Planning public transport networks in the post-petroleum era
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 07:43authored byJohn Stone, Paul Mees
Oil depletion scenarios suggest that public transport powered largely by electricity, together with cycling and
walking, will be the mainstays of future urban mobility. This paper argues that there is great scope, in a time-scale
of years rather than decades, for transport planners to increase the number and types of trips for which public
transport is a convenient option. Our argument begins with a snapshot of Melbourne during the last period of
intense and sustained constraints on oil supply and an overview of the performance of various transport modes in
the three decades from 1976 to 2006. The decline of public transport since 1950 occurred at a faster rate than
changes in density and can be reversed without the need for widespread re-creation of the urban form. The key to
making these changes lies in the approach to public transport planning used in successful European and North
American cities: service-based network planning. This model offers hope for greater public transport use in
Australian cities, and is outlined in the central part of the article. We conclude with some comments on the forms
of transport governance required to deliver `networked¿ public transport services.