Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheba
If you look at a map you'll find that Surrey has a basic grid plan in it's populated areas - maybe it's not as fine grained as Vancouver's but it's there. Then look at TransLink's bus map of Surrey and you'll see it's primarily north - south routes. I've sent in a suggested future map with some basic east - west routes that would make transit far more useful in Surrey.
Vancouver has it's downtown not "in the middle of the city" but rather on a slice of land sticking out into Burrard Inlet at the north edge of the city. It's also home to large swathes of SFHs. Those SFH neighbourhoods are well served by regularly spaced bus routes. Now look at the rest of the region and see that it doesn't get anywhere the near same service.
Please don't try to play the snowflake defense and / or claim that Vancouver is more worthy than the rest of the region.
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There are a number of reasons why Vancouver has vastly superior service compared to the other municipalities.
First, Vancouver is denser. Much denser. According to the 2011 Census, there are 5,249 people/sqkm in Vancouver and 1,480 people/sqkm in Surrey. So Vancouver is exactly 3.5 times as dense as Surrey. I know Surrey has densified since 2011, but so has Vancouver. And I know that Surrey has a lot of farmland within its city limits, but that farm land does affect transit demand.
Second, Vancouver is a major commuter destination. I know Surrey is too, but it's not to the same degree. Not only does Vancouver have a large amount of jobs, but they tend to be concentrated in one general area (downtown/Central Broadway) which makes transit service easier. Furthermore, and this is huge, Vancouver is a massive education destination. Langara has 10,000 students, but the big one is obviously UBC. I don't want to pull numbers out of nowhere, but if I remember correctly at least 40% of students commute. There are 60,000 students, so at least 24,000 students a day need to get there from all over. That's a lot of bus trips, and is the primary reason there are so many high-frequency east-west bus routes. They are all packed to the brim with students all the time. You can't just not have them. And the north-south routes are the same that exist in places like Richmond and Surrey. Downtown is at the north edge of the city, so bus routes follow every trunk route in this direction to take people there. A common hub-spoke configuration.
The UBC example raises my final point: anchors. Transit systems need strong anchors on their termini to drive much of their ridership. Vancouver is incredibly lucky in this regard; they have UBC on the west, and the Expo Line on the east. This provides for very easy east-west route configurations, as there is tons of demand for both the whole trip as well as for people in the middle wishing to access either one. Surrey, and Richmond, doesn't have this. I suppose Surrey has Langley Centre on one end and Scottsdale Exchange on the other, but demand for them is just nowhere close. They also don't cover the entire east and west sides as Vancouver's do, so they are not as natural.
I've grown up and live in Richmond and Ladner, so believe me, I know your pain. I know that getting from southwest Richmond to southeast Richmond takes you all the way through Richmond Centre. It sucks. And the 601 in Ladner sorely needs increased frequencies. I know most of you probably think no one lives there, but pass ups are not uncommon now, and at 30 minute frequencies. But from a transit planner's perspective, when working with a limited budget, the demand is clearly higher in Vancouver. We do need more service in the suburbs, but Vancouver is bursting at the seams. And it's not induced demand due to their better service, but simply a reality of current commuting patterns and density in Metro Vancouver.
Finally, I know it's a long ways away, but once funding starts to increase (which could happen as soon as next year with the property tax and fare increases) and the Expo Line is extended, Surrey will see more east-west routes as part of the bus integration, as the anchors will be there. But for now, it's just not feasible.