by TheOstrich » 07 Aug 2019, 22:19
Back in the 1950's and 1960's, the vast majority of Corporation buses in Birmingham ran round the City Centre in a loop - down New Street, up Corporation Street past Rackhams department store (now House of Frazer, soon to be closed), round Bull Street to Snow Hill Station, and back to the Town Hall along Colmore Row. OK, it got very congested at rush hours, but it worked and public transport interchangeability was easy. Goodness known what the pollution element was but we didn't know about that back in those days.
Following 50 years of town planning, the central shopping area has become pretty much fully pedestrianised. Certainly a much cleaner environment, but buses became terminated at a number of "hubs" on the outskirts. These hubs are technically linked by a couple of bus routes - the 16 and the 24, but to get across the Birmingham city centre, say if travelling from Longbridge to Walsall, you'd have to change buses twice, or walk 10 minutes or so between the interchanges. Not so good.
Nowadays the current solution is to run the (not that frequent) tram through the pedestrian area, recreating most of the original city loop, albeit clockwise instead of anti-clockwise. What goes around comes around, in more ways than one!