the officials who commission them as well as the consultants and contractors who execute them.) We can take consolation from this: we are not alone in our misery.
Are BRT systems bereft of such practices ? Kick-backs for contracts & lobbying by parties for projects that benefit them is common in almost every sector. So, why claim this as a negative only against Metro ???
# A properly designed BRTS does better on many criteria than any rail-based system.
This is too generic. Metro systems generally have much higher carrying capacities than all other forms of mass transport systems & have speeds equivalent to the best BRTs (in fact, most BRTs have lesser speeds than Metros). So, what are the many "criteria" in which BRT does better ???

rackstar - 4 October, 2010 - 08:27
Metro is already there in Bangalore, whats the point of debating if it is necessary? So Bus-Rapid-Transit can work as complimentary survice or a feeder service. Say metro doesnt have ring route, so ORR is good candidate for BRT. But BRT in inner ring road is waste because north-south and east-west underground metro line already serves that target audience. Also no use of BRT in raidial direction as metro will cater to them already.

Public Agenda - 4 October, 2010 - 10:20
DMRC wanted to have a Metro Rail in Bangalore not because it was needed but it was the dream, of the consultant and MD to see it run here
The way the CM sanctioned Metro and a later CM the HSRL against all the advice from even Abide to extend the Metro to BIAL also shows the same dying dreams to screw Bangalore.
and the reasons to have a BRT at least now is to prevent the COSTLIEST MISTAKE of we the citizens ending up spending 30000 crores of loans and grants to line the pockets of heavy engineering public or private sector companies
Its amazing how the pro-infrastructure lobby would want the public to spend, take a loan, and perpetually subidise the heavy engineering white elephants which are thrust on the common man for whims of worldclass, PT
In fact no money shd be spent on the Metro ph II instead we shd have a pro Bus Gandhigiri lobby which will help restructure the city in the poshest areas by pulling down unnecessary commercial complexes like malls along the bus corridors and there shd be no blanket or harsh criticism
letus retrofit all buses used by the common man instead of expensive volvos
EXCHANGE THE SUSPENSIONS
let us have volvo, or mercedes suspensions on the normal blue and white buses and let the volvo buses get the blue & white ones

Naveen - 5 October, 2010 - 12:00
Mr Public Agenda,
You said Metro was not reqd for the city at all & then you say CM should have taken the advise of ABIDe for Metro to airport instead of HSRL
You said expensive volvo & merc bus suspensions must be retrofitted on common man's blue & white buses & then you say Blr-Mlr volvo buses have horrible suspensions
I can't help but wonder what your idea of "Public Agenda" is all about - can you throw some light & clarify ???
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