Sitting at Miami Airport waiting for my
flight to San Juan in Puerto Rico, I'm looking back on my 1-day
exploration of the Miami urban rail system, which consists of the
Metromover and Metrorail, the latter with just one line basically, so
it is easy to do in just one day.
Officially, since the Airport branch
opened, there are two colour-coded Metrorail lines, and that's also
implemented, there is a colour board in the front window, which also
says 'Orange Line' or 'Green Line' in letters for those who cannot
clearly distinguish colours. It is also announced by the drivers
continuously so you can always be sure you're on the right train. On
the platforms, however, an automatic voice only says 'a northbound
train is approaching', so it seems this system has not been upgraded
since the branch was added. There are next-train indicators, like TV
screens, again not too well placed, but with a split screen left for
southbound and right for northbound, and trains have a colour dot
next to them. And this is the first system in the U.S. that I
remember has waiting times with seconds, not just minutes. They
display the next trains almost steadily, although short messages are
mixed in, too, but for adverts, etc, a separate parallel screen is in
charge. All in all, the service is o.k., trains run every 5 minutes
on the shared section, except during midday off-peak, they run only
every 7.5 minutes, which means every 15 minutes on the northern
branches. During off-peak, the system is not really busy, you can
always get a seat if you wish. I did, although I didn't like those
soft worn-out plastic seats. What's nice, you can sit at the very
front of the train and have a great look outside the front window to
watch the route. And you can observe the driver, to see whether the
train is operated manually or in ATO mode. While the latter is
well-tuned and runs quite smoothly, the manual operation I observed
on some rides was a bit unpleasant as it seems the driver cannot
adjust the speed gradually, but has to select set speed steps, so he
continously has to change 'gear' (I just detect myself referring to
the driver as 'he', but in Miami I indeed just saw male drivers!).
The worst part of the Metrorail system is that it is dated and needs
some overhaul. The track is a bit worn-out, but especially the train
wheels are below acceptable. I guess that they stopped maintaining
them when they ordered new cars in 2012. But having ordered them from
Ansaldobreda (who knows why?) the old trains may remain in service
much longer than expected... (sorry, but Ansaldobreda's record is
fairly bad, except for the automatic metro system they designed for
Copenhagen, Milan M5 and Brescia). On the train fronts I missed the
original 'M' logo they used to have, now it's just black, but the
logo made them distinctive Miami (the same trains are also in
operation in Baltimore).
The Metrorail stations are o.k., no
exciting architecture or artwork and rather uniform, but generally in
a good shape. Like in Atlanta, you need your ticket to get out of the
system despite the flat fare system. The only one I remember with a
bit of arty decoration is Palmetto, the only station on the first
extension of the system:
The Airport station is quite impressive with
its huge vault, the Tri-Rail/Amtrak station next to it still hasn't
opened. The weak point here is that everybody has to transfer to the
people mover to actually get to the airport. While this is often a
good solution when the people mover delivers passengers to different
terminals, in Miami the MIA Mover drops everybody at a single station
at the airport, and from there you still have to walk a while to get
to your terminal. And while at the rail station, exiting and boarding
people mover passengers were wisely separated, at the terminal
station hords of waiting passengers with luggage obstruct the path
for those getting of the train. So, wouldn't it have been wiser to
extend Metrorail directly into the airport. Sure, the people mover
also serves as a link between the terminal and the rental car
station, which is in fact a really huge vestibule, much larger than
most train or metro stations in the U.S., and that says a lot about
the Americans' travel preferences! So, although the journey from
downtown to the Airport is just 15 minutes and thus even shorter than
in Atlanta, you need to add at least 10 minutes to walk to and ride
the people mover and then walk to the terminal, whereas in Atlanta
the rail station is next to the main terminal.
The only major interchange station,
that at Government Center where the Metromover runs two levels below
Metrorail, is not ideally laid out. There are some escalators missing
so they switch the direction according to the main flux of
passengers. While this is a logical thing to do, the alternative
route is via a hidden lift or rather steep stairs. This interchange
was laid out for a second Metrorail line that would cross on the
intermediate level. At least part of its platforms plus concrete
sleepers are visible on that level, rather ugly and useless anyway,
so why don't they use that space for something else? There is no talk
about using it for a transit line in the foreseeable future. It
really lies there like a ghost station.
I bought a one-day pass for $5.65, but
actually paid $7.65 because I purchased an EASY smartcard. Later I
found out that like for single tickets you can also get a 1-day pass
on a single-use paper smartcard! Anyway, I have started collecting
these smartcards now. Otherwise the ticket vending machines were easy
to handle and there were plenty of them available. On buses you can
still pay cash also.
The downtown Metromover was actually a
positive experience, especially after the ridiculous system in
Jacksonville. The trains run pretty frequently and are heavily used.
Certainly the fact that riding them is free helps to increase
ridership. While the Inner Loop line always ran with two cars, the
branches vary. I think the southern Brickell loop always had a single
car, whereas the northern Omni Loop had one or two cars, without any
obvious logic behind that. I think this branch should always have two
cars as it does get very busy with people changing to and from buses
at the Adrienne Arsht Center stop. But even the southern leg to the
Financial Center was well used during late morning hours when you
would expect all these office workers to be in their towers. The ride
between the junction down that leg is pretty spectacular as the
trains climb up steeply to Fifth Street station which lies high above
the canal, feels like being on the 6th or 8th floor of a building,
and then steep down again. The trains move swiftly, but station
dwelling is sometimes a bit too long. It was surprising to see that
the new trains have only two seats per car, which says a lot about
its popularity, although I think they should add a few more and run
double sets instead.
The Metromover stations are proper
stations, some high above street level, and unfortunately often only
with one escalator, so if this doesn't run in the direction you want,
you may have to climb rather steep steps up or down. All stations are
equipped with lifts, though. I liked the vaulted roof in some, whose
structure reminded me of the Washington DC Metro, though in short, of
course.
This morning, however, the Metromover
let me down when I wanted to take it to travel towards the airport,
as the entire system was closed down, no idea why. So I had to walk
across downtown to take Metrorail at Government Center.
In Miami, I was successful in getting a
full system map, a Metromover leaflet and a Metrorail timetable! At
the Airport they have a staffed office, as well as at Government
Center, which is very positive, because this is where one would look
for it first. At other stations, there are bus timetables at the
entrance, and often with a security guard sitting there, one of them
also handed out a full system map they have in cupboards. On the
platforms, full system maps and a downtown extract is also displayed,
but I didn't see any neighbourhood maps.
Miami-Dade Transit's online trip
planner is complete crap. For once, I wanted to prepare a trip
properly, knowing that at the busstop it might be difficult to find
out where which bus goes, so I did it before on my netbook. I entered
two clearly defined addresses to get an answer that no connections
were available! Then I clicked on the busstop icon in Google Maps and
found out that bus 119 runs frequently from North Beach (where I had
to drop my car) to downtown Miami. The Tranist website even showed me
a timetable for this line. But when I was out there, the busstops
didn't show a bus 119. Instead there was line S going downtown, they
must have changed that recently. Anyway, this bus actually runs past
my hotel! So why was the system not able to calculate a 1-seat ride?
Absolutely useless! Even if it required 3 transfers, the system
should be able to provide that information. Unfortunately many
transit agencies use only Google Transit, which is a nice service,
but too many errors, and if you tell them, they can't change it,
because apparently on the transit agencies can make changes. And
transit agencies employ lots of incompetent people, unfortunately...
Next stop: San Juan
LINKS
Miami at UrbanRail.Net
No Tri-Rail?
ReplyDeleteThere is not much I can write about Tri-Rail, I only saw it at the Metrorail/Tri-Rail interchange, which is quite a convenient station, actually the Tri-Rail part if nicer, and that it runs regularly throughout the day. Major flaw, of course, it does not reach the city centre, so commuters have to add another 20 minutes to get downtown.
Deletethey actually did have more seats on the metromover and removed all but one pretty recently. since it is free and air conditioned, homeless liked to ride....and ride...and ride......
ReplyDeleteThank you for your publication!
ReplyDeleteMy trip in all metrorail and metromover stations Miami (in Russian):
http://infojd.ru/dop/poezdka2014us-2.html
Resulting from this U.S. trip, I have now published the third book in my U.S. series, namely "Subways & Light Rail in the U.S.A. - Vol. 3: Midwest & South", for more info see
ReplyDeletehttp://www.robert-schwandl.de/usa/midwest-south/
Yes, Google Transit is worse than bad. In Catania, both the Circumetnea and the Metro was not shown, as well as the whole of Turkish urban rail! In istanbul, it did not even logically make sense. Even if the M1b branch opened the same time as M3, it only shows the M3. And the T4 extension that opened back in 2009 is not shown. And I could go on, but it would be too long.
ReplyDeleteBut keep in mind that Google Transit is not a Google content, but a tool local transport operators can use and need to keep updated, so if a city does not feature Google Transit properly it is not Google's fault, but the local transport operator's.
ReplyDelete