I suspect most people reading this have never taken a ride on a streetcar, but compared to buses they are so much smoother and quieter for the passenger. And, no exhaust.
About ten years ago, the general manager of the Toronto Transit Commission, working the figures, determined that street cars were not as economic to operate as buses and proposed the evolution away from street cars. Torontonians were ready to lynch him. And, in fact, since then, street car lines have grown, by about 10 km.
They are not a small investment, but are much less than subways. To maximize their efficiency, they need their own defined right of way. For most Toronto lines that is not the case, and a typical bicyclist can match the average speed of a streetcar in congested traffic conditions. Bear in mind that in Toronto, the street cars have frequent stops, much like a city bus, every three or four blocks, and that also cuts their average speed way down.
But, to go back to the title, its interesting to note that in many cities, back almost 100 years go, streetcar lines were extended to the suburbs, and survived economically, until the auto, fueled by cheap gasoline, displaced them. And, with dedicated track they were fairly quick too. Maybe its an idea worthy of reconsideration.
For sure, not every arterial road in a suburb could be a streetcar candidate, but a hub and spoke system using buses could feed a radial network with dedicated surface rail.
Consider Copenhagen. A city of 600,000 city residents with a combined metropolitan population of 2.8 million. Not really so dissimilar to many middle of the pack major U.S. cities, like St. Louis or Sacramento or Cincinnatti in terms of the downtown/suburban sprawl. But, the S-Tog commuter rail network extends over 100 (168 km) miles of track length and 85 stations. And the rail cars used are very clean and quiet, with excellent seat upholstery and large windows, better than a car for comfort. Whereas many U.S. cities of this size do not even have frequent city bus services on most routes. A high share of commuters use bikes at either end to reach the stations. Seems like a very energy efficient, and time efficient, transit mode to me. I have often asked, if Denmark can afford such a system, commenced way back in 1934, what is to stop America? A country which can spend $244 billion over five years on interstate upgrades, to support a transport mode we see going defunct, can afford this type of technology, no doubt about that. I have often wondered, when it comes to tax money for transportation, if there is some inertia or even backroom manouvering by vested interests to keep this non-sustainable status quo of auto commuting going as long as possible.
This is a map of the "S-Tog" commuter rail network, which portrays the suburban sprawl there.
