The experience goes something like this: Upon entering a station, passengers purchase smart cards loaded with fares for one or several trips on the system (1500 pesos per trip or about 65 cents.) After tapping your card to a sensor and passing through the turnstile, there are easy to read maps that outline the service provided at that station. Even for non-spanish speakers, the alpha-numeric route system is easy to decipher. Once you've determined what bus you need to take, overhead LED signs update you on the expected arrival time of your bus. Coming from Chicago, where communicating useful information to your paying customers is something that has not yet dawned on the transit authority, TransMilenio is an incredibly refreshing user-friendly system.
Perhaps the most remarkable feature of the system is its cost. According to the Transportation Research Board of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the seven phases of TransMilenio development will eventually cost $3.3 billion (USD) and cover almost 400 km of roadway. This number is ten percent LESS than a proposed 30 km subway line. Clearly, the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) model, of which TransMilenio is the largest in the world, is an excellent low-cost transportation option for rapidly developing cities on a tight budget.
Just keep your hand on your wallet...
2 comments:
Any plans to introduce alternate-fuel or electric buses to the routes? That's probably the one place where CTA authorities seem to have an eye toward the future.
Thank you for your balanced and well-informed post on TransMilenio. I was completely bowled-over by it and am convinced that it is a remarkably effective & efficient way to get people around en-masse. It is far more civilised than a plain old bus, and the costs seem too good to be true. Now if only the rest of world (ahem, transit-poor North America), would put its arrogance towards "developing nations" aside and actually check it out!
~ Adriana
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