if the obahn is to be replaced with anything it would need to be heavy rail. what would be the point of putting slow trams down an already fast corridor. youve got a dedicated corridor, so why use trams? put a metro style heavy rail line with feeder interchages by busses.AtD wrote:How can a transfer to trams be quicker when the Flexitys only have a top speed of 80km/h and you're including an extra transfer and the resulting longer dwell times?rubberman wrote:Nope. However, I suggest that buses feeding a hub with trams would be quicker. Which is the reason that other major cities round the world have not taken up the O-bahn. If the buses feeding the hub can return to their terminus more quickly because they do not have to travel all the way into town that means more frequent buses, or less buses for the same frequency. The hub to the city can then be done with flexitys - even coupled *gasp*.
A tram wouldn't work on the O-bahn corridor. Take a look at the built environment around it. Almost the entire length of the track has nothing around it at all, so any rail vehicle would require time consuming and unpopular transfers. A busway is the only logical solution unless the surrounding population density is increased dramatically.
Surely there's better PT initiatives for us to obsess over and for the government to spend money on than replacing an already successful piece of infrastructure with another with dubious benefit?
My vision for the corridor if the obahn was to be removed would be to have a rail line beginning in a tunnell at adelaide r.s.. it would travel east to a station in City East, before curving north with a station at the zoo and or melbourne street. Station under walkerville before exiting tunnel and rejoining existing corridor just south of new klemzig station. stations then at locheil park, paradise, holden hill, modbury, ridgehaven and Golden grove. klemzig, paradise, modbury and gg would be interchanges/TODs.