… aboard the Seattle Monorail.
Come ride with me …
27 Wednesday Feb 2013
27 Wednesday Feb 2013
19 Tuesday Feb 2013
Posted in photography, photowalking, Portland, random, trains, transit, Travel, urban
07 Thursday Feb 2013
Posted in history, New York, photography, photowalking, random, trains, transit, Travel, urban
07 Thursday Feb 2013
Posted in London, photography, photowalking, random, trains, transit, Travel, urban
04 Monday Feb 2013
Posted in Alberta, architecture, art, Calgary, friends, fun, photography, trains, transit, urban
Tags
alberta, art, C-Train, calgary, canada, light rail, LRT, photography, rail, railroad, railway, trains, transit
I often wonder if most people who use Calgary’s light rail system notice the art that exists intrinsically all around them.
Well, there are six Calgarians who most certainly do. Flickr friends and photographers (above, from left) James Tworow, Linda M. Cunningham, Nathalie Babineau-Griffiths, Wanda Martin and Dave King, along with Ian Proctor (not present), share their visual insights from the newly opened west leg of Calgary’s LRT system.
Their photo exhibition, One Place, Six Perspectives, demonstrates the innate artistic richness of Calgary’s newest C-Train stations, which stretch 8.2 km westward from downtown.
Swing by for a look and you, too, will see how transit can be more than just trains, buses, bricks and mortar.
One Place, Six Perspectives takes place on the walls of Pages Books in Kensington until the end of April.
P.S.: The group’s photos are also available for sale.
18 Thursday Oct 2012
Posted in fun, history, London, photography, photowalking, trains, transit, Travel, urban
03 Tuesday Jul 2012
At the end of June, Via Rail announced it was cutting service on some routes while looking to increase service on others, due to customer demand.
One of the route to see a reduction is the Montreal-Halifax train The Ocean, which would see its frequency drop to thrice weekly from its current six-day-a-week operation.
Despite eyewitness reports from one of my cousins and Via employees who say the train is very much full, especially in high-season, Via claims ridership has dwindled by about half in the last 15 years, especially with faster and cost-competitive choices from Air Canada, WestJet and Porter.
I’ve always had a soft spot for The Ocean. When I lived in Montreal, it was the primary means of transportation whenever I wanted to visit another cousin in Halifax (the one who got married, as was noted a few posts ago).
Of course, it was leisure travel for me. But every time, I’d end up meeting people on the train for whom it was a necessary and comfortable means of getting to Montreal, Moncton or Halifax for medical appointments and other such activities.
I understand that for the leisure market, three-day-a-week scheduling is of practically no consequence.
But the reduced schedule would be a terrible blow for those who live along the line and need the train as a means of conveyance, not just for a pretty picture window or the seasonal dome car.
As a means of reducing the impact of the service reduction, here are two low-cost ideas for Via to consider:
• On days when the full Ocean train is not running, use a coach-only train or a few self-propelled Budd Rail Diesel Cars to provide minimal service between Acadian towns on the Northumberland shore, say between Bathurst and Moncton.
• Stagger service between The Ocean and The Chaleur (Montreal-Gaspé) in Quebec whenever possible, so the impact of The Ocean service reduction is close to nil between Montreal and Matapedia.
I do fear, however, that this round of budget cuts has essentially carved Via into two tiers: The Montreal-Toronto-Ottawa triangle versus everywhere else.
If you live in the busiest parts of Via’s network, you will get all their attention and effort. Better infrastructure; better frequencies; nicer stations; more amenities.
If you live everywhere else, however, you don’t really need the train to travel for essential business.
It’s an inaccurate picture of the country and how we want to travel. Not everyone is able to fly; not everyone want to be stuck on a motorcoach for days on end.
And it does not bode well for attempts to maintain broad, public support for the train as a means of transportation across this country.
(This is especially true right here, in Calgary, which was amputated from Via’s network way back in 1990. As I’ve stated publicly in the past, that’s a whole generation of people for whom passenger trains are a non-entity in their lives. Not cool.)
On a more basic level, the cuts speak to the financial inequality between this country’s three major modes of transportation.
Via’s competition, airlines and bus companies, are allowed to use public goods (the air and public roads) as a means of moving people, pretty much free of charge.
Via Rail, however, must pay a mint to use infrastructure (rails) owned by private firms. (It’s the perfect kind of public-private partnership, really.)
I seriously wonder if the price points for bus and air service would rise if they actually had to pay fair-market value to use the public good they need to do business. It would be cool if some economist somewhere could actually do the math and see if my suspicions are correct on this point.
Images from top: A Budd stainless steel HEP1 car at the Halifax train station (June 2012); a westbound Ocean during a stop in Moncton (November 2003); the busy concourse inside Montreal Central Station (March 2009).
13 Wednesday Jun 2012
Posted in Canada, Halifax, Nova Scotia, photography, photowalking, trains, Travel
Tags
canada, halifax, nova scotia, photography, photowalk, rail, railroad, railways, random, station, train, trains, urban, Via, Via Rail
You’d never know this car was almost 60 years old unless you looked it up (or were told, as the case may be).
Evangeline Park (Via Rail 8704) was originally delivered by the Budd Co. to Canadian Pacific for the original Canadian, which launched in 1954-55. Today, the Park cars are also used on the Ocean, which runs between Halifax and Montreal. Today, apart from the Canadian, the Park cars are also used on the tail end of the Skeena (Prince Rupert-Jasper) and in summertime on the Ocean. (Thanks to Jon Calon for the reminder.) You may also see Park cars on charter duty at the tail end of other Via trains.
In this shot, the car is seen parked outside the Via Rail train station in Halifax.
25 Wednesday Apr 2012
Tags
canada, métro, montreal, photography, photos, quebec, rail, railroad, railway, train, trains, Travel, urban
The original rolling stock of the Montreal metro, built by Canadian Vickers and dating back to 1966, still plies the tracks under that city’s streets. Here’s a train of such cars entering Viau station a few weekends ago.
These vehicles will be retired within a few years, when the Montreal Transit Corp. receives the first of a new fleet of new Metro cars, built by Bombardier and Alstom.
27 Tuesday Mar 2012
Posted in Alberta, Calgary, Canada, photography, photowalking, trains, transit, urban