The ICCU issues (and the way it's being mishandled) have me worried, but otherwise it seems like the perfect option for my use case.
The ICCU issues (and the way it's being mishandled) have me worried, but otherwise it seems like the perfect option for my use case.
The Edward W. C. Arnold Collection of New York Prints, Maps, and Pictures, Bequest of Edward W. C. Arnold, 1954
View of Hoboken Taken from the Ferry https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/10366
NJ's new restrictions on e-bikes are raising serious concerns for riders across the state. We joined @bikejc.org on @biketalk.bsky.social to unpack what the law does, the situation that led us here, and where we go next.
Don't miss the end where we share some hopeful news on #Hoboken Vision Zero!
The intent of this thread wasn't to post a trove of vacation photos, but to share the progress being made by our southern neighbors.
The build out of this system wasn't perfect - I've whitewashed much of it - but hopefully this motivates you to learn more about Mexican transit and urbanism. π
It's incredible what this project has brought to the YucatΓ‘n Peninsula. The Tren Maya serves an interesting mix of Int'l passengers visiting tourist sites, Mexicans from other regions wanting to connect to Mayan culture, and local residents who just need to travel economically through the area.
We finished our route in Palenque, at another Tren Maya Hotel.
Palenque features breathtaking Mayan ruins, nearby natural water features, and is home to the residence of former Mexican President AMLO, who championed and oversaw construction of this system during his term in office.
While this would have ordinarily taken us directly to the city center, the Tren Ligero was only in partial operation, due to Carnaval happening on the malecΓ³n that night.
But that's a whole different story. π
Our next stop was Campeche. While the ChetumΓ‘l - MΓ©rida segment is fully electrified, our route switches to diesel for the rest of the journey.
The transportation system here features the Tren Ligero, which is a fully separated, full BEV, guided bus system from the station to the historical center.
Along with the BRTs, many stations have extensive bike storage and connect to various bike share systems. The biking connections to population centers is still relatively sparse at this time, so usage is low, but they're clearly building for the future with this strategy.
During construction of the Tren Maya, a massive build out of BRT systems was created in many cities, connecting passengers to the train stations and running downtown.
Our next stop, in MΓ©rida, featured the Ie-Tram - a fully electric system using Irizar buses - taking us right near our lodging.
An interesting quirk of the train system is that it is constructed and operated by the Ministry of Defense. This results in airport-style security checkpoints and many military personnel stationed and traveling along the route.
Some of the stations offer a government-run 'Hotel Tren Maya', which have luxury lodging and locations near nature preserves and archeological sites. We stayed at these in ChichΓ©n ItzΓ‘ and Palenque.
The stations are generally quite impressive. Everything is newly constructed, with many stations integrating natural features and references Mayan culture.
They also feature impressive multi-modal connectivity. More to come on this.
We started our trip in CancΓΊn, making our first stop in ChichΓ©n ItzΓ‘.
The rolling stock is primarily Alstom electro-diesel MUs, with Tourist or Premier ticketing options.
Prices are tiered for Int'l, Nat'l, or Local passengers, with local tickets comparably priced to existing bus services.
The system is a ~1500km loop around the YucatΓ‘n, starting in CancΓΊn and ending in Palenque. The route includes cities, small villages, and many "Pueblos MΓ‘gicos", archeological sites, and nature preserves.
Many of my urbanist friends have yet to hear about the progress made in the YucatΓ‘n Peninsula around the recently-opened Tren Maya. I spent a couple of weeks there and would love to tell you about it!
ππ§΅
Maybe try Marty Surpreme next, haha!
We're celebrating the fact that this announcement is a massive reduction in the project cost and scope.
@ravibhalla.bsky.social
Hereβs a video recommendation for you:
youtu.be/CTV-wwszGw8?...
Iβd like to see it expanded.
Imagine this system improving the efficiency of every loading zone through the city! We could eliminate the impulse for double parking overnight.
And business was actually up throughout the corridor during the enforcement pilot.
Parking turnover was up. Spending was up. Parking transactions were up. All signs were positive.
Itβs really frustrating that a handful of people are blocking this program from being restored.
HPU enforces parking violations like this, not HPD.
HPU simply doesnβt have the capacity to position someone at 1 location. Automating part of their patrols was a huge benefit of the CLEAR program that allowed additional enforcement elsewhere, but, yet again, this has yet to be reauthorized by CC.
Phil Cohen supports the enforcement program.
Heβs doing what he can to fix the problem, but he needs a vote from Fisher, Imus, Russo, Ramos or Presinzano to get anything done.
The situation you described happens all the time. It is dangerous, chaotic, inefficient, and completely preventable.
Hopefully our City Council will choose to do something about it.
We had a system that automatically sent these violations to HPU to be ticketed along lower Washington, but @tiffaniefisher.bsky.social fought for its repeal.
As chair of the Transportation SC, she now holds the authority to reintroduce and expand the program to upper Wash anytime she wants.
We could really use your help in Hoboken over the next few weeks. The portal bridge rerouting is going to be a disaster for us, unless NJ Transit deploys even more buses, similarly to what was done during PATH closure last year.
Please donβt post stuff like this unless you have more information. Otherwise youβre just spreading fear and confusion.
S.A.L.U.T.E. is a good framework to think through the next time you are suspicious.
@tiffaniefisher.bsky.social is on here.
Upper Willow is the most dangerous street segment in Hoboken, where around 1/10th of our traffic injuries occur. Itβs a county road that has a planned redesign:
hudsoncountyview.com/letter-weve-...
The @bikehoboken.org 2024 Traffic Injury Report has more data:
www.bikehoboken.org/s/2024-Bike-...