A couple interesting tidbits related to the opening of Dongmen Station, slated for this coming Sunday (September 30th):
For those who don't know, one of the most cited benefits of separating the Zhonghe Line from the Danshui Line and merging it with the Xinzhuang Line is that it will relieve crowding in Taipei Main Station by making it possible for people traveling between the Zhonghe Line and eastern Taipei to transfer at Zhongxiao Xinsheng. According to the Taipei MRT Corporation, currently on the average day 257,000 transfers occur at Taipei Main Station, and 77,000 at Zhongxiao Xinsheng. With the opening of the Zhonghe-Xinzhuang connection, the number of transfers at Taipei Main will decrease by 53,000 to 204,000, and increase at Zhongxiao Xinsheng to 129,000. Other media reports have suggested a more modest (and less specific) shift of somewhere between 20 and 30,000 transfers, which seems low to me given that transferring at Zhongxiao Xinsheng will be faster for everyone traveling between eastern Taipei and anywhere south of Guting, on both the Xindian and the Zhonghe Lines. I do wonder however if the numbers take into account the likely increase in ridership that will result from faster trips and increased frequency on the Zhonghe Line, which should lead to a lot of new MRT passengers transferring at Zhongxiao Xinsheng, not just people who used to transfer at Taipei Main.
Another service change which occurred earlier this month is that the headway between trains on the Bannan Line during peak hours decreased from 2 minutes 15 seconds to 2 minutes 5 seconds. Not huge, but anything that decreases crowding on that line is a good idea, and frankly overdue. I wonder if they can up frequency any higher.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Taipei MRT's Most and Least Popular Stations
Below are the top ten busiest stations in the
Taipei MRT in 2011, according to the number of times each station was entered
and exited.
1. Taipei Main Station Bannan, Danshui 113,478,000
2. Taipei City Hall Bannan 43,101,000
3. Ximen Bannan,
Xiaonanmen 42,980,000
4. Zhongxiao Fuxing Bannan, Wenhu 37,358,000
5. Xinpu Bannan 29,763,000
6. Zhongxiao Dunhua Bannan 26,897,000
7. Danshui Danshui 26,564,000
8. Jiantan Danshui 25,753,000
9. Zhongshan Danshui 22,603,000
10. Banqiao Bannan 21,660,000
The top four stations aren’t particularly
surprising, given that they are either major transit hubs (Main Station, City
Hall), commercial areas (City Hall, Ximen, Zhongxiao Fuxing) or job centers
(Main Station, City Hall). More
surprising is the popularity of Xinpu, located in an area with no destinations
that I know of. Anyone who’s ridden the
Bannan Line into Banqiao will have noticed that the train empties out at Xinpu;
what’s surprising is that this translates into more boardings and exits than in
stations like Danshui or Zhongxiao Dunhua that are next to major
destinations. The only explanation I can
think of is that Xinpu is next to Provincial Highway 64, linking it to western
Zhonghe and Xinzhuang, making it a logical transfer point for bus riders from
those areas headed towards central Taipei.
This suggests that MRT lines in Xinzhuang and western Zhonghe areas
should get high ridership, though the Xinzhuang Line so far has been pretty
disappointing.
Everything else on this list isn’t too
surprising, though I didn’t expect Danshui and especially Jiantan to be less
popular. I would be curious to see how
much traffic through these stations, and in fact through all stations in the
top 10, consists of bus transfers- as popular as both are as leisure destinations
I suspect a large portion of their popularity is from transfers.
Also to be expected is the preponderance of
Bannan Line stations, given how many major destinations the Bannan Line passes
and that it is the only line to connect with every other line. Even more crucially, it is the only high-capacity
line in Eastern Taipei, and the only line to connect Eastern Taipei with very
high-population areas in the west.
The Wenhu Line, with much lower capacity than
the other MRT lines, unsurprisingly only has one station in the top ten, the
one it shares with the Bannan Line. The
absence of the Zhonghe and Xindian branches of the Danshui Line and the Luzhou
Line is unsurprising as well, given that those lines all run half as frequently
as the Danshui and Bannan lines.
Below are the least-used stations in the
Taipei MRT:
89. Nangang Software Park Wenhu 621,000
88. Xiaobitan Xiaobitan 1,261,000
87. Wanfang Community Wenhu 1,384,000
86. Dahu Park Wenhu 1,730,000
85. Xinhai Wenhu 2,036,000
84. Zhongyi Danshui 2,104,000
83. Fuxinggang Danshui 2,327,000
82. Linguang Wenhu 2,589,000
81. Muzha Wenhu 2,882,000
80. Wende Wenhu 3,013,000
Again, none of these are very surprising:
most of these stations are on the medium-capacity Wenhu Line, and most of them
are located on the most distant parts of the MRT system. Many of them are close to other, more popular
stations (Nangang Software Park, Wanfang Community), or are in areas that are
only partially developed (Nangang Software Park, both Danshui Line stations).
Monday, September 24, 2012
New Taipei and World Car Free Day
Although
most residents of Taiwan probably didn’t notice, last Saturday was World Car
Free Day, intended to demonstrate that life is not only possible without cars,
but better. Many cities celebrate by
banning cars from downtown streets or providing public transit discounts. New Taipei had another idea however: making
it easier for people to drive to an MRT station.
Specifically,
the New Taipei Department of Transportation announced that one of their new
measures to encourage “green transit” will be increasing car parking space near
Dingxi MRT station. For those who don’t
know, Dingxi is one of only two rail stations in Yonghe district, which has
230,000 residents and 40,000 people per km2, the highest population density of
any district or city in Taiwan, and is therefore singularly ill-suited to cars. Dingxi is unsurprisingly one of the most
heavily trafficked stations in the Taipei MRT, ranking 14th out of
89 stations in 2011 and averaging over 26,000 riders a day. As anyone who has passed through Dingxi can
attest, the crowds of people using the station walk there or take a bus, and
what’s really needed is more sidewalk space to relieve the pedestrian gridlock
on Yonghe Road. Increasing space for
driving will only encourage people to drive more and make walking more
inconvenient- in other words will undermine the very goals of World Car Free
Day- and regardless will only benefit a small fraction of the people who use
Dingxi station.
New Taipei’s
other new measures for World Car Free Day are less ridiculous and more
banal. Aside from Dingxi, the Department
of Transportation chose two other rail stations- Danshui and Jingtong, in
Pingxi- to be “green stations”. Improvements
planned include better pedestrian signage at Danshui and more bicycle “space”
at Dingxi (no idea if that means lanes or parking space). Another “improvement” is more plantings at
all three stations, certainly a nice touch but of dubious environmental value.
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