MYTH: TRAM PASSENGERS BENEFIT FROM FEWER TRAM STOPS
Myth: Tram passengers benefit from fewer tram stops
Fact: The main thing that makes Melbourne trams slow is lack of tram priority at intersections, not the fact that trams have to make stops. Very few tram stops in Melbourne are closer together than the optimum, so removing stops will on the whole be bad for passengers.
Just after Melbourne’s trams were privatised in 1999, some employees of the new private operator Yarra Trams suggested that tram stops in Melbourne were too close together, and that removing tram stops would help speed up people’s tram journeys. A review of all stops on Yarra Trams’ routes was announced, aimed at removing those that were ‘surplus’ according to the operator’s criteria. Press reports suggested that up to 50 per cent of all tram stops might disappear, while Yarra Trams produced glossy newsletters pushing the idea that fewer stops were good for passengers.
After the PTUA declared this the best strategy yet invented to drive passengers away from the tram system, the government intervened and stopped the cull of tram stops going ahead. However, the idea has refused to die. Careful observers have noted that the stops on the new tram extension from Mont Albert to Box Hill are around 40 per cent further apart than those on the old route just to the west – despite there being no difference in urban form or density between the old and new sections of the route. And Yarra Trams, in a reprise of its abortive 1999 exercise, recently pushed through the removal of one-third of the tram stops in parts of Collins Street, Flinders Street, Bourke Street and Victoria Parade.
Increasing the spacing between stops can help the operator run its vehicles faster – though only marginally, if at all – but it also makes passengers walk further. So all it does at best is procure an advantage to the operator at the expense of (some of) its passengers. A much better way to speed up trams is to give them proper
priority at intersections and segregate them from car traffic. Higher frequencies can also help reduce delays due to overcrowding.
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