At some point that becomes a diminishing return. I would much rather a new line be built with 24tph, than the same amount be spent on a signalling bump to give us 36tph rather than 24.
"Train Architect Designs the Perfect Commuter Train" - Except no train was designed in this video, just explained what's the thought behind the configurations choices of existing trains and also metros
@@chopsuey33 One of the things that really sets out Paris metro network is it's low distance between each stations. It's also pretty small (2.4 m wide) compared to most other, more modern metros, but not unique in that regard. Whereas NYC and London built their first lines based on the mainline railway, Paris metro was basically conceived as an underground tram/streetcar. None of it makes it unique, it's still just a metro.
There is a big difference between regular trains and metro's when it comes to the aspects mentioned in the video, so it is kind of weird that no distinction was made between them.
Exactly. When I'm travelling 15 minutes, I'm not too bothered about comfort or getting a seat or what kind of luxuries there are - but on a 2 hour journey, those things matter a whole lot more.
@@stevieinselbyYes I totally agree. Just see the difference of comfort and configuration between underground trains and Elizabeth line trains in London.
100% the Toronto transit subway is a great example of commuter, super wide, plenty of seats and standing room, and no fixtures in the way to limit space. But I wouldn't want to take one from Paris to Strasbourg, or across the channel.
Because there's no sharp distinction. Look at the Elizabeth Line. Look at the Piccadilly Line. Look at Caltrain. Look at BART. Look at RER. It's all a continuum, and you're handicapping yourself if you compartmentalise and don't look up and down the hierarchy for inspiration. You'll notice that metro trains are starting to exchange ideas with elevators, too: we have multicompartment elevators, we have metros with platform doors. And indeed, the first time I took Eurostar I was struck by the (to me, I admit, depressing) aircraft vibe.
@@blueghost3649 roads are not profitable (they suck tons of money out of taxes) so why should public transit expected to be? that is the hypocrisy all car brains have programmed into their default state for some reason
Subtle little thing there at the end, implying that "private" products like Heathrow Express are superior. In fact, most of the amenities on HeX are also on the Elisabeth Line-the HeX trains were even downgraded recently. There's no real point to riding HeX now. Also, the focus was on Metros, not commuter trains. Two different things.
Even with the best design, public transit still relies on disciplined and considerate passengers. In many Eastern cultures, trains are a significant part of daily life, and passenger etiquette is crucial for efficient travel to work and home. However, I was surprised to find that in North America, public transit behavior differs in many ways. It’s not just fare evasion; theft, begging, and even instances of people urinating on the train are not uncommon. Growing up, we were taught to view Westerners as disciplined, industrious, and creative. My first experience on a North American subway challenged those assumptions.
Most Westerners are disciplined, industrious and creative. However, Western countries are much more heterogenous and liberal, and thus have to deal with the bad apples. Wink, wink.
In many places outside North America, public transit is designed to be and seen as a viable option for everyone to get around to all the places they might want to go, and the systems are widely used across the socioeconomic spectrum. But in North America, unless your origin and destination are within an easy catchment area around the stations, public transit is rarely the most convenient option, and those who can afford to do so would sooner drive. That decreases the broad ridership that would help to enforce social norms, and leaves public transit as the option for 1) people who live right near it and for whom it's actually useful, and 2) people who have no other choice because the financial buy-in of being able to purchase and maintain a car is too high. Not to say there aren't some different cultural values in East and West surrounding public spaces and utilities - there definitely are, and I've seen it firsthand. But it's also important to realize that in many North American cities, you're not necessarily seeing a fully representative sample of the population due to the social and economic values of the place that built the transit.
It’s true, we have a few problems we need to address while improving public transit, like homelessness, behavioral health, etc. For what it’s worth, in my suburban area quite a few working people ride the buses and light rail and I rarely encounter unsavory characters. I think it’s important that we continue improving and expanding the transit network in the U.S. regardless. And hey, fewer people on the road to contend with for those who want to drive!
@@QuarioQuario54321 by... switching to them? idk what exactly ur question is lol. if ppl are offered alternative means of transport that is well designed and competitive with existing options, ppl will migrate to it. look at seattle, which is undergoing a massive transit expansion, that's popular, and well used by commuters.
@@trainsandmore2319 Sooo what you are saying, "let's not attract people to trains but rather penalise people for using cars." . Following your logic, how about we stop all funding to highways altogether and then herd people it freight carriages cause we can afford so many more freight carriages. . Comfort doesn't matter here.
1:57 That is really not the reason why double-deckers slow down passenger flow... The simple fact that more people have to go through the same door does. You could add another cart but that makes the train longer and walking distances bigger. People also tend to wait around the entrance to the platform. Adding more doors speeds up passenger flow but adds complexity and takes space.
It's good for increasing capacity, and for cities like Philly where there's multiple major stops people get off at. Their use by NJ transit into nyc, where probably 90% of riders are ending up, is oddly helped by Penn Station's terrible platforms. Disboarding the train is seldom the bottleneck, the packed stairs and escalators tend to be instead.
Both are true. Stairs do slow down passenger flow. RER trains in Paris that have stairs at their doors like the RER C or D are clearly slower to disembark compared to the almost step-free RER A trains.
@@Joesolo13I’m not sure if it’s the best for Philly as double decker trains have significantly longer dwell times. Which can take a line from 24 to 15 tph when stations don’t have massive amounts of platforms. What Philly needs is frequency, not size
How about a double-decker platform? Fill on two levels, at least as fast as on a single level. There should still be a stairwell on the train, but just one, only used if one level is crowded so that people can spread out to the other level. Being able to move between levels on the train lets passengers look for seats on both levels.
There really isn't a "perfect" design of train which will work on all systems. Each train type will have a different design purpose. Metro trains are designed for maximum capacity as they need to move a lot of people in a city quickly. These trains will have very high door density to get passengers on and off quickly, but some metros function more like suburban railways and others more like a grid network of lines. Commuter trains are designed for a mix of seating and standing passengers- depending on whether the trains are supposed to run inner or outer suburban services or even regional commuter services, the train design will be different. Inner suburban trains will have fewer seats, more doors and more standing room whilst outer and regional commuter trains will often have more seats. Intercity trains are designed with the expectation that every passenger will get a seat and prioritise passenger comfort so there will be very little standing room and lots of more spacious seats. Each system has its own design requirements which is why buying a standardised model of train and slapping it onto random train lines without consideration about what the train needs to do is generally a bad idea.
Here in the US and especially California we need to emphasize the difference in types. For example BART and LA metro both have 50 mile lines. DC’s Silver line is starting to get a bit long…
@@TysonIke BART really is more like a suburban rail system than a metro. It has speeds similar to Australian suburban rail systems with similar stop spacing. LA's stupidly long light rail lines are really emblematic of how bad Metrolink is (bad schedules, stops that are too far apart) I feel like part of the reason why metro and light rail systems are pushed so far beyond what they're supposed to be used for is because mainline rail isn't able to fill the gap of outer suburban journeys. Commuter rail systems across the US use loco hauled trains which makes them slow to accelerate and reach top speed, meaning stops need to be placed very far apart so that the trains maintain a good average speed. Most regional/suburban rail systems across the world use multiple unit trains which accelerate much faster, many of which are able to hit 60mph in under a minute with the fastest doing so in under 30 seconds with 80mph in 50 seconds (metro levels of acceleration but with a much higher top speed than a metro). This means that stations can be placed closer together whilst still maintaining high average speeds. This means that suburban rail systems across the world are able to maintain speeds fast enough to complement a metro whilst still providing good coverage in outer suburban areas, hence the need for very long metro lines is alleviated. So in most other countries, rather than a 50 mile metro or light rail, a suburban rail system would be built.
I think this is why it’s hard to get a system that tries toto combine both to be designed well. For example the Elizabeth line trains. In my opinion they are designed well but can’t ActiveCit the comfort needed for a full journey and probably aren’t as efficient as a tube train, if it comes to passenger flow, when working through central London.
Great video! Just a slight correction: the R211 shown is actually an R211S, since it runs for the Staten Island Railway (SI), not the R211T which is found on other NYC Subway lines. The R211S, unfortunately, does not have the open gangway feature, which likely could be a result of cost savings, as this also highlights another aspect of railcar design in which different variants of the same type of railcar can be placed into service or purchased for certain lines based on a variety of factors such as engineering design constraints for some lines.
I think maximizing the people standing in the middle 3 carriages or even the middle 5 would be best because that is typically where people embark the quickest and leave for the station's exit. The following 2 can be those seated along the side facing in and the ends of the train passengers facing each other.
@@QuarioQuario54321 that isn't as common as the usual layout, and also transit trains are designed in a way that all cars are mostly standing room no matter what, especially on transit systems that require extreme capacity to even keep up with high ridership and not becoming too crowded that required pushers to even fit in
@@machinismus We used to. Our public transit was the envy of the world back in the early 20th century. Then it all got bought up by auto and tire manufacturers and systemically destroyed. That's a gross oversimplification, of course, but it's essentially what happened.
This is all good stuff but the most important thing to improve capacity will always be 1. Building more lines, 2. Better signalling to allow more trains to run on existing lines, 3. Better infrastructure to allow longer trains and then 4. More high capacity train design, in that order
I think longer trains aren’t always the solution for a metro, there’s a limit. Because I imagine longer trains might lengthen the dwell time due to many more doors so more chance of passenger obstruction. Maybe passengers want to enter in a certain carriage to which they may linger on the platform for more time as well. I find longer trains suit commuter or intercity trains more compared to a metro in which dwell time matters more.
@@JT29501I’ve heard more lanes in highways just lead to more congestion although obviously it’s not as simple as that and not that it doesn’t encourage public transport use which leads to more traffic.
@@Peter-mj6lz It's not really significant enough. Let's say you have 8 car trains, and you want to upgrade to 10 car trains (as happened near me quite recently). You add 2 extra carriages, so essentially one "extra" train in 4. If you are already running with good signalling at metro type frequencies, it might be impossible to add 1 new train for extra 4. However it's doubtful that any extra dwell time (and theoretically there really shouldn't be much, as long as you have plenty of doors and good station layouts that distribute passengers reasonably evenly) will cost as much as that 1 train in 4. I certainly haven't noticed any extra dwell time from the recent upgrades near me. And the Elizabeth Line, also near me (I'm lucky) has very very long trains and generally gets unloaded and loaded very quickly indeed. However, I would add I did put it third for a reason - if there is still space to improve frequencies, that is definitely preferable, although potentially more expensive. And obviously a whole new line will provide the most extra capacity of anything, but is also the most expensive.
As a New York City resident, I would opt-in removing more seats for standing room. Most New Yorkers are capable of standing, it really depends on social expectations on allowing elderly/disabled to take a seat (I also believe in making little kids stand as well). We would also implement this type of train on a shorter route that goes through very populated neighborhoods in rush hour, such as the 7 train that goes through Queens to Manhattan.
Great video! On many metros, trams and regional trains I've been on it's always interesting to check out the seating, door and overall car layout. You can understand a lot about the type of passengers they are purposed for
Ha! That Heathrow Express train you pay through the nose for is just 5-10 minutes faster than the Elizabeth line. Unless you overslept it's not at all worth the money (not to mention, you may spend 10 minutes in Paddington getting onto the Heathrow Express whereas the Elizabeth line is more easily accessible in other stations, and it runs more frequently).
As an American, here's a great train design: -Clean -I don't get stabbed on the platform -Actually sticks to the schedule -Goes places I want to go at hours I want to go there Once we can hit these BASICS maybe we can talk about the actual car design. Also, WSJ you don't care about commuter trains. No American big business does. There's too much kickback money from the oil and car companies. This video is a joke.
The PPHPD also depends on the average speed of a train. This in turn depends on how often it has to stop. If a train only stopped half of the time, the average speed would increase significantly. In Santiago de Chile, this is successfully practiced during rush hour: a line has trains with different modes: Mode A: stops at stops 1,2,4,5,7... Mode B: stops at stops 1,3,4,6,7... At stops 1, 4 and 7... (i.e. 1+3n with n=1,2,3...) the trains stop in BOTH modes so that people can switch from mode A to B. This reduces the number of stops by 1/3 because each mode stops at 2 out of 3 stops. With a mode C it would be even more economical: Mode A: 1, 2, 5, 6, 9... Mode B: 1, 3, 5, 7, 9... Mode C: 1, 4, 5, 8, 9... This reduces the number of stops by 50% because each train only stops at 2 of 4 stations (but the probability of having to change trains increases). By increasing the average speed, crossing a large city from, for example, far in the south to far in the north is drastically reduced.
I live in a HOT country (Australia) and I am increasingly angered by companies like Alstom and Bombardier, pushing their pretty trains designed for cooler climates onto us. Our trains used to have poor or no air conditioning, but very good ventilation, and sun protection. Now they are all fully sealed and have huge windows, meaning all the passengers get baked. Also people tend to sweat on hot days so having sealed cars, means the smell is sickening.
Alstom isn’t your government. They present a bid to your government and then the that gov decides to award the bid to based off or cost or other reasons. Blame your government that procured the trains not Alstom. If your government really wanted to they could have asked Alstom to design the trains to meet the climate conditions that exist in your city.
@@cboy0394 Trust me dude, I DO blame the government. This video though is about the train designers and not the government. You must also consider that the manufacturers always offer cookie cutter, off the shelf designs with a "One Size Fits All" attitude. All the various trains and trams we have are are just the same as the ones in northern Europe, and the only real choice we are given is the interior seating arrangement. Yes we could get a custom job done, but have you ever priced a 12 seat Mini Cooper? Customization costs big bucks whereas having trains already designed for hot climates only adds a small amount. As you said, "They present a bid to your government..." but all the companies present their designs on a Take It Or Leave It basis.
I feel you. Indonesia also had this problem with old Japanese trains. Thankfully, the train company took the matter into their own hands and retrofitted the trains with blasting ACs. Now, sometimes it gets too cold on the train. Especially when it is empty late at night.
Speak for yourself. I live in a COOL part of Australia where snow settles in winter. Just because you live somewhere with an intolerable climate like Queensland, does not mean you speak for the entire continent.
It is your government's fault but Siemens kind of did the same thing to Amtrak. Siemens essentially refused to design a more comfortable seat and just stuck in their off the shelf European commuter rail seats. Even though the trains they are designing are aften used for 5 hour journeys.
Someday, American rail passengers will learn that waiting for departing passengers to exit the train is far more efficient than trying to push exiting passengers backwards. That slows up rail service a lot in Los Angeles.
The best architecture is the Japanese type. It works from 1963 and the 103 series. one level, 3/4 doors per side, 20m long, 2.95m wide, but curved at 3.05m wide, longitudinal seats, no strollers, no bikes and other bulky objects, reserved places for people with difficulties at the end of the cars, multiple support bars, long trainsets and medium to high frequency. Trains that are too short risk limiting capacity and appeal!! Who wants to get on trains that are too crowded as soon as the line opens!!! They manage to have lines with 150% load without too many problems, Japanese discipline also has a big part in this success. Otherwise nice French accent..
They missed one very important, yet glaring piece to this conundrum. All trains, whether train, tube, tram, metro, subway, etc have doors on both sides of the carriage, yet you can only enter or exit on one side. On most, at Canary Wharf station in London, you can enter/exit the tube on both sides, essentially crossing eastbound and westbound journeys without having to navigate stairs. This is rare. If a whole line or system, had both left and right doors open at every station, this should make it easier and faster. You could even play around with it. Have customers enter on the right and exit on the left. Sometimes humans do amazing things, others times you humans are as dumb as door nails! Actually, its not entirely the fault of humans, since most stations are old, and to include a new platform is most times difficult.
Honolulu has a brand new HART System. It only goes from Kapolei to Aloha Stadium for now, the rest of the line will go all the way into Honolulu, but only stops at Ala Moana Blvd. it should to all the way to Waikiki to help visitors go to and from HNL and back. UH Manoa would be ideal, but of course funding and budget is always the issue in Hawaii with limited resources. Someone needs to come to Hawaii and help out a growing population on the Leeward side of Oahu. Honolulu can be a world class city, if the infrastructure is up to par with the rest of the US.
This is why NYCT 1 Train is better for commuters than the 4/5, pole is “20 centimeters” off center thereby keeping the doorway from being blocked by standing passengers. 4/5 is a total pain to exit/enter at express stops Union Sq./14th and GCT
Realistically the train layout depends on the capacity target of the train. In a commuter train you tend to see transversal seating simply because you sacrifice some standing capacity in exchange for extra comfort in longer journeys. In metros, you generally have longitudinal because most people aren't staying for a long while. From experience, these come given by transit authorities. Oh and 4:44 is just false. If a train is cramped, it's because the system lacks capacity. There is only so much capacity you can squeeze from design decisions within the carriages themselves. The actual issue most likely lies in frequency which can be improved (resignalling to a CBTC system being a solution), or trains being too short (lengthening platforms being the solution). If you still lack capacity, sorry mate you're gonna have to build a new line paralleling the overcrowded existing one, like Paris did with 14 or London with the Lizzy.
The WSJ really hammering home the point that (according to them), the only purpose of a train is to make money. PLEASE NOBODY MAKE A PASSENGER TRAIN SERVICE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE PEOPLE PLEASE GOD PLEASE.
Living in hamilton travelling to Toronto, 20 yrs. ago 55 minutes train. Today, 55 minutes train. If you want to get people out of cars stop using 1900 technology.
Does someone at the Journal realize they just compared cruise ships on rails to subway trains? While it is nice the see the overall design process (most of this I already knew I took classes for this in college, but always nice to see again), that's not a fair comparison to crowd control. Especially when one of those trains has a ticket price of over a thousand dollars per person.
I thought this was going to be about taking advantage of the stops to have some sort of revenue from real state owned and rented by the subway-train operators. Also, not exaggerating when building the train platforms, making it bigger than it needs to be.
Image IF America had cross country train rides where youd basically stay in your own room and then go eat in the dining room in the morning, stuff like that. I would pay sooo much moeny to do that
I don't know why we don't have double-decker platforms. I don't know why we don't use both sides of the carriage, with an entry side and an exit side. I don't know why we don't see intermodal cross platform transfers. Why, in short, are vehicle architecture and station architecture treated as unrelated?
Well, well, well, what’s the WSJ up to now? 🙄 It’s okay to have trains as long as we privatize and make the trips cost twice as much. How about subsidizing better infrastructure and architecture with government subsidizes like the ones going to the oil and automobile industries instead of creating more classes?
Ok, where does the transit agency get the $20b needed to extend each station to fit 2 more cars? It's better to use that money to build another line, which could also connect new destinations.
Let's not forget routes, freight issues, derailments, etc. The paths to glory be different (europe vs murica). For reference, I grew up on the Metra system in Chicagoland which allowed my affinity for trains as a youngin to learn random stuff at their transportation hubs and local railyards. This is gross lol
So why in Paris does the RER B train which runs between CDG Airport and Orly Airport have no space for luggage? Because it serves more local ipassengers in central Paris. Time for a dedicated train/s.
There are spaces for luggage on RER B trains. But you're right, there will be a new dedicated train non-stop from Paris Gare de l'Est station, but also metro line 17. Also, RER B will receive new trains in the coming years with a lot more room. They'll be mostly double-decker, alternating single and double deck cars, larger internal platforms, etc.
You work for 40yrs to have $1M in your retirement, meanwhile some people are putting just $10K in a meme coin from just a few months ago and now they are multimillionaires.
I want to compliment you, you have said it all. I am a little business owner and I really want to expand my business to the next level by making myself an investor but I really don't know how to go about it..
What a horrible way to close this video out. More people in cities just means that there needs to be more public transport options. It doesn't need to be more crowded, that's just a political choice.
This is a bit of a nonsense item. You compare metro’s with trains. Totally different ballgame. I never had any horrible experiences on trains. Not in Japan, not in China, not in the Netherlands. But metros are horrible everywhere during rush hours.
Not sure what systems they are talking about here, but their design considerations certainly do not apply to the NYC system. There, the placement of poles, benches, etc has nearly no impact on rider comfort or economics. It sounds like the designers here have never even ridden a NYC subway! The only design change in the last several decades that has had any significant impact is the elimination of seats, which is truly regrettable. I do not see any benefit to it whatsoever, not even placing a bike, which usually takes up the entire width of the car.
Some trains have had misaligned doors in an attempt to force people to move out but they never realized the poles are always near the doors. On the B division, they thought making the cars longer and having fewer cars over the same length would be more efficient but they ended up reducing the number of doors per train slowing them down, and then went back to the shorter cars again.
They do apply to NYC and all other systems, with variations, of course. But there's no exceptionalism, only trends where this or that will work a bit better than here or there. NYC isn't more special than many other systems, and these considerations still apply quite universally. Just like the open gangway design is universally more efficient and better for safety than closed car design, despite what passengers of this or that transit system may think. There can be local preferences, and slight local variations but that's it.
This is why Sydney's trains are so terrible. The double decker trains delay people getting on and off (particularly because of the people who just stand their confused before deciding to go up or down).
Tokyo Metro shares surge in trading debut: on.wsj.com/4fm51ND
MORE TRAINS
now this is what the people want to see!
That would be the ideal solution but
MORE TRAINS
At some point that becomes a diminishing return. I would much rather a new line be built with 24tph, than the same amount be spent on a signalling bump to give us 36tph rather than 24.
MORE TRAINZ
"Train Architect Designs the Perfect Commuter Train" - Except no train was designed in this video, just explained what's the thought behind the configurations choices of existing trains and also metros
It's rarer these days to find a video that doesn't have clickbait now.
Well it is the WSJ, Jeff probably told them to remove it.
@@flyingpanhandle Jeff owns WaPo, not the WSJ.
Thanks for saving me the 7 monites
@@oleunis7921 that's why we all use the DeArrow extension with community corrected titles and thumbnails
WSJ interviews someone from Alstom (a French company), but they manage to pull off the feat of never mentioning French metros.
French metros are quite good, but also unique in the world, there haven’t been a new generation Paris metro for almost 20 years
@@MrJimheerenhow is Paris metro unique ?
to add to the complexity in a factory in Derby UK
@@MrJimheerenthat is not true, there were new metros in 2021 or 2022 idk (look up MP14)
@@chopsuey33 One of the things that really sets out Paris metro network is it's low distance between each stations. It's also pretty small (2.4 m wide) compared to most other, more modern metros, but not unique in that regard. Whereas NYC and London built their first lines based on the mainline railway, Paris metro was basically conceived as an underground tram/streetcar.
None of it makes it unique, it's still just a metro.
There is a big difference between regular trains and metro's when it comes to the aspects mentioned in the video, so it is kind of weird that no distinction was made between them.
Exactly. When I'm travelling 15 minutes, I'm not too bothered about comfort or getting a seat or what kind of luxuries there are - but on a 2 hour journey, those things matter a whole lot more.
@@stevieinselbyYes I totally agree. Just see the difference of comfort and configuration between underground trains and Elizabeth line trains in London.
100% the Toronto transit subway is a great example of commuter, super wide, plenty of seats and standing room, and no fixtures in the way to limit space.
But I wouldn't want to take one from Paris to Strasbourg, or across the channel.
Because there's no sharp distinction. Look at the Elizabeth Line. Look at the Piccadilly Line. Look at Caltrain. Look at BART. Look at RER. It's all a continuum, and you're handicapping yourself if you compartmentalise and don't look up and down the hierarchy for inspiration. You'll notice that metro trains are starting to exchange ideas with elevators, too: we have multicompartment elevators, we have metros with platform doors. And indeed, the first time I took Eurostar I was struck by the (to me, I admit, depressing) aircraft vibe.
Didn't miss a single opportunity to say "paying passenger" instead of just passenger
Yeah, as if free public transit systems didn't have this incentive too lol
This is the “WallStreet” Journal Sherlock. No one is watching this unless their default operating mode is profit seeking.
The original "Greed is good."
What’s wrong with that
@@blueghost3649 roads are not profitable (they suck tons of money out of taxes) so why should public transit expected to be? that is the hypocrisy all car brains have programmed into their default state for some reason
Subtle little thing there at the end, implying that "private" products like Heathrow Express are superior. In fact, most of the amenities on HeX are also on the Elisabeth Line-the HeX trains were even downgraded recently. There's no real point to riding HeX now.
Also, the focus was on Metros, not commuter trains. Two different things.
Even with the best design, public transit still relies on disciplined and considerate passengers. In many Eastern cultures, trains are a significant part of daily life, and passenger etiquette is crucial for efficient travel to work and home. However, I was surprised to find that in North America, public transit behavior differs in many ways. It’s not just fare evasion; theft, begging, and even instances of people urinating on the train are not uncommon. Growing up, we were taught to view Westerners as disciplined, industrious, and creative. My first experience on a North American subway challenged those assumptions.
Most Westerners are disciplined, industrious and creative. However, Western countries are much more heterogenous and liberal, and thus have to deal with the bad apples. Wink, wink.
In many places outside North America, public transit is designed to be and seen as a viable option for everyone to get around to all the places they might want to go, and the systems are widely used across the socioeconomic spectrum. But in North America, unless your origin and destination are within an easy catchment area around the stations, public transit is rarely the most convenient option, and those who can afford to do so would sooner drive. That decreases the broad ridership that would help to enforce social norms, and leaves public transit as the option for 1) people who live right near it and for whom it's actually useful, and 2) people who have no other choice because the financial buy-in of being able to purchase and maintain a car is too high.
Not to say there aren't some different cultural values in East and West surrounding public spaces and utilities - there definitely are, and I've seen it firsthand. But it's also important to realize that in many North American cities, you're not necessarily seeing a fully representative sample of the population due to the social and economic values of the place that built the transit.
"A developed country is not a place where the poor have cars. It's where the rich use public transportation." - Gustavo Petro
In North America, trains are viewed as welfare for the poor and mentally ill.
In Asia, even rich people ride subways.
It’s true, we have a few problems we need to address while improving public transit, like homelessness, behavioral health, etc. For what it’s worth, in my suburban area quite a few working people ride the buses and light rail and I rarely encounter unsavory characters. I think it’s important that we continue improving and expanding the transit network in the U.S. regardless. And hey, fewer people on the road to contend with for those who want to drive!
America.
BUILD MORE Train INFRASTRUCTURE
Use a bit of that highway budget...
And how will people switch to the trains?
Defund the local state DOTs by half and redirect that share of the funding to public transit agencies in the DOTs' respective states.
@@QuarioQuario54321 by... switching to them? idk what exactly ur question is lol. if ppl are offered alternative means of transport that is well designed and competitive with existing options, ppl will migrate to it. look at seattle, which is undergoing a massive transit expansion, that's popular, and well used by commuters.
a small bit of the highway budget is not enough to build train infrastructure
@@trainsandmore2319 Sooo what you are saying, "let's not attract people to trains but rather penalise people for using cars."
.
Following your logic, how about we stop all funding to highways altogether and then herd people it freight carriages cause we can afford so many more freight carriages.
.
Comfort doesn't matter here.
Displaying the amount of people per car is standard for all trains in Switzerland. This really helps picking the right train, time, and waggon
1:57 That is really not the reason why double-deckers slow down passenger flow... The simple fact that more people have to go through the same door does. You could add another cart but that makes the train longer and walking distances bigger. People also tend to wait around the entrance to the platform. Adding more doors speeds up passenger flow but adds complexity and takes space.
And what if that entrance is in many places
It's good for increasing capacity, and for cities like Philly where there's multiple major stops people get off at. Their use by NJ transit into nyc, where probably 90% of riders are ending up, is oddly helped by Penn Station's terrible platforms. Disboarding the train is seldom the bottleneck, the packed stairs and escalators tend to be instead.
Both are true. Stairs do slow down passenger flow. RER trains in Paris that have stairs at their doors like the RER C or D are clearly slower to disembark compared to the almost step-free RER A trains.
@@Joesolo13I’m not sure if it’s the best for Philly as double decker trains have significantly longer dwell times. Which can take a line from 24 to 15 tph when stations don’t have massive amounts of platforms. What Philly needs is frequency, not size
How about a double-decker platform? Fill on two levels, at least as fast as on a single level.
There should still be a stairwell on the train, but just one, only used if one level is crowded so that people can spread out to the other level. Being able to move between levels on the train lets passengers look for seats on both levels.
There is a designation called Train Architect. That is what hooked me
Misleading headline: Wasted time waiting for a designer reveal that never happened. Instead the video is a review of cabin interiors around the world.
There really isn't a "perfect" design of train which will work on all systems. Each train type will have a different design purpose.
Metro trains are designed for maximum capacity as they need to move a lot of people in a city quickly. These trains will have very high door density to get passengers on and off quickly, but some metros function more like suburban railways and others more like a grid network of lines.
Commuter trains are designed for a mix of seating and standing passengers- depending on whether the trains are supposed to run inner or outer suburban services or even regional commuter services, the train design will be different. Inner suburban trains will have fewer seats, more doors and more standing room whilst outer and regional commuter trains will often have more seats.
Intercity trains are designed with the expectation that every passenger will get a seat and prioritise passenger comfort so there will be very little standing room and lots of more spacious seats.
Each system has its own design requirements which is why buying a standardised model of train and slapping it onto random train lines without consideration about what the train needs to do is generally a bad idea.
Here in the US and especially California we need to emphasize the difference in types. For example BART and LA metro both have 50 mile lines. DC’s Silver line is starting to get a bit long…
@@TysonIke BART really is more like a suburban rail system than a metro. It has speeds similar to Australian suburban rail systems with similar stop spacing. LA's stupidly long light rail lines are really emblematic of how bad Metrolink is (bad schedules, stops that are too far apart)
I feel like part of the reason why metro and light rail systems are pushed so far beyond what they're supposed to be used for is because mainline rail isn't able to fill the gap of outer suburban journeys.
Commuter rail systems across the US use loco hauled trains which makes them slow to accelerate and reach top speed, meaning stops need to be placed very far apart so that the trains maintain a good average speed.
Most regional/suburban rail systems across the world use multiple unit trains which accelerate much faster, many of which are able to hit 60mph in under a minute with the fastest doing so in under 30 seconds with 80mph in 50 seconds (metro levels of acceleration but with a much higher top speed than a metro). This means that stations can be placed closer together whilst still maintaining high average speeds. This means that suburban rail systems across the world are able to maintain speeds fast enough to complement a metro whilst still providing good coverage in outer suburban areas, hence the need for very long metro lines is alleviated.
So in most other countries, rather than a 50 mile metro or light rail, a suburban rail system would be built.
I think this is why it’s hard to get a system that tries toto combine both to be designed well. For example the Elizabeth line trains. In my opinion they are designed well but can’t ActiveCit the comfort needed for a full journey and probably aren’t as efficient as a tube train, if it comes to passenger flow, when working through central London.
@@williamhuang8309BART I'd the closest Amercia gets to have S-Bhan style systems besides from Septa and DC Metro.
Great video! Just a slight correction: the R211 shown is actually an R211S, since it runs for the Staten Island Railway (SI), not the R211T which is found on other NYC Subway lines. The R211S, unfortunately, does not have the open gangway feature, which likely could be a result of cost savings, as this also highlights another aspect of railcar design in which different variants of the same type of railcar can be placed into service or purchased for certain lines based on a variety of factors such as engineering design constraints for some lines.
I think maximizing the people standing in the middle 3 carriages or even the middle 5 would be best because that is typically where people embark the quickest and leave for the station's exit. The following 2 can be those seated along the side facing in and the ends of the train passengers facing each other.
What about when the entrance is at the end of the platform?
@@QuarioQuario54321 that isn't as common as the usual layout, and also transit trains are designed in a way that all cars are mostly standing room no matter what, especially on transit systems that require extreme capacity to even keep up with high ridership and not becoming too crowded that required pushers to even fit in
James May thoroughly enjoyed this
james may reference, how lovely to see
US :
more tracks & trains ❎
More roads & cars ✅
Right? The US hardly funds transportations as it is. No way they'll pay for these train designs.
@@jrho8033 And instead do what? Have outsiders design them? Just come up with specs and let the rest be up for interpretation?
Don’t lose hope! Someday we’ll have a transit network that’s good for everyone, I can feel it.
@@machinismus We used to. Our public transit was the envy of the world back in the early 20th century. Then it all got bought up by auto and tire manufacturers and systemically destroyed.
That's a gross oversimplification, of course, but it's essentially what happened.
Impressive design, making commutes more comfortable! 🚄
As a New Yorker, the European trains shown here are straight from science fiction
You said it, even our R211Ts pale in comparison
India needs this asap
This is all good stuff but the most important thing to improve capacity will always be 1. Building more lines, 2. Better signalling to allow more trains to run on existing lines, 3. Better infrastructure to allow longer trains and then 4. More high capacity train design, in that order
Exactly the same thing could be said for highways.
@@markplain2555 Sorry, what? Signalling? Longer trains? That would be a pretty weird highway..
I think longer trains aren’t always the solution for a metro, there’s a limit. Because I imagine longer trains might lengthen the dwell time due to many more doors so more chance of passenger obstruction. Maybe passengers want to enter in a certain carriage to which they may linger on the platform for more time as well.
I find longer trains suit commuter or intercity trains more compared to a metro in which dwell time matters more.
@@JT29501I’ve heard more lanes in highways just lead to more congestion although obviously it’s not as simple as that and not that it doesn’t encourage public transport use which leads to more traffic.
@@Peter-mj6lz It's not really significant enough. Let's say you have 8 car trains, and you want to upgrade to 10 car trains (as happened near me quite recently). You add 2 extra carriages, so essentially one "extra" train in 4. If you are already running with good signalling at metro type frequencies, it might be impossible to add 1 new train for extra 4. However it's doubtful that any extra dwell time (and theoretically there really shouldn't be much, as long as you have plenty of doors and good station layouts that distribute passengers reasonably evenly) will cost as much as that 1 train in 4.
I certainly haven't noticed any extra dwell time from the recent upgrades near me. And the Elizabeth Line, also near me (I'm lucky) has very very long trains and generally gets unloaded and loaded very quickly indeed.
However, I would add I did put it third for a reason - if there is still space to improve frequencies, that is definitely preferable, although potentially more expensive. And obviously a whole new line will provide the most extra capacity of anything, but is also the most expensive.
As a New York City resident, I would opt-in removing more seats for standing room. Most New Yorkers are capable of standing, it really depends on social expectations on allowing elderly/disabled to take a seat (I also believe in making little kids stand as well). We would also implement this type of train on a shorter route that goes through very populated neighborhoods in rush hour, such as the 7 train that goes through Queens to Manhattan.
I remember once the train was so full that people climbed onto the luggage space above the seats and took a nap 🤣🤣
Great video! On many metros, trams and regional trains I've been on it's always interesting to check out the seating, door and overall car layout. You can understand a lot about the type of passengers they are purposed for
Ha! That Heathrow Express train you pay through the nose for is just 5-10 minutes faster than the Elizabeth line. Unless you overslept it's not at all worth the money (not to mention, you may spend 10 minutes in Paddington getting onto the Heathrow Express whereas the Elizabeth line is more easily accessible in other stations, and it runs more frequently).
As an American, here's a great train design:
-Clean
-I don't get stabbed on the platform
-Actually sticks to the schedule
-Goes places I want to go at hours I want to go there
Once we can hit these BASICS maybe we can talk about the actual car design.
Also, WSJ you don't care about commuter trains. No American big business does. There's too much kickback money from the oil and car companies. This video is a joke.
Flip-up chairs seem brilliant to me!
The PPHPD also depends on the average speed of a train. This in turn depends on how often it has to stop. If a train only stopped half of the time, the average speed would increase significantly. In Santiago de Chile, this is successfully practiced during rush hour: a line has trains with different modes:
Mode A: stops at stops 1,2,4,5,7...
Mode B: stops at stops 1,3,4,6,7...
At stops 1, 4 and 7... (i.e. 1+3n with n=1,2,3...) the trains stop in BOTH modes so that people can switch from mode A to B.
This reduces the number of stops by 1/3 because each mode stops at 2 out of 3 stops. With a mode C it would be even more economical:
Mode A: 1, 2, 5, 6, 9...
Mode B: 1, 3, 5, 7, 9...
Mode C: 1, 4, 5, 8, 9...
This reduces the number of stops by 50% because each train only stops at 2 of 4 stations (but the probability of having to change trains increases).
By increasing the average speed, crossing a large city from, for example, far in the south to far in the north is drastically reduced.
Great innovations in train design!
Oshi iri Sama ? I love it!
The director is speaking very business convincing English mixed with French accent. Soo good
Now I have new perspective when I will board a train
This guy should travel once in Mumbai local trains 😂😂
I live in a HOT country (Australia) and I am increasingly angered by companies like Alstom and Bombardier, pushing their pretty trains designed for cooler climates onto us. Our trains used to have poor or no air conditioning, but very good ventilation, and sun protection. Now they are all fully sealed and have huge windows, meaning all the passengers get baked. Also people tend to sweat on hot days so having sealed cars, means the smell is sickening.
Alstom isn’t your government. They present a bid to your government and then the that gov decides to award the bid to based off or cost or other reasons. Blame your government that procured the trains not Alstom. If your government really wanted to they could have asked Alstom to design the trains to meet the climate conditions that exist in your city.
@@cboy0394 Trust me dude, I DO blame the government. This video though is about the train designers and not the government. You must also consider that the manufacturers always offer cookie cutter, off the shelf designs with a "One Size Fits All" attitude. All the various trains and trams we have are are just the same as the ones in northern Europe, and the only real choice we are given is the interior seating arrangement.
Yes we could get a custom job done, but have you ever priced a 12 seat Mini Cooper? Customization costs big bucks whereas having trains already designed for hot climates only adds a small amount.
As you said, "They present a bid to your government..." but all the companies present their designs on a Take It Or Leave It basis.
I feel you. Indonesia also had this problem with old Japanese trains.
Thankfully, the train company took the matter into their own hands and retrofitted the trains with blasting ACs.
Now, sometimes it gets too cold on the train. Especially when it is empty late at night.
Speak for yourself. I live in a COOL part of Australia where snow settles in winter. Just because you live somewhere with an intolerable climate like Queensland, does not mean you speak for the entire continent.
It is your government's fault but Siemens kind of did the same thing to Amtrak. Siemens essentially refused to design a more comfortable seat and just stuck in their off the shelf European commuter rail seats. Even though the trains they are designing are aften used for 5 hour journeys.
The perfect commute is home office, so I don’t have to deal with a train, or a commute.
Fun fact: Top 23 world’s busiest train stations are all located in Japan.
Good information, thanks.
Very interesting!
I think signalling and station design plays as big or even a bigger role in preventing overcrowding.
Someday, American rail passengers will learn that waiting for departing passengers to exit the train is far more efficient than trying to push exiting passengers backwards. That slows up rail service a lot in Los Angeles.
The best architecture is the Japanese type. It works from 1963 and the 103 series.
one level, 3/4 doors per side, 20m long, 2.95m wide, but curved at 3.05m wide, longitudinal seats, no strollers, no bikes and other bulky objects, reserved places for people with difficulties at the end of the cars, multiple support bars, long trainsets and medium to high frequency.
Trains that are too short risk limiting capacity and appeal!! Who wants to get on trains that are too crowded as soon as the line opens!!!
They manage to have lines with 150% load without too many problems, Japanese discipline also has a big part in this success.
Otherwise nice French accent..
They missed one very important, yet glaring piece to this conundrum.
All trains, whether train, tube, tram, metro, subway, etc have doors on both sides of the carriage, yet you can only enter or exit on one side. On most, at Canary Wharf station in London, you can enter/exit the tube on both sides, essentially crossing eastbound and westbound journeys without having to navigate stairs. This is rare.
If a whole line or system, had both left and right doors open at every station, this should make it easier and faster. You could even play around with it. Have customers enter on the right and exit on the left.
Sometimes humans do amazing things, others times you humans are as dumb as door nails!
Actually, its not entirely the fault of humans, since most stations are old, and to include a new platform is most times difficult.
I think Hannover has done one of the best jobs with their TW3000 commuter train
Sydney trains are the best
Honolulu has a brand new HART System. It only goes from Kapolei to Aloha Stadium for now, the rest of the line will go all the way into Honolulu, but only stops at Ala Moana Blvd. it should to all the way to Waikiki to help visitors go to and from HNL and back. UH Manoa would be ideal, but of course funding and budget is always the issue in Hawaii with limited resources. Someone needs to come to Hawaii and help out a growing population on the Leeward side of Oahu. Honolulu can be a world class city, if the infrastructure is up to par with the rest of the US.
This is why NYCT 1 Train is better for commuters than the 4/5, pole is “20 centimeters” off center thereby keeping the doorway from being blocked by standing passengers. 4/5 is a total pain to exit/enter at express stops Union Sq./14th and GCT
It’s the older carriages with the better design 😂
Just design a train that has no ending.
It would really helped if people didn't bring Godzilla bikes onto trains, and brought folding bicycles instead
01:58 those red doors reminds me of Belgian's train
Realistically the train layout depends on the capacity target of the train. In a commuter train you tend to see transversal seating simply because you sacrifice some standing capacity in exchange for extra comfort in longer journeys. In metros, you generally have longitudinal because most people aren't staying for a long while. From experience, these come given by transit authorities.
Oh and 4:44 is just false. If a train is cramped, it's because the system lacks capacity. There is only so much capacity you can squeeze from design decisions within the carriages themselves. The actual issue most likely lies in frequency which can be improved (resignalling to a CBTC system being a solution), or trains being too short (lengthening platforms being the solution). If you still lack capacity, sorry mate you're gonna have to build a new line paralleling the overcrowded existing one, like Paris did with 14 or London with the Lizzy.
The WSJ really hammering home the point that (according to them), the only purpose of a train is to make money. PLEASE NOBODY MAKE A PASSENGER TRAIN SERVICE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE PEOPLE PLEASE GOD PLEASE.
Solution : Use Quantum Computers to find the perfect setting
Shame there was no mention of accessibility in this, since public transport is a nightmare for disabled people
Living in hamilton travelling to Toronto, 20 yrs. ago 55 minutes train. Today, 55 minutes train. If you want to get people out of cars stop using 1900 technology.
Paying customers 😊
Does someone at the Journal realize they just compared cruise ships on rails to subway trains? While it is nice the see the overall design process (most of this I already knew I took classes for this in college, but always nice to see again), that's not a fair comparison to crowd control. Especially when one of those trains has a ticket price of over a thousand dollars per person.
All algorithms work until you come to Delhi metro 😂😂
MORE TRAINZ
All this train stuff is fantastice the problem is the people who catch them trains. I am really sick-n-tired of being harrassed on trains.
ah yes my country, just as expected
I thought this was going to be about taking advantage of the stops to have some sort of revenue from real state owned and rented by the subway-train operators. Also, not exaggerating when building the train platforms, making it bigger than it needs to be.
time punctuality both sub and above is important too and invest in automation so no more driver shortage even in late night and week end
Those poles in the door area look like a nightmare to maneuver around if you are in a wheelchair or have a stroller or walking aid.
And the crowds are not?
30 years yeah right some of the rolling stock from Mexico City is from the 70’s
In my city, train frequency = every 90 seconds.
What about people who stand in front of the doors and block people from coming out of the train? is there solution with design? 😅
Image IF America had cross country train rides where youd basically stay in your own room and then go eat in the dining room in the morning, stuff like that. I would pay sooo much moeny to do that
* Prods you to check out Amtrack sleeper trains of today
They're slow and quite expensive though which is why not many people take them
If you pay cose attention to the video, you will notice that they are not actualy giving us a perfect train layout like the title claims
I don't know why we don't have double-decker platforms. I don't know why we don't use both sides of the carriage, with an entry side and an exit side. I don't know why we don't see intermodal cross platform transfers. Why, in short, are vehicle architecture and station architecture treated as unrelated?
The AI camera system detects fat people?
Mske them more frequent. Instead of waiting 10 mins. Wait 5. Or 2. Guess what? No overcrowding.
So who built the current generation of commuter trains...pastry chefs?
Well, well, well, what’s the WSJ up to now? 🙄
It’s okay to have trains as long as we privatize and make the trips cost twice as much.
How about subsidizing better infrastructure and architecture with government subsidizes like the ones going to the oil and automobile industries instead of creating more classes?
so he just made polish warsaw metro
The infrastructure needs to be replaced to have bigger trains
Ok, where does the transit agency get the $20b needed to extend each station to fit 2 more cars? It's better to use that money to build another line, which could also connect new destinations.
Sensors should be installed so when a certain capacity is reached, an alarm will sound and the doors close.
Let's not forget routes, freight issues, derailments, etc. The paths to glory be different (europe vs murica). For reference, I grew up on the Metra system in Chicagoland which allowed my affinity for trains as a youngin to learn random stuff at their transportation hubs and local railyards. This is gross lol
where can i buy that elizabeth line model on your desk
Make smaller people....
Crazy that the WSJ is talking mass transit. Political realignment on transit issue ?
Alstom trains in France (both for SNCF and RATP) are so ugly design-wise ! The Japanese, Korean and Chinese ones are way more beautiful
Chicago Union station is the worst and the new deployment plan is even worst!!!!!
How are charging ports some luxury these days? Even my local buses are rolling out usb charging ports and it's owned by the council.
double deck trains like london has double deck bus
Hard to fix human behaviour - too many got on and immediately stop.
Misleading title.
decades old tunnels? try centuries
So why in Paris does the RER B train which runs between CDG Airport and Orly Airport have no space for luggage? Because it serves more local ipassengers in central Paris. Time for a dedicated train/s.
There are spaces for luggage on RER B trains.
But you're right, there will be a new dedicated train non-stop from Paris Gare de l'Est station, but also metro line 17.
Also, RER B will receive new trains in the coming years with a lot more room.
They'll be mostly double-decker, alternating single and double deck cars, larger internal platforms, etc.
What about this make the individual train cars smaller, with their own wheels, and tracks, and have them go to everyone’s front door..
Main issue with those systems is that it's basically impossible to make them carry enough people/hour to not cause enormous jams
What, you brought over somebody from Japan?
You work for 40yrs to have $1M in your
retirement, meanwhile some people are putting just $10K in a meme coin from just a few months ago and now they are multimillionaires.
I want to compliment you, you have said it all. I am a little business owner and I really want to expand my business to the next level by making myself an investor but I really don't know how to go about it..
imagine invsting in Btcoin earlier.... You could have been a multi millionaire precently
Assets that can make you rich
FX
Btcoin
Stocks
Gold
Real estate
You're right but a lot of people remain poor due to ignorance
Not because of ignorance, it's because of the high rate of unprofessionalism in the cypto market
I'm French and how you can interview a french person and never mention any french metro ???
french metro is garbage
What a horrible way to close this video out. More people in cities just means that there needs to be more public transport options. It doesn't need to be more crowded, that's just a political choice.
free country venmo as much money you want from your personal funds into the federal or state funding, recycle cars
This is a bit of a nonsense item. You compare metro’s with trains. Totally different ballgame. I never had any horrible experiences on trains. Not in Japan, not in China, not in the Netherlands. But metros are horrible everywhere during rush hours.
What about using both sides of the train to board and deboard the train?
That's actually a thing! The word is "Spanish solution"
Alstom is pure garbage
Not sure what systems they are talking about here, but their design considerations certainly do not apply to the NYC system. There, the placement of poles, benches, etc has nearly no impact on rider comfort or economics. It sounds like the designers here have never even ridden a NYC subway! The only design change in the last several decades that has had any significant impact is the elimination of seats, which is truly regrettable. I do not see any benefit to it whatsoever, not even placing a bike, which usually takes up the entire width of the car.
Some trains have had misaligned doors in an attempt to force people to move out but they never realized the poles are always near the doors. On the B division, they thought making the cars longer and having fewer cars over the same length would be more efficient but they ended up reducing the number of doors per train slowing them down, and then went back to the shorter cars again.
They do apply to NYC and all other systems, with variations, of course.
But there's no exceptionalism, only trends where this or that will work a bit better than here or there.
NYC isn't more special than many other systems, and these considerations still apply quite universally.
Just like the open gangway design is universally more efficient and better for safety than closed car design, despite what passengers of this or that transit system may think.
There can be local preferences, and slight local variations but that's it.
This is why Sydney's trains are so terrible. The double decker trains delay people getting on and off (particularly because of the people who just stand their confused before deciding to go up or down).
Only two doors at opposite ends of a carriage means a big increase in "dwell times" at stations.