In Praise of the Short Bus
I live downtown, and have fairly established travel patterns, so I don’t try out new bus routes often. Today, however, in light of the snow, I tried a couple new routes: the C21 and C23.
Normally this wouldn’t merit mention, but these buses are a relatively new addition (for me at least) to downtown Vancouver.
They’re short buses, and they’re the right size solution for the problem. I really appreciate that Vancouver’s transit service, Translink, has obviously done some thinking and analysis on these routes. They were traditionally under (or un) served, but didn’t necessarily merit a full size bus. I know it’s hardly a stroke of genius, but it’d be easy to imagine them throwing a big diesel bus at the problem when all it neede was a nimble short bus.
I see that Translink calls them ‘community shuttle minibuses’:
For over seven years, TransLink’s distinctive blue-and-yellow Community Shuttle minibuses have been providing more convenient transportation choices for people who require neighbourhood-friendly service on less busy residential routes. On September 4, new Community Shuttle routes will begin service in Tsawwassen and at UBC, and two popular downtown Vancouver shuttle routes will be extended to Main Street SkyTrain Station.
They’ve been around for seven years, but have only recently extended the routes I mentioned.
