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The
bigger picture
Auckland City Council and its
regional partners are committed to addressing traffic congestion in our
region.
Auckland City’s Strategic
Plan seeks to create an effective transport system. The implementation of bus priority measures is
specifically identified as one element of achieving the plan’s vision to
keep Auckland moving.
Our vision for effective transport is of a city whose people use public transport more and can move
around easily, using a combination of water, rail and road transport that
does not harm the environment.
There are two main ways to make
Auckland City's public transport system better:
- Providing new infrastructure
- Continually improving our
current services and infrastructure
Click
here to find out what the Strategic Plan says about the
proposed rapid transit corridor network, and improvements to existing
services.
Regional strategies
The Auckland Regional Council has
prepared:
- The Regional Land Transport Strategy
- the main guiding document for all work done to improve roads, public
transport, walking and cycling throughout the Auckland region.
- The Regional Passenger Transport Plan
- to set standards for contracting services to bus, rail and ferry
operators, and
- to show how public transport will develop over the next 10 years.
Public transport for Auckland
The Regional Passenger Transport Plan describes what needs to be done in the next 10 years to
improve public transport. It says the number of people using public
transport in some parts of the region will need to double if the transport
system as a whole is to keep operating efficiently. The plan proposes a wide range of actions, including rapid transit, bus priorities,
more frequent services, new stations, new routes and more convenient
ticketing. Rapid transit is a high frequency service running at least
every 5 minutes at peak times, in its own right of way, unaffected by
congestion. It could be provided by light rail, bus, ferry or conventional
electric or diesel rail.
Rapid transit will take time to build.
Also, it will not, on its own, be enough to achieve the targets for public
transport. The rest of the public transport network will also need to be
developed to give people better travel choices, so that it becomes easier
to leave the car at home in the garage or to decide not to buy that second
car.