I'm writing from Guadalajara, where I've been for the last week. It's been hard work and I've been less 'around' than normal, but yesterday I had an opportunity to have a tour in the afternoon, and to eat our with my local contacts in the evening. A very hospitabvle people.
Guadalajara is a bustling historic city of around 5 million - and the car rules; the usual traffic jams are here, and watching the cars go by most of them are single occupant. But there's a fleet of buses too; a considerable number pass by where I have been staying - a suburb about 3 miles out from the center; there is usually a bus within site, sometimes several. They are between a minibus and a regular bus in size, and look and sound like they have big,inefficient engines. I've noted the trolley buses, and that there is a metro system - just two lines - "very good if it goes where you want". And loads of yellow cabs.
I also saw the Macrobus which is new and controversial.
It runs on a two concrete lanes down the middle of one of the major roads, right across the city and underneath the downtown area. Concrete edge barriers prevent other traffic from using the lanes, and where I saw it there was a central 'station' for passengers to load on and off the bendy-bus vehicles, which are diesel engined. You'll note in my picture that the old trolley bus wire support brackets are still in place, useless with the wires removed.
I wondered about the move from electric to diesel - it seems a step backwards, and what the locals think. Wow - "why take up a whole lane just for the bus". "The concrete barriers cut the city in two / it's hard to turn across". "It stops at every light and is just as slow". "It cost too much". "It should have been another metro line - twice as quick, and it would not decrease the road space for other traffic". "It's a shiny prestige project which the goverment has rushed into place to help it get re-elected. Looks good, great feel good factor, but achieves too little". "It adds another technology to the mishmash we already have in the City"
There are even protest T shirts [still - for the battle against is lost and it's running] being worn.
Why post this on "The CoffeeShop" - because I see and here echos of Cambridge, and perhaps I see and hear other more distant echos for some of our bigger towns and cities in the South West.
The Macrobus is running, but finnishing works are still being done. I hope to get invited back here some time so that I can report and learn further.
See
more about Guadalajara and
even more pictures including public transport ones