Quote:
Originally Posted by iheartthed
I know this statement is meant to be provocative but it's also very misleading. Not a single city in the western hemisphere outperforms New York metro area rail. Globally we're talking London, Paris, Tokyo, and maybe some Chinese cities, have comparable or better rail servicing the suburban fringe, but that's literally it.
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Paris and Tokyo yes. London maybe equal. China doesn't really have suburban rail using Western definitions.
The UK doesn't have good rail service for European standards. They never electrified or grade separated most of the system. London has pretty bad suburban service relative to size for European standards, and the infrastructure doesn't appear better than in NYC, to me. No suburban third-rail, less electrification, no 24 hour service, less grade separation, and the main lines don't have higher capacity. It's a vast suburban system, with very good frequencies, but not really like in Paris or Berlin, where you have a metropolitan-wide network.
It doesn't really make sense to directly compare NA suburban service with European suburban service tho, bc they serve completely different constituencies. Suburban rail in Europe is the same as the bus, priced the same with the same demographic. In continental cities, suburban rail is much more working class than urban Metro. Suburban rail in NA is (stupidly) service narrowly targeted to white collar executives in affluent railroad centers. There has never been a tradition of serving working classes on the fringe via suburban service, and the system pricing and scheduling reflects this. Working class Americans drive old vehicles, they don't use transit.
UK is kind of in-between Europe and NA. They have commuter towns for affluent professionals, as in NA. The service leans more Euro-style, but still functions more as a work shuttle for professionals. and not like in Germany and France where people take it to the dentist and school and sports club.