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

  • May 11, 2012
    Funding shortfall for US Interstate upgrades
    Andrew Bardin Williams investigates tolling on the federal Interstate system as maintenance and upgrade requirements increasingly outpace funding The I-95 corridor through North Carolina is one of the most heavy trafficked interstates in the US, seeing upwards of 46,000 vehicles per day in some stretches-and North Carolina’s Department of Transportation (NCDOT) estimates this number will to rise to 98,000 vehicles per day by 2040. Along with the rest of the federal interstate system, the North Carolina str
  • October 29, 2014
    Opticom gives priority to Memphis Transit’s buses
    A new traffic signal priority system is helping bus passengers in Memphis reach their destinations on time.
  • February 2, 2012
    FLIPPER - improving the provision of flexible transport services
    John Nelson and Brian Masson, Centre for Transport Research, University of Aberdeen, UK, describe the FLIPPER initiative which is intended to improve the provision of flexible transport services
  • November 21, 2012
    Transportation hub the centre of sustainable urban development
    A marriage of transit, technology and culture is taking shape in Minneapolis, with ITS systems vital to hopes for a sustainable development centred on a hub of public transportation. Construction started in July this year on ‘The Interchange’ – a station in the Midwest US city of Minneapolis claimed as the most spectacular expression yet of the fast-spreading North American concept of transit-oriented development (TOD). Due for completion in 2014, the Interchange is designed as a multi-modal public transpor