Quote:
Originally Posted by ChargerCarl
Please read the article.
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I can't believe you're using that article as your sole source on this... it's poorly researched (the references...) and pushes a single narrative. Yes, the "GM conspiracy" is VERY overblown in this discussion, and had little to with the removal of streetcars in many cities. In some places of course, it famously did.
The reality, as usual, varies from case to case. In the U.S. many places streetcars were often used as loss leaders for development and never recouped the cost from operating because American suburbs were not built to a density to support them in a time of increasing car ownership. Coupled with material shortages in the lead-up, during and following WWII it was inevitable they would be dismantled. Even in larger cities with public transit agencies the combined costs of maintaining and repairing neglected systems that ran well over capacity during the war could be too much.
Of course this is an American narrative and (even as the article supports) has more to do with how the system was set up than the actual performance of streetcars. In Canada most systems ran at a break-even or loss state. Even when the private streetcar system in Toronto was folded into the TTC it maintained this policy essentially until the creation of the metro government post-war. In large part this led to the existing urban fabric of tightly packed houses in streetcar suburbs and viable high streets.
As for the current day, the failure of most new American systems is due to design. They are often simply "downtown circulator" type systems that have irregular routing and don't extend that far outside the city centre. If you look at the surviving historic systems this is not the case - linear routes that extend from the centre outwards on a linear routing. Here's the TTC streetcar map:
https://i.imgur.com/7EyUoqx.png
The 504 line for instance carries about 60,000 passengers a day, which is more than many newer light rail systems!
As for speed, in Toronto at least the traffic running streetcars run about the same speed at buses. Sometimes a bit slower, and sometimes a bit faster. Buses generally accelerate faster but take far longer to load and unload. Streetcars get caught up by left-turning vehicles but buses get just as caught up by parked cars and right-turning ones. When a route is down for repair the replacement buses tend to be overcrowded and less efficient since each streetcar carries far more people
Official speed comparisons of downtown bus and streetcar routes using TTC data:
http://www.metronews.ca/views/toront...treetcars.html