adron posted on January 30, 2010 11:50

Portland Streetcar on Lovejoy.

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Posted in: Pictures  Tags: , ,
adron posted on November 26, 2009 22:49

Just a few photos of my coffee run from today.  I was out of grounds, so off to the streetcar.

Victory, Colombia El Jordan.  Excellent beans!

The streetcar zooms into focus, and yes, it was actually zooming up to the stop relative to its normal speed.

Clarity of the drops on the window with the haze of the world beyond.

Twisting around the corner, the front leads the rear of the streetcar.

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We arrived in Phoenix (as you may have noticed from my previous entry, “Phoenix Transit Exploration #fail and #success”.  Our first few days we stayed out close to our friends Jason & Cube so we could help out with and attend their awesome geek wedding (<3 u 2).

The ceremony was an outside ceremony, on a beautiful day with the setting sun off to our backs.  As the sun slowly set, and eventually disappeared we all sat and mingled, enjoying great food at the festivities after the vows were spoken.

Afterwards we all drove off in our paths for the night.  The newly married couple heading off to California in the morning in their Hybrid Honda, Jo and I off to our last night in the suburban hotel, and others in various directions.

Jo and I rose early morning today, Sunday ~ day 9 of our adventure, and went about some after wedding errands and wandering about southeastern suburban Gilbert, Mesa, and Phoenix.  After running those errands we headed with our rental POS Chevrolet Cobalt to the urban core of Phoenix to check in at the San Carlos Hotel.

Out Of The Burbs’

Once we checked into the San Carlos Hotel we headed back for our last suburban excursion in the ole’ rent a car.  Off to 16 miles south of downtown to check out a Brazilian Grill.  There we met Aendenne and her son, Cyrus for a bit o’ meat, tasty bits, and dessert!  Some of the meat was spot on, some of it was off a bit.  The desserts pleased all at the table.  :) 

Aendenne brought up some of the positive Phoenix points (as Jo and I are both having a time of this perpetual sun thing bearing down, and the suburbia – well, we’ll just get over that later).  One of the positives is the eternally consistent weather.  The other is when it does storm, it is awesome and epic, something that is often missed in Portland – being there are no actual storms of any sort.  Even the things Portland calls storms are merely a bit heavier rain or heaven forbid, one of the rare snow flurries (that happen maybe every 2-4 years).

Afterwards we parted ways with our farewells for the day.  I hope to make a trip out this way again soon and hang out with all.  It is really good to see friends like this.  Aendenne then headed off to do what I’m usually doing, more coding & more work!  For once I was actually heading off to just chill.

No Jo and I are downtown, and we’ve taken a bit of a zonk, and now are ready for our Sunday afternoon adventure to find something to swim in since we have a rooftop pool (oh yeah, rockerz!)   All that, with light rail at our very doorstep to lead us off to Lux, Breakfast, and the other adventures we’ll have in Phoenix.  So with that I’m off, and more to come later.

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Adron posted on October 1, 2009 15:41

I wanted to take the #136 north on Gilbert, transfer to the #40, and then transfer to the light rail.  I studied the schedule for the #136 and could not determine when it would arrive near where I was staying.  I would have been happy to just go and wait for it if the bus arrival times where every 15 minutes, but the frequency was 30 minutes.  Strangely I almost went to wait for 30 minutes considering the temperature at 10:30am was an awesome 72 or so degrees.  That temperature however wouldn’t last long, and since I’m rather sun intolerant, I decided a car was unfortunately in order.

I got a ride from Jo’s soon to be married friend Cubers (pronounced “CUBE-ERZ”) to Enterprise Rent-a-Car and picked up a POS automobile.  I then drove directly to the nearest light rail transit park & ride and ditched the POS Chevrolet Cobalt.  That was the end of that turmoil, I could now focus on life, people, architecture, and my surroundings instead of driving.  With the car ditched I walked myself through the expanse of parking spots, filled with automobiles.  Through the parked buses, one a BRT oriented ride, one a normal hybrid bus, and then onto the platform where an LRV set awaited my embarking.

The Phoenix Bus System Fails but the Light Rail Rules

I’m going to clause this next section with my assumptions, thoughts, and ideas about Phoenix.  I figured it was a right leaning, socialistically auto transport oriented catastrophe of pavement ala Los Angeles.  I assumed that there would be no real density, and the downtown would be a corpse with partially sullen people.  I thought the light rail would be at 20-30% occupancy even though I had read the ridership statistics.  I thought all these things, how could this famously inefficient city harbor an intelligent process of zoning and growth.  How could mile long blocks, as inhumane as that is, allow for dense development, beautiful architecture, and above all – intelligently operated and built transit?

Please excuse my excursion in vulgarity, but holy shit did I just get sideswiped into a new consciousness.  Thank you Phoenix.

Mesa, Gilbert, and Bulldozing

I boarded in Mesa.  In my previously stated stereotype of Phoenix.  Mesa, is simply …  well, most of it should just be bulldozed.  Same with Gilbert.  Probably a lot of the outlying suburbs.  These areas are expanses of non-communication, human un-involvement, a faceless expanse of human development without any humans.  Sure, there were plenty of people around, but they were hiding in their cars, in their homes, and away from any actual community.  The sprawl was beyond destructive to the surroundings, but to any human being with a soul that desired community, life, culture, ideas, thoughts, or other elements it was not the place to be.  I’m sure there are some in the burbs’ that would argue this, but sit me down with them and they’d walk away either realizing this and a high likelihood of planning to move inwards toward the city.  Simply put, the surrounding suburbs are a dirge.  Pure death of the soul, no authenticity, no art, no originality.  The suburbs here are the archetype of American mindlessness, allowing corporatism to feed us the majority of our thought, the grand slice of our ideas, from our religion to our diets.

But this ended within just a few stops on the light rail system.  By the third stop the train was full of human beings.  Smiling, some talking to each other, checking their phones for the latest text or E-mail.  The train was primarily college students, young and beautiful.  There were a few people heading to work or other errands, but mostly college students at this time.

By the fifth and sixth stops the train was even more packed.  Even once we reached ASU and unloaded a ton of people, a ton more got on.  We kept rolling at a good speed down the center street alignment.  In about 10 minutes we where downtown, rolling through the streets with cars and people everywhere.  Strangely though, and this is where my idea of Phoenix rapidly started to change.  I thought to myself, wow, “this is enlightening”.

There were people wandering around outside heading for lunch, EVERYWHERE.  This of course is just one test of a city, a good lunch crowd.  I also realized that citizens, regular ordinary citizens, were walking around with their second amendment rights squarely planted in armaments upon holsters on their hips.  Unfortunately for the staunchly anti-gun blue crowd nobody was gunning down each other – hmmm, the twisted irony of that.  On the note of the staunchly anti-transit red crowd, which I thought polluted Phoenix too, the transit was indeed full of riders and even the bus stops garnered decent numbers of people waiting for a ride.  I was, being the Libertarian middle of the road advocate that I am, euphoric to see high transit ridership and armed, proud, happy citizens all over the place.

American Citizens in Phoenix

Speaking of Phoenix citizens, I honestly thought there would be much more grumbling and aggression.  In the suburbs it seemed that this might just be the case.  I saw 3 arguments taking place, heard about a botched robbery and the robber being shot, and other various forms of aggressive crimes.  But here I was downtown being greeted by complete strangers as I walked the sidewalks.  At first I figured it was the camera, so to see I took it off and stowed it in the backpack – but it ALL continued.  People, in full honesty, were greeting me with hellos.  Of course not every single person, but a solid 2 dozen people greeted me with hellos and smiles.  I was, shall I say shocked.  I had not seen this in any city except Portland.  But really, most American cities do seem to be picking up this spirit of camaraderie among each other.  I have to admit, that it has improved even more amid Obama being elected.  His victory truly has made an impact in city life, just by the air of change.  Regardless of what is functionally occurring with the administration, his presence versus Bushy Boys presence has changed the attitudes of millions of Americans.  Phoenix seems to be no exception, except that it has bucked my idea by exponential degrees.

Sandwich Factory

I jumped into the sandwich factory and got an excellent New Yorker Sandwich.  The shop had a great attitude (and armed employees also), and just gave me even more of an exuberant boost.  I gave Tony (of Lightrailblogger Fame) a call, got popped into voice mail.  I then tried to give my coworker from a job in another land, Aendenne a call, but my phone ceased to cooperate for a moment.  After about 15 minutes though Tony txted me back and we had a short txting exchange, which ended with me asking where a good wifi establishment, preferably with coffee, would be.  He pointed me to Lux.

LuxCommunityCoffee - Art

I mapped Lux on my iPhone and found it without much effort.  I fortunately knew where the light rail went, because I looked at the map and hit the “transit button” which failed to work.  I checked and came to the unfortunate conclusion that Valley Metro has not provided their transit information to Google.  I had a message for Valley Metro, GET YOUR INFORMATION TO GOOGLE!  Even without the transit directions I knew where it was, walked over to the light rail and checked the station stops.  A few stops north would land me almost at the front door of Lux.  An LRV arrived and off I went for a coffee surge and some electricity for my montage of devices.

I arrived, and was puzzled at first where Lux was, but then in short order with a tip from Tony, realized the located and stepped inside.  At first, walking into Lux was disorienting because of the darker lighting compared to the excessive sun outside.  My eyes adjusted and I moved forward in better clarity.  Stepping up to the bar I realized there was a roasting machine in the back.  Absolutely a good sign for coffee of credibility.  I got a smile on my face while I set my pack down beside the bar.  I ordered an ice mocha, figuring it would be a good default to jump into after the heat.

The girl at the counter asked, “want whip cream” to which I replied, “no thanks.”  She then got a sad puppy look like I’d hurt her feeling, which she then told me kindly, “we make the whip cream home made…”, to which I quickly changed my tune.  I received my mocha and must say, very tasty whip cream.  The mocha was good too, with a solid rich chocolate flavor and a slight bit of espresso bite.  I’d suggest one.

Lux was pretty packed when I got there, with only 3 seats empty in the whole place.  I was able to snag one after inquiring with one of the beautiful people seated aside me, “may I snag this seat?” to which I received a reply of “oh no, please do” from the young lady seated there.  I took my pack and set it aside, pulled forth my camera, laptop, iPhone, and all requisite cords to plug em’ all up and get juiced back to full batteries.  The pretty gal aside me plugged in my gadgetry for me, since I was across from the plug.  With the zappy electric flow going I commenced upon completion of this blog entry.

Needless to say, if you haven’t been to Lux and live in Phoenix, you should probably go.  You might kick yourself for not having been, especially if you actually like coffee of the higher quality (i.e. Not Starbucks burnt roasts & sugar induced comas).

The Ride to Lux, Light Rail Style

As I stood upon the LRV rolling north out of the heart of downtown Phoenix, I marveled at a number of things.  One of those things was the smoothness of the ride.  Because of the straightness of the alignment, the LRV could really scoot and still sustain a smooth ride unlike some of the twisting, turning, and raised embankments the LRVs in Portland and Seattle ride along.  I’ve come to find that the best riding light rail is planted firmly in cement along straight corridors.  The ride was absolutely chill, I dug it.

The second thing that outright shocked me was the level of development along the light rail.  Of course some was pre-existing and some is new.  But much of the pre-existing has now become transit oriented development (TOD), and garnered options to the lifestyle that being TOD provides.  There where shops, businesses, and massive apartment, condo, and other living complexes along this northern branch.  Every inch of what I had seen so far along the light rail line was in good maintenance, and the entire line tended to run through areas where the buildings where beautiful.  At least in the facade of beauty that many buildings exist hidden inside of.  This level of development continued extensively with only a couple blocks along that line being undeveloped or under-developed.

The other notable thing I noticed, was the continuation of people riding on the light rail.  Not just old, or poor, but everybody.  There was an older guy in a suit, a 30ish old suited man, some young kids in the tweens, some young ladies carrying on about some cute guy toward the middle of the car, probably in their early twenties, and a few single people interspersed in age range, lifestyles.  Also stood gazing into the distance a skate boarder, pondering what no one really knows, or possibly nothing at all.  One thing in common among all of us, was that everyone on the train was relaxed, chilled out, unlike the drivers I had seen earlier in the day in Mesa & Gilbert.

Packed to Crush Capacity

My last comment in this entry, is that while I sat in the wonderful air conditioned space of Lux.  I sat there watching each light rail vehicle make its way by.  When I got off and entered Lux around 1:30pm the trains going by were at about 95% seated occupancy.  By 2:15pm the trains coming by had 100% seated occupancy and had 10-20% standing occupancy.  By 3:15pm the trains coming by had reached 90% of crush capacity.  Each LRV set was going by with approximately 190-200 people each.

I’ll have a lot more to say regarding Phoenix, the architecture, design, zoning, layout of the city, and much more.  But for now, I bid the intertubez farewell for a bit and am off to wander the line a bit more.  This last photo I depart with is a shot of the city from the Lux Light Rail Station.

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adron posted on July 9, 2009 00:01

Today I got to take a preview ride on the new mall on one of the new MAX LRVs.  Here are a few of my initial observations.

Observations

The new MAX LRVs are wicked smooth riding.  The braking, seating positions, and the rear (middle?) bubble positions are awesome.  They make for some great views from the ride.  In addition to the seating and better braking for a smoother ride, when sitting near the front or rear one can actually see out of the cab now!  So seeing where one is going or has been when in those seating positions is possible.  This just strikes me as a rather awesome new feature.  I like to be able to see out the front of the vehicle.  The image to the left is of the rear vestibule area of the lead LRV of our two car LRV train.  Click the image to check out the larger available image  (along with the others).

When boarding they had a "Not In Service" displayed on the reader boards.  This is the first time I’ve ever gotten to ride a MAX while the reader boards displayed the not in service message.

The spacing of the stops I really like.  It is a vast improvement over the cramped spacing of the previous bus mall & current Yamhill & Morrison Street stops.  We where able to make the whole loop and take a break at the turnaround in 30 minutes.  So the length of the mall was easily covered in about 10 minutes, and I’m thinking operations will enable an 8 minute cross town trip.  If the rest of the MAX line through town was setup this way, we could get a cross town commute of about 16-18 minutes instead of the current 22+ from Lloyd Center to Goose Hollow.  If I ever have to make that commute again, I'd sure appreciate 16-18 minutes versus 22+ minutes.  That 4-6 minutes really starts to add up over the course of a week.

The serpentine approach really doesn’t seem to be causing anywhere near as much confusion or problems as I originally had imagined.  If anything, with the train & buses in operation the idiot auto drivers actually pay more attention.  After hours when the frequencies increase and the mall is often empty, drivers just end up all over the lanes without regard for where they're supposed to drive.  I guess, one really can't expect more from American drivers, Portlanders or not.  Simple fact is, drivers are intolerably unobservant on average.

 Bike

Yup, even on the first preview ride we already have a bicyclist aboard!  In actuality probably 30% of the riders on this first ride ALL came to the preview ride on bikes.  Most had locked up their rides nearby instead of bringing them on board.

The Ride

We started out at the information store on 6th & Alder.  After everyone met up the group walked down to the 6th & Burnside stop to entrain.  Once everyone go planted in a seat and checked out the new LRV we had our announcer start providing us some information about the new mall line.  She started off with the tidbit of 1.8 miles of track on the mall, and continued while everyone listened and talked.  She might have just thought we weren’t!  ;)

To the right is an image from the tail end of the train with fellow riders Gabriel Amadeus Tiller, and Jo looking away to ignore the camera.  Several other familiar faces where along to enjoy the ride too.  If you follow me on Twitter you’ve probably seen my tweet, if not, get signed up.

First we headed north toward the train station and slowed at each stop, as if in service.  I grabbed the following shot from the clean clear window, which you can see a slight glimmer of.  It is truly awesome to be able to get to the train station via MAX now.  Every major mode of intercity transport is now connected via light rail.  Train & Plane, the city is now set.  :)

As we made our turn to head back south I grabbed two photos of the inside sharp twist of the LRVs.  The first here is looking to the front of the train and the second is looking to the back.  I must say, I think these are the sharpest turns in the system, I could be wrong but jeez, they are sharp.

This second image with Reid hiding in the turn of the MAX, is of the rear of the LRV set.  Through the window you can see the rear LRV twisting sharply through the turn.

We rolled on steady after that as a jovial camaraderie was had by all.  With keen observations taking place by the riders one could see the interest and excitement.  The rear seats where immediately taken up by a happy quartet of individuals, which grew into a group carrying on with smiles among the entire rear vestibule.

We made our way back to Burnside, past Backspace (grabbed a shot of that later, take a look at the images toward the end of the blog entry).  After that short bit we rolled through and uphill to the southern turnaround.  There we all stopped for a short breather, I mean, we where all with bated breath from the excitement of being some of the first to ride the new MAX.  Dibs right!

While heading south we also came to a stop and waited beside our little flanged wheel brethren the streetcar.

After the short ride back north to our departing stop, we all detrained with the giddiness of a kid with their first lego toy.  I think everyone was pretty stoked after our little foray.  After that it was time to hit the carts on 5th.  Below are a few more shots I caught while walking about.

A angle focus shot of the LRV.

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adron posted on June 11, 2009 06:16

I finally had a good photo outing on the downtown bus mall here in Portland.

Started out with the semi-reliable, and very useful Transit Tracker.

At two minutes I walked over to the stop and sure enough, here comes the #9 headed for downtown.

Since a lot of people seem to be complete illiterate fools that like to delay buses, slow down progress, and generally get in the way I follow the "Go with the flow.  Exit rear door."

Took a shot of my downtown stop, the #9 zipped away and a #17 pulled in as I got the photo.

Smooth flow during rush hour went well, as it has been going.

Even though in the above shot I said rush hour, but really, it was about 3pm "ish".  But as always with TriMet downtown is generally always busy during the day.

I got a few more bus mall shots when the sun ran away from the sky and I escaped from a productive day of work.

This is about 8:45pm and there is still steady ridership flowing on and off the buses.  Here two are stacked up at a stop on the north stretch of the mall.

A little bit of an artsy shot of the mall looking toward Union Station.

A clear shot looking the other way.

#4 Division bus using one of the new TriMet Buses, a rarity since it is an east side only line.

Yup, another artsy shot.  Anyone guess what street this is?

Another display of people's illiteracy, more of non-Portlanders than Portlanders.  I also must say it is evidence people do not know nor follow most of the rules of driving.  Double whites YOU DO NOT CROSS IN ANY FREAKING STATE PEOPLE!!  If something says Bus Only it means Buses Only!  How is that complicated Mr. & Mrs. California, Mr. & Mrs. Suburbanite, Mr. and Mrs. Washingtonian!  Seriously, out of the almost 2000+ tickets TriMet has handed out almost ALL of them are for people not from Portland.  I don't know about you, but that is fairly solid evidence that at least Portland drivers pay attention.

Last but not least, one of my top 3 stops.  Why you might ask, it's near Stumptown on 3rd.  :)   I practically live at that place (and Stumptown).  With the bus mall rearrangement it might actually decrease my usage of both places by about 5-10% because they're 2-3 blocks further than the 1 block they where previously.  Eventually I'll get it figured out.

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adron posted on April 11, 2009 15:22

The Transit Sleuth, that’s me the writer of this here blog, have got a new logo coming for the site.  I also intend to do more videos, slide shows, images, and media related things of transit related nature for the ole’ blog.  This is my first collage video, or slide show, or whatever one wants to call it.  Just a fun bit, and watch until the end for a first run preview of the new logo!

This video of images was inspired by another video by my fellow transit friend Al M, which I’ve linked below.  He put some shots I’ve posted over the various blog entries together into this awesome video collage.

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adron posted on April 3, 2009 07:28

Took these during my commute experiment on the WES.

This is a shot of the Cherriots Express Bus to Salem.

The design definitely stood out, even though it had a rather 80's feel to it.  I still dug it, regardless.

I had hoped to jump one of these buses down to Salem and back in the afternoon after work one day, but since most of the week was screwed up I didn't make it.

Also note, the hybrid design of the bus, which I'm still surprised TriMet can't find more use for Hybrid buses or at least clean fuel burning buses.

The next set are photos I got while waiting at Beaverton Transit Center.

TriMet bus in Beabverton

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This first shot I got of my trip out to Wilsonville was classic.  Click on it and look at that speedometer!  Yeah, I was rolling!  The next shot just tells the future ever so brashly.

The WES silently slipping by while I'm in traffic...  moving oh so fast.  In the rear view mirror you can see the rest stacked up waiting behind me.  In the near future, as traffic gets worse along Highway 217 the WES becomes more and more viable as the real alternative to commuting along the corridor.

Conductor walking the platform before departure.Yeah.  Passed up with not a sound.  The WES flew right by me while I rolled a double digit 20 or so MPH.  Behind me in the rear view mirror you can see the traffic stacked up.  This was at 6:07pm.  I ended up in scheduling and alarm clock debacle after debacle.  I ended up driving out Monday which really sucked, I could have been on that ride instead I was stuck in traffic in the ole’ Zed (350Z for those non-Nissan peepz).  Real good use of a sports car, NOT.

The next day I grabbed a few good shots.

 

Here I grabbed a shot of the conductor walking the station before departure.  I think the sign embodies the ideal of the system from the perspective of Wilsonville & Beaverton.  Because really, out of all the riders, all but about 5 total people went into downtown Portland.  Everyone riding the WES went somewhere within the corridor or transferred to a bus or MAX heading westward.

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Finally I boarded the Red Line MAX bound for the airport.  I decided a self portrait was due, so self portrait I made in light rail transit mode style.

Arrival at the airport.

Strange artwork directly in and up the escalators at the airport.

In this shot I'm looking south east over the Alaska Air Concourse, exit ramp of the airport, rental car lot processing facility, and MAX exiting the station.  Kind of a little bit of every mode of transportation available at the airport.  Just missing the airport buses that take travelers to their cars in the distant lots.

Internal airport ramp for loading and unloading.  Funny thing is, with all that massive space where people load and unload it technically has less throughput than a MAX Train fully loaded.  Unfortunately the MAX never really gets truly full arriving or leaving the airport.  Don't get me wrong, there are a lot of people that ride the MAX out and from the airport, but nowhere near as many as there could be.

A view from the top parking deck level looking down at the pedestrian entrance leading from the parking garage to the airport itself.

...and the last few photos are of the airport, my dinner, and the nifty Beaverton Bakery and Beaverton Bakery Clock.  All the shops in PDX are generally local and we in Portland take pride in the fact that our airport doesn't price rape people with airport prices, but instead the retail and restaurant establishments have the same prices as their respective locations in the city.

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