I thought the South Morang extension was canned in favour of buses?Craig wrote:This is the date for the new Metro trains timetable, which will see the opening of South Morang rail extension
Newcastle Flyer wrote:I thought the South Morang extension was canned in favour of buses?Craig wrote:This is the date for the new Metro trains timetable, which will see the opening of South Morang rail extension
I believe the 562 will be re-routed to run from Whittlesea to NORTHLAND via Plenty Road, to take in parts of the 563.
Craig wrote:The weekend run times on 742 between Oakleigh & Glen Waverley remain longer than on a weekday, an issue that has previously discussed here at length.
krustyklo wrote:I believe the 562 will be re-routed to run from Whittlesea to NORTHLAND via Plenty Road, to take in parts of the 563.
Interesting, I thought history never repeated![]()
Not sure it's a good idea unless a rail connection is provided by diverting the short distance to South Morang or something like that.
giarc wrote:krustyklo wrote:
Interesting, I thought history never repeated![]()
Not sure it's a good idea unless a rail connection is provided by diverting the short distance to South Morang or something like that.
As long it is isn't a 40+ min service (on a good day). It might almost be time to install some part-time bus lanes in Plenty Rd. Not sure how replacing the 563 will help so much. Some time back there were grumblings that the Plenty Rd section of 563 was too much aligned with the 86 Tram to be viable.
I imagine the 572/520 service freq will also increase particularly since it passes the key locations of Mernda and Doreen?
Maybe the 571 could be the 'East West' Link from Greensborough to South Morang.
RailwayBus wrote:I don't get why people keep grumbling about the 563 along Plenty Road. It doesn't duplicate the tram at all. One heads into town and the other heads to Northland. Sure they happen to follow each other for a while, but they serve two totally different purposes, it can't be considered duplication. Not to mention, 563 deviates to serve housing estates.

RailwayBus wrote:An average PT user would pick a shopping centre to travel to based on what is available at the shopping centre, rather than size. Some people might want a specific store that is not available at the other one
RailwayBus wrote:An average PT user travelling to the shopping centre may actually work there and won't have a choice of travelling somewhere else. Or they may be making a transfer to another PT service.
RailwayBus wrote:An average PT user won't count how many buses per hour at three seperate intersecting stops on the tram route. Take away a direct service and people will drive if they have the option to. It's as simple as that. People don't want confusion.
RailwayBus wrote:An average PT user won't bother "changing buses" if they only run every 70 minutes.
RailwayBus wrote:An average PT user might be disabled and can't travel on a tram, or might be elderly and doesn't drive and shouldn't be subjected to obscure transfer options and double journey times.
RailwayBus wrote:Not to mention, a deviation of the bus route into Mount Cooper won't help anyone who lives along the Plenty Road corridor who wants to go to Northland.
Maybe the 571 could be the 'East West' Link from Greensborough to South Morang.
Not sure how replacing the 563 will help so much. Some time back there were grumblings that the Plenty Rd section of 563 was too much aligned with the 86 Tram to be viable.
In this case, the 563 follows the high-frequency 86 tram for roughly 10km, minus the small deviation into Mt Cooper estate. 10km a trip which could otherwise be spent to provide a new feeder route in a growth area, or boost one of many hourly routes across Melbourne to half hourly, or run SmartBus routes more often on weekends, etc.
It's relatively easy to get to Northland by transferring off the frequent 86 tram to another bus, especially with some checking with the Metlink journey planner beforehand - on weekdays there is about about 5 buses an hour at Bolderwood Pde (556 & 567), 5 buses an hour at Tyler St (555 & 566) and 7 buses an hour at Murray Rd (527 & 903).
Even on weekends 563 only runs every 70 mins (and was only every 90 mins (Saturdays) until 5 years ago), so in even with reduced weekend bus frequencies the transfer is still not completely unattractive to now, given the trams are still running every frequently.
And let's remember that there are large parts of Reservoir (along 552, 553, 558, 561) where you have to change buses to reach Northland, its not unreasonable to ask those in Mill Park or Bundoora to do the same.
Judging from the patronage I've seen in Mt Cooper, I suspect most of the residents who want to use PT walk the 600m or so to Plenty Rd to get a tram, rather than wait for a half-hourly bus that doesn't take them to a railway station anyway (i.e. they have transfer to an 86 anyway to get anywhere). Sometimes there needs to be trade-off of not having a service within 400m (the general Melbourne benchmark), but having access to high quality public transport within 800m. An occasional deviation on 566 into Mt Cooper could settle any concerns though.
Unfortunately, there isn't an unlimited budget for bus services (or public transport), and therefore not everyone can enjoy a one-seat ride everywhere - some people will need to change vehicles at some point to get where they want to go, even for a slightly longer trip. Spending kilometres in one area ultimately reduces the money available for another route or area.
It's always going to be possible that a particular store (including a particular major retailer) isn't available at their local sub-regional or regional centre. Ensuring they can get to at least one shopping centre with a wide range of shops however should cover most of their needs though.
For another example, some residents in Warrandyte would prefer to shop at Doncaster Shoppingtown rather than Eastland (or The Pines). Should we reinstate the 364 to Shoppingtown because they don't want to change between frequent buses at East Doncaster? Similar story with Park Orchards and the old 365. At some point you have to draw the line of what is the best use of limited resources.
For now I'd expect a passenger would use the Metlink journey planner to work out which point to change to a bus, unless they wanted to take the safest bet & transfer at Murray Rd.
Even if the route was removed today, most of Plenty Rd would still be served by the 566 bus, but there no longer be a direct north-south route duplicating the tram for 10km.
Just as many won't bother with 563 running at that frequency on weekends.
Craig wrote: At some point you have to draw the line of what is the best use of limited resources.
Let's start thinking with common sense people! It's all good to look at a map and see on paper that two routes follow each other, but let's start looking at them more closely and see that in many cases, it's comparing apples with oranges and each have their own merits.
krustyklo wrote:Otherwise, as far as I am concerned they are cuts to local bus services and we may have to respectfully agree to disagree as to whether this is a good thing and return this thread to it's purpose of announcing timetable changes
krustyklo wrote:If either Craig or PaxInfo can point me to where my local area will be getting better services as a result of the cuts in services mentioned so far, we might yet all be able to agree.
Now all that remains is seeing the new timetables relating to this recent sub-discussion to make the relevant assessment about improvements I guess. Seems conspicuous that those with a component of 'all roads lead to South Morang' haven't been updated yet.
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