Caso de Estudio: Passenger Interchange
Caso de Estudio: Passenger Interchange
Caso de Estudio: Passenger Interchange
In most major cities the amount of congestion on the roads is increasing. Some of
this is due to commercial vehicles, but by far the majority is due to private cars.
There are several ways of controlling the number of vehicles using certain areas.
These include prohibition of cars in pedestrian areas, restricted entry, limits on
parking, traffic calming schemes, and so on.
A relatively new approach has road user charging, where cars pay a fee to use a
particular length of road, with the fee possibly changing with prevailing traffic
conditions.
Generally, the most effective approach to reducing traffic congestion is to improve
public transport. These services must be attractive to people who judge them by a
range of factors, such as the comfort of seating, amount of crowding, handling of
luggage, availability of food, toilets, safety, facilities in waiting areas, availability of
escalators and lifts, and so on. However, the dominant considerations are cost, time
and reliability. Buses are often the most flexible form of public transport, with the
time for a journey consisting of four parts:
Questions
1. Are the problems of moving people significantly different from the problems of
moving goods or services?
a. The problem of moving people is that they are never satisfied with the
service, if, in the past, we know that public services must be improved
to offer a better service.
b. The detail of moving goods and services is only a matter of waiting
time at the arrival of what is required.