Another white elephant strolls Indraprastha roads
Mistakes doomed Delhi’s ‘Bus Rapid Transit’ corridor before it got rolling
Jason Overdorf feedback@postnoon.comAfter a new report debunked its claims that the hopelessly flawed Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) corridor has speeded up bus travel and reduced accidents in the city, the Delhi government has pleaded that the project cannot be scrapped lest its failure affect other transit systems planned around the country.
Absurd? That’s the sort of logic that the BRT has been following since it was first suggested. I’ll get into the new Central Road Research Institute (CRRI) report in a moment. But here are the real reasons that the BRT has been a complete failure.
They built it in the wrong place
The not-so-secret agenda of the BRT planners was to convince middle class commuters to shift from cars to the bus, so they put the first route smack in the middle of wealthy South Delhi, which has a greater percentage of car owners than any other part of the city, as well as (once) some of its widest and therefore least congested roads. This meant that the system was going to irritate a powerful lobby from the outset, and also that its usefulness to the lower class/lower middle class bus riders would not be immediately evident ‘trial run’ with half-finished project
This was an incredibly boneheaded move, because it ensured that there would be no upside to the corridor. The jams were particularly bad where the bus lanes began and because the corridor didn’t actually deliver riders to their destination.frequency of buses remained the same
Leave it to engineers who don’t commute by bus to miss the one crucial fact about bus travel: It’s not the bus ride that takes forever, it’s waiting for the bus to come in the first place. So when the BRT opened for business, car owners would sit in the car lane, waiting for 15 or 20 minutes before a bus would whiz by in the empty “rapid transit” corridor.
They didn’t link the route to the Metro
One will recall that the BRT began amid a slanging match over whether buses or a subway system was the most practical a cost-effective way to convert Delhi to a public transportation city.
This was stupid, since the answer was “all of the above.” But it also meant that the BRT and the Metro essentially developed independent from one another. If the first leg of the BRT had taken riders directly to a major Metro exchange, both systems might have leveraged added riders. And the BRT, in particular, might have gotten a boost from the Metro’s street cred with the middle class. no carrot, no stick
Not only was the BRT not actually faster than taking your car or bike — since you’d have to first get to the BRT line, which lacked the commuter parking lots present at Metro stations. But apart from the traffic jams that it created, there was no punishment for continuing to drive: Parking fees remain in many high-traffic areas; license fees for cars are low, and not collected annually; the cops rarely issue parking tickets or tow cars; and there is no charge for bringing your car into the city center, such as exists in London or Singapore.
What’s the result?
According to CRRI, ‘a lack of a proper bus route rationalisation has meant that buses cluster on the BRT stretch, with only four-five passengers boarding or alighting per bus, but the government data shows a huge number of passengers plying on the stretch. This, the report notes, “is obviously boosting the passengers per hour per direction (PPHPD) drastically and thus presenting an exaggerated figure”.
Moreover, “A comparison of the available road crash data indicates that there is an increase of 40% in the number of fatal road crashes coupled with 48% increase in the number of fatalities. At the same time, the number of simple/injurious road crashes reported by the traffic police has registered an increase of 7%.”
And comparing the normal BRT non-functioning to an experimental run in recent weeks, in which the bus lane was thrown open for everybody, the CRRI also found that the thing was bad for the environment.
Category: India




