Do you know a DC newbie who needs a primer on how to get around the city without a car? I wrote one for ApartmentGuide.com. Check it out!
DC bus map, learn to love it to unlock the city.
Average Rating: 4.8 out of 5 based on 179 user reviews.
November 29th, 2016 | Permalink
Tags: bike, bus, metrorail, pedestrians, roads/cars, streetcar, transportation
While planning for a 16th Street bus lane continues, DDOT has quietly made another important but nearly invisible improvement there: The traffic signals are now optimized for buses.
16th and U queue jump signal. Photo by the author.
33 traffic signals along 16th Street now have Transit Signal Priority, or TSP. TSP holds a green light a few seconds longer, or switches a red to green a few seconds sooner, if a bus is ready to pass through.
Stopping at fewer red lights speeds buses along a line. In particular, DC is using TSP on 16th Street to keep S9 buses on schedule. When one falls behind, the signal priority kicks in so that bus can catch up.
16th Street has so many buses that DDOT can’t give each one priority all the time, or it would gum up every perpendicular street along the line. But keeping buses on schedule is a nice improvement for riders.
16th & U queue jumper
In addition to TSP, at 16th and U there’s now a dedicated signal just for buses, called a queue jumper. It gives buses their own “go” signal a few seconds before cars get their green, allowing buses to jump ahead of a line of waiting cars. By the time cars get their green and start moving forward, the bus is in front of them rather than behind.
The bus signal looks different than a normal light, so car drivers don’t mistake it for one they’re supposed to follow. A horizontal bar means stop, and a vertical bar mean go. It’s the same as the dedicated streetcar signal at 3rd and H, and the same as bus signals along the Crystal City Potomac Yard transitway.
Traffic lights may not be as exciting as bus lanes, but these details matter. Thanks DDOT for making this progress.
Comment on this at the version cross-posted to Greater Greater Washington.
Average Rating: 4.8 out of 5 based on 194 user reviews.
November 17th, 2016 | Permalink
Tags: BRT, bus, transportation
In the Star Trek universe, transporter technology can instantaneously whiz characters from starships to planets and back again. The latest Trek movie, Star Trek Beyond, shows us transporters in service as public transit.
Public transporter booth. Screencap from Star Trek Beyond. Click for video.
Although transit has never been a key element of Star Trek, which is rarely set in big cities, the franchise’s long history does include a few scenes with futuristic transportation.
A few seconds later in that same scene, a high-speed train zips by.
In the previous movie, 2013’s Star Trek Into Darkness, we saw a brief glimpse of a futuristic articulated bus.
And finally, in a 1995 TV episode of Star Trek Voyager, one character emerged from a 24th Century San Francisco subway system called Trans Francisco.
But all those futuristic trains aside, the transporter has got to be the coolest of Trek’s multimodal options.
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Average Rating: 4.4 out of 5 based on 299 user reviews.
November 7th, 2016 | Permalink
Tags: fun, transportation