Workingman wrote:When I was in Saudi there were loads of smaller buses, 20 seater jobs, and they were everywhere. You could buy a day / week / month pass in most shops and supermarkets and just flash it to the driver as you got on. The buses ran everywhere and were always full - day and night. The other interesting thing was that supermarkets became hubs for different routes. There were no direct cross town buses, but you could get one to the supermarket, hop off and get on another. It took some getting used to, but it worked.
Here in Leeds we also have hubs dotted at shopping centres or large supermarkets in the suburbs. Smaller buses come in from the outlying towns and villages then the big buses go into the city centre. The big buses run every ten minutes so there is never a long wait. It's not perfect for everyone, but it works for most, and the buses are clean, well maintained and well used throughout the day.
We also have day / week / month and year passes (individual and family) and the cost is based on a zonal system - inner suburbs, outer suburbs, towns and villages. With a £4.50 day rider ticket I can get from Leeds city centre out to Wetherby, Harrogate or even Skipton.
ROFL, we done all that, over 30 years ago! - 1984, Devon General, Harry Blundred, and Exeter was the pioneer City. We used to live in South Somerset back then and Exeter was a focal point for shopping, so I remember it well.
http://www.exetermemories.co.uk/em/_tra ... inibus.php
Yes, those 16 seater Minibuses were everywhere, running at roughly 5 minute intervals, and by gum were they popular. Cheap and cheerful, the trouble was, they totally clogged up the town centre (see picture of High Street in the article) . You couldn't move without falling over one! Goodness knows what the pollution rating must have been ……
Bus usage went straight through the roof, and inevitably minibuses were replaced by midibuses and then by double-deckers. But double-deckers are expensive beasts, there weren't so many of them, and the bus services then declined. Other cities tried it, notably Oxford, but Exeter was the greatest success.
The key to it all, as you've mentioned in your post regarding Leeds, Frank, was the frequency.