Skip to main content

PB to undertake Vancouver transit improvement project

C-Tran, the Vancouver, Washington public transit agency, has awarded a contract to Parsons Brinckerhoff for a transit improvement project that will consider bus rapid transit (BRT) options.
March 26, 2012 Read time: 1 min
4281 C-Tran, the Vancouver, Washington public transit agency, has awarded a contract to 4089 Parsons Brinckerhoff for a transit improvement project that will consider bus rapid transit (BRT) options.

The project involves performing an alternatives analysis (AA) using the Federal Transportation Administration’s Small Starts process to develop and evaluate a range of  BRT build alternatives, including guideway treatments, station locations and concepts, potential new park-and-ride facilities, sizing and locations. In addition, the PB team is responsible for community outreach, conceptual engineering of the alternatives and station areas, and environmental analysis.

Bus service along the route being evaluated, the Fourth Plain Corridor, carries 27 per cent of C-Tran’s total ridership.  However, schedule reliability is consistently compromised due to localised traffic congestion, closely spaced stops and increasing numbers of people using mobility devices. It is not uncommon to see riders standing on the bus, and even “bus bunching” due to the challenge of maintaining schedule reliability. With BRT operating with priority treatment and, possibly, in some form of a fixed guideway along the corridor, C-Tran believes that most, if not all, of these challenges could be successfully addressed, and attract new riders to the system.

Related Content

  • Mounting benefits of dynamic tolling project
    January 30, 2012
    Wisconsin's four-year HOT lanes pilot project, launched in May 2008, cost US$18.8 million to construct. Halfway into the project, which uses variably priced, or dynamic, tolling to improve highway efficiency, the benefits are mounting. The problem was obvious, and frustrating, to anyone who ever sat in bumper-to-bumper traffic on State Route 167 and watched a lone car whiz by every 20 seconds or so in the carpool lane. But for planners at the Washington State Department of Transportation, the conundrum was
  • Need for standardisation of toll classes
    March 2, 2012
    In a previous article Bob Lees of Idris Technology Ltd looked at the appropriateness of toll classes in relation to all-electronic toll fee collection. Here, he looks at how addressing classification standardisation could avoid downstream aggravation and cost
  • Engineering firm unveils I-70 improvement project
    July 29, 2013
    International engineering firm Parsons Corp has unveiled its proposed US$3.5 billion project to ease traffic on Interstate 70 through the central mountains in Eagle County, Colorado. Parsons had submitted an unsolicited proposal to Colorado Department of Transportation in 2011. The three-phase project would include tolled express lanes and a bus rapid transit system and be completed as soon as 2021. The express lanes would be reversible to accommodate peak traffic flows to and from the mountains. The proje
  • Making the case for ALPR in enforcement
    February 2, 2012
    Federal Signal's Brian Shockley uses examples from around the world to make the case for the greater use of automatic license plate recognition technology in the US. It is time, he says, to consider the possibilities of a national network and the use of average speed enforcement