Mostrami il tuo esempio? Conosci un posto dove la distanza è ancora minore?
Questo esempio è a Swords, 3 fermate dell’autobus molto vicine l’una all’altra a 200 metri tra ciascuna fermata.

https://i.redd.it/keie8dm3v0og1.png

di ParaMike46

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33 commenti

  1. Paddy_Powers on

    The C4 at Palmerstown on the way west. 3 within a few yards of each other. 

  2. Mysterious_Gear_268 on

    I dunno, I’ve lived in high density cities with lots and lots of stops and they were fine. Especially, during bad weather it was nice to have a stop so close. 

    Where i live now (rural), I use the bus more frequently because I have a stop close by.

    In your example I’m not familiar with the area but maybe? I certainly wouldn’t like a blanket decision made to remove every second stop.

  3. pippers87 on

    Trying to get them removed is the massive issue. Councillors bread and butter is

    “Theres an aul one in that estate, who needs the bus stop for hospital appointments”

    Not a hope of it changing

  4. illogicalpine on

    One that sticks to me are the two bus stops on the 11 route in Ranelagh which are 130m apart, literally around a corner from each other.

  5. The E1 route coming in to Bray from the Woodbrook roundabout to the Castle Street bridge has 4 stops in the space of 650 (ish) meters

  6. If you can see the next bus stop from the current one. It’s too close (with a few exceptions obviously)

  7. bangladeshespresso on

    There are plenty examples of those across Dublin, which slows down buses drastically.

    Before someone tells me like before, they are not supposed to be fast, they sure ain’t supposed to be slow as fuck either

  8. KatarnsBeard on

    I get the 37 into town every week from the Clonsilla area. There’s definitely some that feel way too close together around Carpenterstown and Laurel Lodge

  9. svmk1987 on

    Everyone’s posting examples here but you should also check which buses and routes actually stop in these stops. Sometimes, different bus stops are for different routes.

  10. mizezslo on

    Totally agree in some cases, but just want to remind us all that to the disabled, removal of those stops can be a real life-changer.

  11. Gazza_s_89 on

    Passages should be assembling themselves at stops on their own time , not on the systems.

    Keep the spacing 400m minimum.

  12. _Cactusbagel_ on

    I definitely get the thinking behind it and would love to see our public transport system get a re haul in general, but it’s also important to remember that the removal of stops could seriously impact the disabled community and the elderly community. There has to be a better solution

  13. PixelNotPolygon on

    It would be rearranging the deckchairs on the titanic to suggest that this would improve public transport in Dublin

  14. The example in OP isn’t very good, as multiple different routes could be using those stops going different directions. Eg. The first one on Swords Road (Pavillions) could be used by buses going striaght through or to the right at the roundabout up ahead. On a similar note, buses coming from those roads (which are out of shot to the right) could be using the second bus stop and going up towards the roundabout at McCabes pharmacy and taking a left.

    There’s plenty of examples where there’s two stops for the same route, on a straight road, within 200m of each other.

  15. StaffordQueer on

    Clontarf Road is great example. Bus stops every 200m, insanely inefficient.

  16. C0smicdread on

    I often get buses for 1-2 stops / to travel very short distances because I have mobility impairments, I know it’s frustrating but it is extremely helpful to have more stops if you’re disabled.

  17. spincyslom on

    I remember hearing about Dublin Bus getting some consultants in to find ways to improve the service and this was one of their major recommendations. Other European cities do not have bus stops so close to allow for a faster bus service. It was opposed by local politicians at the behest of the public as people though it would effect the elderly and disabled. However evidence from other cities indicate that is not the case.

  18. Rameez_Raja on

    There’s so many of these in the Terenure/Rathgar area. There’s been quite a few occasions where I just missed a bus only to beat it to the next stop at walking pace.

  19. womanyellsatcloud on

    that middle one in OP’s example is particularly useless. the one on the left is for pavilions and stops right outside. the one on the bottom is on the main road where people can cross over to the housing estates opposite pavilions. i had never known the point of the middle one, there is nothing there! there’s not even a place to cross safely!

  20. At least in Dublin with the 90 min fair (and anyone with a pass) most people don’t need to interact with the driver.
    Stops are **so much slower** to board the same number of passengers in Cork because everyone needs to tell the driver where they are going.

  21. I don’t know if its closer, but it’s definitely not much farther – on Roebuck Road, there’s a stop across from the Spar/Off License and then another outside the Islamic Centre that are stupidly close.

    I should get off at the Islamic centre but if the bus is quiet and people are getting off at the one before, I’ll get off then because it just feels stupid to get the driver to stop again 10 seconds after he’s pulled off.

  22. DuckyD2point0 on

    S2 bus has 6 stops in a 1.2km stretch of road, I find the bus great but that particular section is just ridiculous.

  23. YearnestShackleton on

    The S2 just coming out of Ranelagh has 2 stops 100m away from each other on Appian Way. Pisses me off every time.

    https://preview.redd.it/qtgf3h3551og1.png?width=2092&format=png&auto=webp&s=e809bdacd031a2613172c05c55d162f464ecc83b

    Each additional stop adds 20-60s. If you limited the stops to 350-400m minimum spacing you could likely half the number of stops along the route, and you’d see the average journey speed up massively. If you did this for every route in Dublin you could greatly alter the public transport landscape overnight. While yes we also need more transport options, Dublin bus actually provides a really good network with pretty good coverage. It certainly has its problems (ghost buses/unreliability probably being chief amongst them), but if you could improve journey times I think fabric of Dublin would start to feel much healthier.

  24. DribblingGiraffe on

    Whitehall road in Kimmage is a great example of this. There are 5 stops in a straight 800 metre road. No buses turn onto the road half way so that isn’t an excuse.

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