The document discusses transportation sustainability and growing transportation options in Tulsa. It notes that transportation accounts for 70% of petroleum use in the US and 33% of greenhouse gas emissions. Nearly 30% of trips in metro areas are less than 1 mile. The document then summarizes Tulsa's regional transit system plan, which includes commuter, urban, and circulator services. It focuses on plans to improve the Peoria Avenue corridor, including the potential for bus rapid transit between downtown Tulsa and 71st Street. Projections estimate ridership on a Peoria BRT line could increase over 125% in 7 years to nearly 5,000 daily riders.
3. Transportation and Energy
• Transportation responsible for 70% of
petroleum use in the United States (57% of
petroleum is imports) Source: EIA, 2009
• Transportation is responsible for 33% of
GHG emissions in the U.S. Source: EIA, 2009
• 25% of walking trips take place on roads
without sidewalks Source: FHWA, 2008
• 28% of trips in metro areas are <= 1 mile
Source: NHTS, 2001
6. Percentage of trips in the U.S. under 2 miles
U.S. Department of Transportation, May 2011
http://fastlane.dot.gov/2011/05/2-mile-challenge.html
7. Percentage of trips in the U.S. under 2 miles
Taken in a car
U.S. Department of Transportation, May 2011
http://fastlane.dot.gov/2011/05/2-mile-challenge.html
8. Why plan for bicycles?
• Health
• Integration with transit
• Transportation + Recreation
• Economic Opportunity
• The 60%
U.S. Obesity Trends, 2010
11. 2.5 Mile Buffer
19992009
In 1999 35% of
population
served within
2.5 miles
In 2009 80% of
population
served within
2.5 miles
Trails and Bikeways for the Tulsa Transportation Management Area
Existing and Funded Trails and Bikeways
Multi-Use Trails
On-Street Bikeways
1 Mile Buffer
2.5 Mile Buffer
14. Bicycle/Pedestrian Master Plan
• Starting this year!
• Connect neighborhoods to the trail
system
• Identify gaps in the sidewalk network
• Connect parks, schools, employment
centers
20. RTSP
URBAN SERVICE
URBAN SERVICE
A. 3RD ST/TU/ADMIRAL
B. PEORIA/RIVERSIDE
C. HARVARD/YALE
D. 21ST STREET
E. 71ST STREET
F. 41ST STREET
G. PINE STREETA
B
C
D
E
F
G
23. Study Goals
• Goal 1: Improve Transit Access and Regional Mobility
• Goal 2: Support Economic Development
• Goal 3: Invest in Low-Cost, High-Impact Transit
Infrastructure
• Goal 4: Build Community Support for the Value of Transit
Peoria-Riverside Transit Study Goals
8/5/2013 23
26. Adopted 10/13/2011
Adopted Regional Transit
System Plan
20.2 Miles
Residents: 56,000 (1 in 7)
Jobs: 52,000 (1 in 5)
5,700 TOTAL daily trips
to/from downtown (13%)
Peoria/Riverside
Corridor
27. Major Activity Centers
8/5/2013 27
Tulsa Tech
Blair Property Park
Cherry Street
Mabee Center/ORU Brookside
Downtown
Utica
Square
St. John & Hillcrest
29. Ride Check Survey
8/5/2013 30
• April 24-26, 2012
(Tuesday – Thursday)
• 9 Routes surveyed
• 9 routes accounted for 64% of
total ridership, of which 25%
was on Route 105 (Peoria)
• 20% flag stops (5% of riders)
• Major stops at Pine, DAS, 41st
Street, 61st Street, and 81st
Street
• 4,000+ benefitting riders
Grouping On Board +Boardings
N Peoria +S Peoria 1,681
N Peoria +Downtown 2,819
S Peoria +Downtown 3,728
All Segments 4,114
30.
31.
32. What is Bus Rapid Transit?
8/5/2013 33
Branded Buses Off-Board Fare Collection
Passenger InformationEnhanced Boarding Platforms
33. Performance & Experience of
BRT Systems in the U.S.
U.S. GAO Report 12-811 (July 2012)
oFTA Funding of BRT vs. Light Rail since 2005
oEconomic Development Factors
oPerformance after 1 year
oTravel time savings
Comparing Performance From 3 Systems
oKansas City MAX
oAlbuquerque Rapid Ride
oFt. Worth SPUR
Estimates for Tulsa
34. U.S. GAO Report 12-811
Completed July 2012
Median Cost
Light Rail: $575 Million
Bus Rapid Transit: $36 Million
30 of 55 Federally-funded transit projects
since 2005 have been BRT
Economic Development Factors:
• Physical features (stations) on the route
that convey a sense of permanence
• Major institutional, employment, and
activity centers
• Transit-supportive land use policy
35. BRT vs. Rail (1st Year
Ridership)
Source: GAO Report 12-811: Bus
Rapid Transit: Projects Improve Transit
Service and Can Contribute to
Economic Development, July 2012
41. SPUR – Ft. Worth
Source: Dupler, P. Ft. Worth Transit Authority “The T” 29 January 2013
42. Peoria Rapid – Tulsa
Operating
Frequency
BRT:
15 min. peak
20 min. off-peak
Hour Span 5:30am – 10:30pm
Saturday 30 min
Sunday No service
Fare $1.50 (regular fare)
Length 15 miles
Cost $18 Million
Operating
start year
2016
2015 (year before open)
Ridership: 2,144
Service Hours: 63
Service Hours: 142
( 125%)
2016 Ridership: 2,322
( 8.3%) (KC MAX)
2023 Ridership: 4,780
( 10.9% annually)
( 123% over 7 years)
(ABQ Rapid Ride)
43. Ridership & Productivity
1,908
2,022 2,144
2,322
2,574
2,854
3,164
3,508
3,889
4,312
4,780
-
5.00
10.00
15.00
20.00
25.00
30.00
35.00
40.00
45.00
50.00
-
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
RidersPerHour(Weekday)
Ridership(Weekday)
2013-2023 Ridership Estimates - Peoria Corridor
Ridership Riders per Hour
OpeningYear
System-Wide
Riders/Hour:
17.5
System-Wide Riders
per Hour
Estimates based on experience with Kansas City MAX and Albuquerque Rapid Ride after 7 years of service and similar revenue hours increases
44. Station Concept Examples
8/5/2013 47
•35 ft Concrete platform
•Station canopy and structural framing support
•LED lighting beneath station canopy
•Benches and / or leaning rails, bicycle racks, trash cans
•Branded, BRT signage and passenger information
•Allowance for public art incorporated into amenities
48. Real Time Bus Arrival Information
52
Step 2: Send Text
to 41411 with the
word „Tulsa ####‟
Step 1: Determine
the 4 digit code of
the stop you‟re at
50. City of Tulsa Capital Improvements Town Halls
All meetings begin at 6:00pm
• Aug. 5 - OU-Tulsa Schusterman Center
Auditorium, 4502 E. 41st St. (Districts 4 and 9)
• Aug. 6 - Rudisill Regional Library – 1520 N.
Hartford Ave. (Districts 1 and 3)
• Aug. 13 - Carbondale Assembly of
God, 2135 W. 51st St. (District 2)
54
51. Tulsa-OKC Rail Open Houses
55
All open houses will be held between 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
www.TulsaOKCRailCorridor.com
52. Whether you want to ride a bus or
ride a bike; walk, hop or skip; or
even share a ride, the TRC is here
to make it easier to get around!
www.tulsatrc.org
How bad is Tulsa’s ozone problem? Chart looks at past 12 years. Red Lines are EPA’s National ozone standard. Blue trend line is our ozone ‘trend’.These plot the highest 3-year average (‘design value’) . Tulsa’s central and north monitors are tied for state’s highest design value at 0.080ppm.2013…?
Measured in quadrillion BTUs61% of petroleum (measured by energy) comes from imports70% of petroleum energy is used for transportationOnly 25% of that energy is converted into useful energy. The rest is lost to heat and efficiency
75% of BRT lines had ridership less than 10,000/day 31% had ridership of less than 5,000/day