313ghazi
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I have been reading about BRT projects and how expensive they are, how they over run on costs. I can't think of a single one Pakistan has done which has not been riddled with project overspend and corruption.
I thought about an alternative. Use existing roads, but where possible add a new lane each side as a bus only lane. Where this is not possible but there are more than 1 lane each side, dedicate the outer most lane as a part time bus only lane - policed by traffic cameras and traffic lights.
So imagine a scenario where each bus transmits it's location via the internet (This can help with live timetabling too). This is then sent to traffic lights on it's route. When the bus is less than 2 minutes away, traffic lights force all traffic into 1 lane (only applicable on roads with more than 1 lane going each way), leaving the other lane clear for the bus. Each lane also has number plate recognition cameras so anyone violating this is issued a Rs5000 fine. As soon as the bus is through, the traffic lights change to signal traffic can now use both lanes again.
This system could be operational at peak times and the rest of the time the buses would contend with traffic, or alternatively have fewer priority points on the routes.
This could provide rapid bus transport, but without the heavy infrastructure.
I thought about an alternative. Use existing roads, but where possible add a new lane each side as a bus only lane. Where this is not possible but there are more than 1 lane each side, dedicate the outer most lane as a part time bus only lane - policed by traffic cameras and traffic lights.
So imagine a scenario where each bus transmits it's location via the internet (This can help with live timetabling too). This is then sent to traffic lights on it's route. When the bus is less than 2 minutes away, traffic lights force all traffic into 1 lane (only applicable on roads with more than 1 lane going each way), leaving the other lane clear for the bus. Each lane also has number plate recognition cameras so anyone violating this is issued a Rs5000 fine. As soon as the bus is through, the traffic lights change to signal traffic can now use both lanes again.
This system could be operational at peak times and the rest of the time the buses would contend with traffic, or alternatively have fewer priority points on the routes.
This could provide rapid bus transport, but without the heavy infrastructure.