Had such a blast doing this podcast with Kathy and Laura. Well worth a listen for the nitty-gritty of how the Transit app works with transit agencies.
Had such a blast doing this podcast with Kathy and Laura. Well worth a listen for the nitty-gritty of how the Transit app works with transit agencies.
To public agencies scolding pedestrians for walking along the roadway: we have no other choice if sidewalks are still not cleared.
At least this bus stop on North Main St. in Providence has a path from the curb to shelter. Good for able-bodied riders but a nightmare for people with disabilities. 😫
[Filed under: fun at work]
When awe-inspiring transit advocates ask you to harness the wisdom of 300,000 app users in their city to figure out where local governments should install more bus stop benches...
The answer is "yes of course I can get a team of data scientists and designers for this!!!"
Cyclists are allowed if they roll slowly and yield to pedestrians... but good luck with that, the Grand Place can approach Times Square levels of pedestrian density at peak hours
pas mal, non ? c'est français
Photo of pedestrians walking in the Grand Place in Lille
Commercial street leading to the Grand Place, full of pedestrians
Sign explaining that the Grand Place is now pedestrianized year round
Sign explaining the public outreach for the pedestrianization project. Between June 27 and September 26, 12,669 people voted for their preferred option. Option 2 won with 71 percent of the vote, compared to 21 percent for option 1.
Since January 12, Lille's Grand Place and nearby streets have been fully pedestrianized. It's the vibrant commercial hub of a metro area about the same size as Providence, Rhode Island, served by two metro lines and two tramway lines.
A path with separation between cyclists on the left and pedestrians on the right becomes a mixed zone as it passes by a bus stop along a major road
A zone for parking shared bikes is marked on the ground in paint with a bicycle icon and the real-time Wi-Fi symbol
Lille, France —
1. Mixed pedestrian priority zones, as opposed to specific crosswalks on a bike lane, seems like a decent way to handle pedestrian access to a bus stop across a bike lane
2. The real time Wi-Fi symbol is such a clear way to indicate that this is a parking area for shared bikes
One thing I wrote about here is how technology has made buses *way* more convenient while techno-futurists were obsessed with flying taxis and self-driving cars.
A Bike Route sign on a paved path mostly covered with snow and ice. The only patches of bare pavement are from natural blowing/melting. There are bike tire tracks and footprints all throughout the snow.
A multi-use path crossing a river. It is covered with snow and ice. There are bike tire tracks and footprints all throughout the snow. This path connects a residential neighborhood with a supermarket and 2 bus routes
RI considers its state-owned multi-use paths as recreational assets instead of transportation assets. This absolves them of the responsibility to maintain them in the winter, despite people clearly still using them for transportation, myself included. This is my route to the bus and grocery store.
Publicité d'Uber avec des panneaux de rue de Montréal : "Quand se stationner c'est compliqué. Uber. Pour que ça roule."
Publicité d'Uber avec une voiture covert avec la neige : "Quand la tempête prend le dessus. Uber. Pour que ça roule."
Publicité d'Uber avec une petit espace entre deux voitures stationnées : "Quand la place est trop serrée. Uber. Pour que ça roule."
Publicité d'Uber avec une panneau néon : "Quand ton 5 à 7 s'étire. Uber. Pour que ça roule."
Preuve de l'échec des transports au Québec : un géant américain qui empire la congestion ose se vendre comme une solution quotidienne. Dans un système fonctionnel, ce serait de l'option la moins attrayante 99% du temps.
Map of McGill REM and métro station, including connecting underground malls
REM fare gates at McGill station
The métro-REM connection at McGill, with its linkage directly to underground shopping, gives strong Châtelet-Les Halles vibes with a Montreal twist
Screen showing real-time arrival info for REM trains to someone who just got off a REM train and is leaving Édouard-Montpetit station
Comically small screen showing real-time arrival info for REM trains to people who just got off a REM train and are leaving McGill station
Screen showing real-time arrival info for REM trains to people who just got off a REM train and are leaving VIlle-de-Mont-Royal station
Don't understand the desire to show REM arrival info to people who just got off the train and are leaving the station. Instead, please show real-time info for connecting bus and metro lines!
Exposed bedrock at Édouard-Montpetit station on the REM
REM: it good. i big fan.
Ok guys I'm gonna ride the REM today
Don't let planners or engineers write public communications for rezoning and transportation initiatives, example one billion
it's my JOB
Wow you don't have to slander me like that
Hot damn
Omg another 1 percenter
i might be an outlier but at least i have an excuse lol
ok chat drop ur @transit.app stats
No definitely not incompatible but also not a feature of the existing métro.
REM uses term "light metro" which I think is accurate.
Primary distinguishing factor is the regional (not core-adjacent) service area & longer distance between stations. Users experience it as a different type of service.
Disagree, it serves a regional purpose that the métro does not, with branching and a different type of service offering. It's not about jurisdiction, it's about setting expectations for users.
Just like the RER A is not Line 15 of the Paris métro, REM A shouldn't be advertised as part of the métro.
Reddit auto-translates its posts. Is your account or computer in English perhaps? You can turn off the translation.
"Pour l’année 2025, Montréal compte 4 des 10 compteurs de pistes cyclables montrant la plus grande affluence en Amérique du Nord. Si on prend un mois d’été typique, par exemple juin 2025, le REV Saint-Denis arrive au 2e rang en Amérique du Nord et au 6e rang en Europe."
Une analyse intéressante, y compris des graphiques qui montrent un taux de motorisation freiné et une offre d'autopartage au hasard en banlieue
🇨🇦🇺🇸 Great, quick interview with Vancouver's transit honcho, who relocated there from Baltimore — highlights just HOW DIFFERENT the transit culture is in Canada, compared to the US.
this is some good shit from nolan
This applies to much more than walking: "The human ability to adapt is the key to our spectacular success on this planet. Our problem is that the people who lead our public conversations, our elites of wealth and opinion, are often some of the least adaptable people on earth."
Indeed we do! More info about how we handle bike routing here: blog.transitapp.com/go-bike/