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Posts by Adron

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Green Line Take 2 – Rolling

Friday the 20th, 2009, at 4:20pm (yes, 4:20) I boarded the Clackamas bound Green Line at Pioneer Square.  I’d knocked out a solid 43+ hour week and stepped out a little early for a ride about.

The LRV set was a Type-4 Style, and arrived with about 15% seated occupancy.  At Pioneer Square that increased to approximately 45% occupancy.  The Type-4 set rolled on and by our departure from Lloyd Center had well over 98% seated occupancy and about 8 people standing.  This would have made 100% seated if those few would have sat down, but alas, people tend to stand often even when seats are available.

At this time of day there is a wide slice of Portland’s population riding the transit.  From the American Indian Mother with her two children, behaving exceptionally well I might add, to the Grandmother with her grand daughter going for a ride about also.  There where other people in this melting pot of a train, all riding cordially and quietly.  The new Type-4 set riding very smooth as expected.  With this many people even the door gaps are dampened.

By 60th there were a few more people on the light rail, and 100% seated occupancy.  The real question is how many will this Green Line Train have once we pass Gateway Transit Center.  Being the Banfield Corridor that the Green shares with the Red and Blue Line is easy to fill up with people, it is interesting how many people continue to ride in these shared Interstate Corridors.

#72, What’s the Word?

This brings up the question, has anyone seen legitimate fluctuations in the #72 Route that could honestly be contributed to the opening of the Green Line?  So far, everything I had seen points to the Green Line being almost entirely new ridership, taking away only a little from the bus routes (maybe 60% or so new riders, that weren’t previously bus riders).  I’d be curious to know if TriMet has any surveys being prepared to determine the makeup of people on the Green Line in this regard, and if they’re doing the same for their most ridden Bus Line the #72.

Jammed @ I-205

When the Green rolled into Gateway Transit Center, we crossed over the parking lot referred to as I-205.  The 3 lanes of Interstate I-205 were jammed pack with cars, moving at maybe 5-15mph.  Well below the peak capacity of parking lot 30mph movement.  The PSU bound Green Line was just departing as we slid into our platform slot at the transit center.  That train was at 95% plus seated capacity with many people standing also.

At this point we departed the transit center with my question answered.  We had 94% seated occupancy with 7 people standing.  Not bad really, being this stands as some pretty serious ridership for the Green Line only portion of the light rail line.

Considering the Green Line is handling this capacity, the I-205 is a parking lot moving under capacity, and the Red Line is handling a respective capacity itself, it appears obvious that as a society we have a long ways to go in cleaning up the transport of people at rush hour.  There really ought to be a better effort to distribute working hours better, the whole 9-5 concept in modern times is very lacking.

The Questions

These observations leave me with a few key questions still about the Green Line and light rail in the Portland area.

  1. When will light rail ridership exceed bus ridership for the system?  My guess is it will possibly exceed bus ridership when employment begins to resume higher numbers and will absolutely exceed bus ridership when the Milwaukee MAX opens.
  2. How will the anti-light rail argument change as more of the lines surpass 20+ years and prove themselves cheaper over the long term than BRT or bus lines, thus providing more throughput at lower cost than comparative bus operations?  My guess is that the argument will continue unabated, something completely new will alter the argument entirely (like flying cars or something crazy), or the argument will change to be made on a different primary point – ala – a train is stuck on tracks or something.
  3. What alterations will take place to the surrounding bus service when the travel patterns are better understood with the addition of the Green Line?  My guess is that some of the lines will be altered ever so slightly to meet with the train better.

TOD Potential

Even though ridership is fairly solid on the Green Line, even surpassing my rather lowball estimates, there are few areas that seem available for real and easily accessible TOD (Transit Oriented Development).  The only areas that seem to have feasible land to build TOD on are the Foster, Flavel, and Clackamas Stops.  The Flavel and Foster stops have two major issues impeding some development, the fact that the Interstate consumes a vast and large parcel of land.  The Clackamas stop simply has the problem of pavement.  The entire stop is surrounded by monstrous paved areas; the Interstate to one side, the mall parking lot on the other, and more of the same nonsense to the south of the stop.  Making the area a massive, almost un-walkable, mediocre area.  Fuller Road seems to have potential, but it also have the pavement problem and has less anchoring it than the Clackamas stop.

I-205 Still Jammed & Arrival Home

After making the full route I stayed aboard as other crowded back onto the train for the downtown trip.  Again, the train filled up, approximately 75% seated capacity with about a half dozen people standing.  It always amazes me that there are always those so hard headed that they’re just going to stand no matter what.  As if standing on transit is some type of novel thing to do.  Either way, whatever the case, the trip back downtown wasn’t nearly as packed as the outbound trip.  Many of the people were teenagers heading downtown to go loiter at Lloyd Center or Pioneer Square Mall.  Matter of fact, as I had assumed months back, much of the Green Line passengers are teenagers, probably more so than any of the other MAX Lines.

The ride went smoothly, except for a few hiccups in the breaking, which made it seem we had hit someone.  Some loud teens got on at Lloyd Center and found the braking hilarious, assuming we’d hit something.  I thought it was funny that they fell into a stupor of stupidity and found entertainment in it.  They ended up getting off a mere 2 stops later to go smoke some pot.  I knew I had picked up some smell of the ganja.

I made it back downtown and walked the last 2 blocks home from the last stop.  A simple ride about, entertaining, enjoyable, and a nice slice of humanity to observe.  It is truly amazing what you can learn from a simple ride around on transit.

Bike Portland Explodes Again, Webtrends Ad in the Crux

There is so much going on over at the Bike Portland Blog in regards to this conversation of taxes for roadways, who pays what, and how much, and etc., etc., etc.  The conversation is long, often tired, and of course tons of things devolve into ad hominem attacks all over the place.  I decided it was time I weighed in, since this is a topic dear to me, as it really makes me rather irate how many people know very little or nothing about how our infrastructure is currently built, maintained (or not), and deemed worthwhile.

Fact #1 The Road System is NOT a product of free-market economics, it is an operationally socialist government mechanism by almost every definition.

Just to start off with the first FACT, our road system is NOT a product of free-market economics, open market, fair market, or anything of that nature.  By morale compass alone Republicans and Libertarians, if they honestly do support free-markets, should absolutely DESPISE our road system network.  Less than 1% is privately owned, maybe 5-10% of it even has a decent return on investment, and about that same 5-10% actually gets appropriately funded and maintained.  Our road system in the United States of America is easily a prime example of socialized (socialism/socialist definition available) ownership and operation by the Government of an industry function, or at least something that in the past was largely an industry function in the United States.

With that fact, that our road system is a socialized operation, one can see obvious reasons certain things are so convoluted in bureaucracy.  The road system is allocated, funded, and maintained as a pull politics bartering tool within the White House and state Governments.  The Federal Government has even used the road funding mechanisms to black mail states such as Louisiana to push through economic trade regulations that don’t meet intra-state commerce clauses.  A prime example is the Federal Government putting thousands and thousands of bars, restaurants, and other establishments in Louisiana out of business by forcing the state to push their drinking age up to 21 from 18.  The point of this being that this encroachment of state rights was done through black mail by our operationally socialist government road system.

Fact #2 The road system is NOT primarily paid for with gas taxes, which fall drastically short of funding our entire road network.

Gas taxes make up enough to fund primarily the Interstates, and at that, they don’t complete 100% of the budget and often require additional sources to meet 100% of budget costs.

 

Should all citizens continue to fund the massive subsidies provided to drivers?

Finally Moved, Still No Car, and Many Fold Transit Increase

Well, finally we are moved from SE 21st & Powell on the east side of the river to the south west side of the river, immediately downtown.  Just slightly east of the PSU campus, right back where Jo & I originally moved to when we left the wretched city of Jacksonville.

We now have access to almost every line TriMet operates.  In addition we’re smack right in the center of everything so we actually have decreased our need of transport and increased our access to transport.  Kind of like a win, win, and WIN.  We’re both stoked on many levels, the only thing that may bother us is the blatant obliviousness of college students wondering aimlessly about in disregard for daily life at PSU – but that’s also one of the MOST entertaining parts of the entire area!  : )

All in all, it has been an INSANELY busy last few weeks, or wait…  forget that…  last few MONTHS!

With that said the transit meetup is coming up on the 5th, so anyone reading this make sure to navigate to the blog entry and comment on where we should meet at.

Last Weekend on the #9

This will be the last weekend we use the #9 as our primary transit mode into downtown, because by next weekend we will be downtown.  We’re heading out at the moment to get some lunch at Isabel’s in the Pearl.  This place has superb food, excellent quality, and downright great prices by Pearl standards!

Here’s our trip path at 23 minutes.

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=3137+SE+21st+Ave,+Portland,+OR+97202&daddr=330+NW+10th+Ave,+Portland,+OR&hl=en&geocode=Fb1GtgIdJ5aw-CkdmrPYfgqVVDFxjDaN8wIlTw%3B&mra=ls&dirflg=r&date=11%2F15%2F09&time=12:56pm&ttype=dep&noexp=0&noal=0&sort=&tline=&sll=45.513054,-122.663727&sspn=0.027577,0.049138&ie=UTF8&t=k&start=1&ll=45.512968,-122.664374&spn=0.027291,0.039757&output=embed
View Larger Map

By next weekend our trip will be as follows at 15 minutes.

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=222+SW+Harrison+St,+Portland,+OR+97201&daddr=330+NW+10th+Ave,+Portland,+OR&hl=en&geocode=%3BFX6qtgIdogiw-Ck9QO7wAQqVVDHCuJy1aOHaYw&mra=ls&dirflg=r&date=11%2F15%2F09&time=12:56pm&ttype=dep&noexp=0&noal=0&sort=&tline=&sll=45.512968,-122.664374&sspn=0.027577,0.049138&ie=UTF8&t=k&start=1&ll=45.517715,-122.681236&spn=0.021049,0.036478&z=14&output=embed
View Larger Map

Off to some grub now.  Coming soon will be some of those controversial questions getting thrown around again, so be prepared!

Spontaneity @ Floyd’s Coffee

Jo & I met after work about 5:00pm at Floyd’s Coffee in downtown Portland, specifically at 1st & Couch.  Map location included below (thx Google maps).

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=118+NW+Couch+St,+Portland&sll=45.500158,-122.644726&sspn=0.01492,0.033023&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=118+NW+Couch+St,+Portland,+Multnomah,+Oregon+97209&ll=45.523853,-122.671745&spn=0.003728,0.008256&t=k&z=18&output=embed
View Larger Map

While sitting there we decided tonight ought to be a good night to go catch the new 2012 movie.  Being that Jo and I, thanks in large part to Portland, have become theater snobs we wanted to go see it at a local theater we could get beer and grub at.  We had checked earlier in the week to see what was playing, and St Johns Theater was going to be opening the movie tonight.  This theater ROCKS!  It serves beer, pizza, and the normal items expected at a movie theater.  The difference is it is local, serves local pizza and beer, and isn’t one of those corporate theaters that is…  I won’t go on about how or why we don’t like those big theaters.

So we did a quick scoping of the bus trip, and realized we where a block away form a single seat bus trip right to the theater!

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=118+NW+Couch+St,+Portland,+OR+97209&daddr=8704+N+Lombard+St,+Portland,+OR+97203&hl=en&geocode=&mra=ls&dirflg=r&date=11%2F13%2F09&time=7:50pm&ttype=arr&noexp=0&noal=0&sort=&tline=&sll=45.556732,-122.717285&sspn=0.119236,0.264187&ie=UTF8&ll=45.556973,-122.716084&spn=0.06736,0.090157&t=k&start=0&output=embed
View Larger Map

It was definitely going to be a trip worthy of a movie adventure!  So at 7:09pm we’d board the #44 Bus to St Johns.  That would get us to the theater at 7:44pm, in perfect time to get tickets, get some seats, sip on a few pitchers of beer, and nibble at some pizza.  The movie stands at a whopping 2 hours and 38 minutes, which will put us out the doors, happy with beer & pizza in our bellies at about 10:50pm.  I did a check of what our options were for departure at that time.  The ideal one for Jo and I is another single seat ride from St Johns all the way home.  This trip will be a long 76 minutes on the #4.

For some of those auto bound individuals out there in the world, they may read this and think, “why the hell would anyone want to travel about an hour each way to see a movie?”  First off, many people travel an hour by car to see a movie.  Depending on their own stupidity and the conditions in which they live, it isn’t entirely uncommon.  But in a car that is an hour of time that there are simply two options; talk and carry on or listen to the radio.  At least those are basically the two legal options.  I suppose one person could read, or do something of that sort.  But the even more likely scenario is that people end up in their SOV (single occupancy vehicle) alone, limited to the radio and talking to one self, driving to meet others.

On transit Jo and I get many more options.  We can listen to our headphones, talk to others (there ARE interesting people on transit, which people would realize if they got out of their cars and met their neighbors), I can spec out a Space Marines Army, Jo can knit the gauntlets she is making for Alex, we can talk among ourselves, read a book, watch a movie on the bus (yup, there are these things called iPhone & iPods, that play video! gasp!).  [Image to the right is one set of gauntlets Jo made, if you’re interested just click on the image.  It links to ravelry which you can join for many patterns and such]

All things that are basically illegal or impossible to do in a car.  So really, when it comes down to it, the bus ride is just hanging out, while the car ride is wasted time.  More of one’s life drained away in fed radio media, limited activity, and often spent fuel, more waste, and all those other negatives to boot.

Jo & I don’t have that issue.  Just FYI, we’re free of those limitations.  So maybe the real issue isn’t why we limit or work so hard to use transit, but why do people try so hard and limit themselves to just auto transport?  Really, it boils down to the eye of the beholder.  If we want to even further distance ourselves from the noose of the automobile we can use our bikes, which again, some would be astonished, but they shouldn’t be.

Anyway, a drink awaits me, and some chilling on the bus, and a movie.  Kick ass. 🙂

Complete Itinerary:

Walk 0.15 mile northwest from 118 NW Couch St to NW Everett & 2nd (Stop ID 1612)
7:09 p.m. Board 44 Mocks Crest to St Johns
7:44 p.m. Get off at N Lombard & Baltimore
Walk southeast to 8704 N Lombard St
Travel time: 41 minutes (including 6 minutes walking)

Movie:  2012   -   2hrs 38 Minutes

Walk northwest from 8704 N Lombard St to N Lombard & Baltimore (Stop ID 8480)
11:07 p.m. Board 4 Division/Fessenden to Gresham TC via Portland city ctr 
which continues as 4 Division to Gresham TC
12:16 a.m. Get off at SE Division & 20th
Walk 0.4 mile south to 3137 SE 21st Ave
Travel time: 83 minutes (including 14 minutes walking)