Tag: cycling Page 1 of 2

The Unofficial Guide to taking your Bike on the Train in NSW

If you’re looking for the official guide you can find it here.

I was encouraged to put together this guide by a mate who recently had cause to take his bike on the train from Sydney to Newcastle and reached out to me to understand the best way to do this. This was pre-Mariyung launch and so I explained that there was a couple of ways to approach this problem but broadly, he had the following options:

  • Take the XPTBad idea – this would require putting your bike in a special cardboard bike box, making a phone call and paying extra money.
  • Take the V-setBad idea – V-Sets have comfy seats and a certain mid-century style but they lack room for bikes. There are bike hooks in one carriage per 4 car set but they can be hard to find in the rush of boarding, are extremely awkward to use and wouldn’t fit his cargo bike anyway.
  • Take the OscarGood idea!

Up until fairly recently Oscars rarely ran north of Wyong but that is no longer the case. Generally, I don’t like spending the 3 hour trip on one because of the narrower and less comfortable seats, but there’s no denying that they have much larger and more usable toilets, wheelchair/pram accessible seating and, crucially, space to park a cargo bike. It’s as simple as wheeling it on and parking it in the vestibule, much as you would on any suburban trainset. Not ideal on trains that are very crowded and have lot of people getting on and off all the time, but perfectly fine for the run up to Newcastle.

The only problem was, how was a layperson like my mate suppose to know all of this AND know before they got the station what kind of rolling stock would be operating the service they were hoping to catch.

Enter ‘The Unofficial Guide to Taking your Bike on the train in NSW’.

At the Station

Before you even think about leaving the house to head on your trip, the first decision you need to make is if you’re going to take your bike with you or leave it at the station. If you’re leaving it at the station, you’ve got three options:

  1. Locking your bike to a standard bike loop – If no bike loops are available, consider a friendly fence post or parking sign. At most stations I wouldn’t recommend doing this overnight.
  2. Locking your bike up in a secure shed – TfNSW have started rolling out secure bike parking. It’s undercover, has 24 hour CCTV and requires swiping a registered opal card to access. I haven’t used these but they seem pretty great and I would definitely give one a go overnight. You can find out where they are and how to register your opal card for access here. I’ve spotted them in the wild at West Ryde and Schofields.
  3. Locking your bike up in a private ‘bike locker’ – These are older and apparently there’s 830 of them across 110 train stations. You might have spotted the big green boxes around and about. These can be privately hired on a month-by-month basis here, which probably isn’t much use unless you’re doing so as part of a regular commute.
Bike Shed and Bike Locker side by side. Credit: TfNSW.

Okay, so you’ve decided to take your bike with you. You’ll be pleased to know that this is free of charge on all Opal accepting train services run by Sydney Trains or NSW Trainlink. Gone are the days of theoretically having to pay a child’s fare for your bike during peak hour!

Next step, getting onto the platform. In days gone by, the CityRail map used to have little wheelchair icons to indicate which stations had a lift (or, presumably, a ramp). That’s gone in the name of legibility so now you’ll have to head to the TfNSW website and look up your train station. Scroll down to accessibility and if it says ‘Lift’ than there is lifted access from the street onto the platform. If not, you’ll probably need to be able to drag your bike up and/or down the stairs but you might get lucky with a ramp (Hi Broadmeadow).

The glorious final iteration of the CityRail network map is cluttered, but you can’t fault it for providing station detail!

Suburban Sydney Trains

If you’re planning on boarding a suburban Sydney Train there really isn’t too much to worry about. Some trains will have slightly more roomy vestibules but all will accommodate you and your bike. There are a couple of standard approaches I’ve witnessed to taking your bike on the train:

  1. Sit in the side facing seats vestibule with your bike in front of you
  2. Stand between the doors holding onto your bike while it rests against a pole
  3. Kickstand the bike upright or secure it to a pole and then sit down in the vestibule

There’s pros and cons to each but I think getting as far away from the doors as possible is going to make your trip more pleasant, particularly if you’re expecting the train to be somewhat crowded.

Sydney Metro

Much the same as taking your bike on Sydney Trains. The first or last doors have some seats that flip up and tend to have a bit more room. Watch out these things can get crammed in peak hour.

Intercity NSW Trains

Okay this is where it gets interesting. The first thing you’ll need to find out is what type of train will be operating your service. The easiest way to do this is to use one of the various trip planning apps. All these apps use the same data feed so just pick one that shows the information you want in a format you like. I personally use and recommend TripView. AnyTrip is also very cool but probably more so for enthusiasts than the casual user. If the trip planning tool you are using doesn’t tell you what kind of train is running your service, pick a different one.

Personally I wouldn’t favour spending three hours on an Oscar, but if you’re travelling with a bike it’s a solid option.

There are about half a dozen different kinds of intercity rolling stock which will affect how you take your bike onboard and how annoying doing so is. You can check out their features and even floorplans on this handy webpage. Here they are in approximate order from worst to best experience:

  • V-Set (also known as an ‘Intercity train’)

The V-Set is hands down my favourite train. They’re the oldest passenger trains running in NSW dating as far back as 1970 and they ooze mid-century class. I’ve heard them described as the ‘poor-man’s business class’ for the well-padded seats, carpeted walls and coat hooks. Just  try to avoid using the bathroom and don’t forget you’ll need to pull the train door open when you’re getting off!

The V-Set might show up in your app of choice as an ‘Intercity train’. They can be found travelling to Newcastle or the Blue Mountains. Expect them to be retired from service by 2026 (although they said that about 2023 and here we are…).

One carriage per 4 cars should have bike hooks. Good luck figuring out which one it is. I haven’t actually used these before but I’ve seen them and it looks hard. Everything on a V-Set is pre-DDA compliance so don’t expect much room to turn around and know that while you’re trying to do anything you’ll be blocking a bunch of other passengers from getting past you.

If I need to ride a V-Set with my bike I usually jump in the first or last door of the train and stay in the vestibule. People can squeeze past as they get on or off the train and there’s no access into the guards compartment so you don’t get through traffic.

Avoid taking your bike on a V-Set if possible and don’t even think about it with a cargo bike, touring bike or anything else oversize.

  • Endeavour Railcar

The Endeavours can be found on the South Coast Line (south of Kiama), the Hunter Line, the Southern Highlands Line and the Blue Mountains Line if you catch one of two daily Bathurst Bullets in each direction.

Endeavour railcar. Credit: Hugh Llewellyn

These trains lack any seating in the vestibule and have small doors, so they aren’t ideal for bikes. That said, they do have luggage and wheelchair areas that might double as bike parking, but I haven’t used them before so I can’t comment. Thankfully the volumes of passengers getting on and off trips run by endeavours should be very low so if you have to park your bike somewhere it partially blocks people and get up each time the train stops, it shouldn’t be a big deal.

Avoid an Endeavour if you can but don’t fret if you can’t.

  • Hunter Railcar

The Hunter railcars have been plying the Hunter line for almost 20 years and are basically a single deck diesel version of the millennium trains. They’ve got large doors and side seating in the vestibule. Taking your bike on one of these is basically the same as taking it on a suburban train.

Hunter railcar. Credit: Hugh Llewellyn

Tick. Just like in Sydney!

  • OSCAR (also known as an H-Set)

The Outer Suburban Railcars were brought in for shorter distance intercity trips that experience high peak demand and needed larger capacity trains. They were originally designed to run to Wollongong and Wyong but can now be found running as far as Newcastle.

Oscar. Credit: wikimedia

They’re from this century so expect wheelchair accessible toilets, automatic doors and side facing seating in the vestibule. Taking your bike on one of these is basically the same as taking it on a suburban train.

Tick. Just like in Sydney!

  • Mariyung (also known as a D-Set)

The much-delayed new intercity Mariyung trains take their name from the Dharug word for Emu. It’s a clever pun because not only are emus fast and graceful over long distances, but the 3-letter acronym EMU in railway parlance stands for Electric Multiple Unit, the type of train the Mariyung is.

Since December 2024 the Mariyungs are finally in operation. You can find them plying the route between Sydney and Newcastle and they should be rolled out to the Blue Mountains Line to replace the V-Sets in the coming year/s.

A V-Set and Mariyung (right) at Central Station. Credit: Dan Himbrechts

These trains are the crème of the crop, bringing intercity rail transport in NSW into the 2010s! Expect to find USB-A ports, 240V wall sockets and folding tray tables. Unlike on all the other trains listed here, you’ll actually be able to enjoy those features because the Mariyungs have legit bike racks! You can park your bike just like you’re at the shops, stow your luggage like you’re on a train to the airport (not in Sydney though lol) and sit down in a seat like a normal person.

The Mariyungs are made up of either 4 or 6 car sets which can be grouped together to create 4, 6, 8 or 10 car trains. My understanding is that each 4 or 6 car set will have one carriage with bike parking, so if your train is 8 or 10 cars long it should have two.

This handy side and plan view of the Mariyung ‘B’ type car shows then large exterior bike indicator and the location of the racks right by the doorway.

To spot the bike parking just walk (or ride) alongside the train until you see a larger-than-life size picture of a bike. Board through these doors, put your bike in the rack and you’re good to go.

Now this is living!

Regional NSW Trains

Okay that’s the relatively good news. If you’re heading further afield than the intercity rail network (i.e past Scone, Dungog, Bathurst or Goulburn)  you’re going to need to mess with the NSW Trainlink checked luggage rules. These trains require seat reservations to travel on and your bike will need to be booked along as checked luggage. This generally isn’t free and can’t be done online; you’ll need to call up.

There are also draconian rules about how your bike must be packed that seem to be designed to discourage people from bothering to do so.

Be aware that NSW Trainlink staff take these rules seriously. I have seen a person be told off for attempting to take a folded-up Brompton style bike onto the train and place it in the luggage rack.

Yes, it fit in the luggage rack.

Yes, it was smaller and lighter than other luggage in the luggage rack.

No, they did not require assistance from staff, and

No, it did not unduly inconvenience other passengers.

However, the rules state that:

  • A limit of one (1) bicycle per passenger is permitted.
  • Reservations are essential.
  • Bicycles will be stored in the checked luggage area.

The bicycle (including protective containers) must weigh less than 20 kilograms to be accepted. If the bicycle exceeds 20 kilograms in weight, it cannot be accepted.

Push Bicycles:

  • Bicycles must be contained in a cardboard bicycle box or commercially produced protective bag to protect the bicycle during transport.
  • Bicycle boxes can be obtained from bicycle retailers or provided upon request.
  • When packing the bicycle, ensure that no part of it protrudes.
  • Boxes must not be torn or damaged to ensure the safe transportation of the bicycle.
  • Maximum dimensions when packed: 135cm long x 80cm high x 24cm wide.
  • A supplementary charge of $12.10 applies for push bicycles.

Folding Bicycles:

  • Folding bicycles must be packed in a commercially produced protective cover bag.
  • Maximum dimensions when folded: 79cm long x 59cm high x 36cm wide.
  • No additional charges apply for carrying folding bicycles.


The passenger in question didn’t have a commercially produced protective cover bag and hadn’t called up to make a special (free) reservation for their folding bike and so was in breach of the rules.

That said, NSW Trainlink have tacitly acknowledged the current system doesn’t work very well for cyclists. Stage 1 of a trial to allow ‘roll-on’ bikes on the XPT was completed in 2024 and Stage 2 is planned for 2025.

Hopefully in the near future there will be a more legible system, something like a bike rack in the luggage car would work fine, I’m sure.

The future of regional travel

The R-Sets are due to enter service from this year and we can only assume that they will have dedicated bicycle storage facilities for passengers. These trains are intended to replace the Xplorers, XPTs and Endeavour railcars over the coming couple of years.

The Regional Rail project website has a FAQ around bike racks which says:

The new regional intercity trains will have dedicated bike spaces.

The new long and short regional trains have been designed for bicycles to be stored in line with current NSW TrainLink procedures, but these methods will be reviewed before the new regional fleet is introduced. As part of this review process, concept testing is being carried out regarding the feasibility and viability of taking and storing bikes on-board without boxing.

Sounds promising, if not entirely certain. This should mean, in theory, that by 2028 you’ll be able to seamlessly take your bike on any passenger train service in NSW – tourist trains and land cruises notwithstanding, hooray! Bring on the rail trails!

Addendum: Most of the above has been put together from my own experience, if I’ve got anything wrong or you’ve got some better ideas on how to roll onto trains in NSW I’d love to hear about it!

The Urban Form and Transport of Marseille (and Sydney)

It’s been almost a year since I last posted here, but my excuse is a good one. I’ve been flat out wrapping up Following the Flow, the documentary I’ve been producing for the past three years. You can watch the trailer and find out more on our website. We are also showing on SBS this Sunday September 25th at 4pm to celebrate World Rivers Day. If you missed that you might still be able to catch it OnDemand!

OK now to Marseille.

Spending a week in Marseille, on France’s Mediterranean Cote d’Azur, I couldn’t help but find myself constantly comparing its public transport and urban fabric with that of Sydney. Aside from the fact that I happened to find myself there, I think these two cities have some similarities that make such a comparison worthwhile.

Marseille as an administrative area has the 2nd largest population of any French city, around 900,000 people. The greater ‘Metro Marseille’ region has a population of around 1.9m people spread across 4,000 square kilometres, making it the 3rd most populous metro area in France after Paris and Lyon.

Marseille’s Vieux Port neighbourhood. Being a tourist, I spent a fair bit of time around here. Credit: Tia Monto

Greater Sydney, for comparison, as described by the Australian Bureau of Statistics spans some 12,000 square kilometres reaching from Bargo in the South, Blackheath in the West and as far as Wyong Shire in the North. Personally I would’ve drawn the boundaries a little closer in. This area is home to around 5.2 million people; Australia’s most populous metropolitan area (but perhaps not for much longer!).

At first glance these cities might appear to be on completely different scales, but the relative density of French cities (and also that of the inner and middle suburbs of Sydney), as well as the countless other significant urban agglomerations within a 1-2 hour commute of Marseille probably makes the size and makeup of these cities more similar than they first appear.

Comparing Sydney to Paris in this way would be less useful as Paris is on an altogether different scale with 13m people spread over 19,000 square kilometres. The vast bulk of them, 11 million, living in the 2,000 square kilometre urban area. Density and total size wise, Sydney has more in common with Marseille than Paris. Besides, I didn’t go to Paris so I can’t exactly write about it!

Metro

Until 2019 Sydney didn’t have a metro. This is more a quirk of definition than anything else. From a tourist or resident’s perspective much of the Sydney Trains network effectively functions as a metro. It is sometimes described as a mix between a European metro and suburban railway (or S-bahn in the Germanosphere).

Marseille built a more traditional metro system in the late 1970s and it now consists of 2 lines running short 4 car rubber tyred and driver operated trains.

A metro train pulling into Castellane Station on Line 1.

The scale of the system is pretty modest with 31 stations spread across 23km. Note the typically high European station density with an average of a station every 750m.

I really like the sleek simplicity of the over door map on-board the Marseille Metro.

Sydney’s Metro, as I’ve expressed elsewhere, is a different beast entirely. Using longer 6 car driverless trains in two years time it will span 65km from Tallawong to Bankstown, coincidently with the same number of stations as Marseille’s system: 31. In Sydney that’s a station on average every 2.1km.

I discussed the problem with the density of stations on Sydney’s Metro in detail in the context of the CBD and Southwest Metro and also in regard to Metro West. In short, there’s nothing inherently wrong with widely stopped stations but it does mean that more people are going to need to use another mode of transport to actually get there. It changes the dynamic of what a metro does. In Marseille, metro stations are close enough together that if you live anywhere near a metro line and are able, you can comfortably walk there.

Louis says ‘Sortie thataway —>!’

Tram

Like Sydney, Marseille has 3 tram lines – and two of them share a significant amount of track in the CBD. In fact, their network diagrams have a lot in common!

The Marseille tramway serves 32 stations across 16km of route while Sydney’s light rail serves 42 stops across a 25km system.

There’s some definitely network similarities going on here…

Next year, with the opening of the Parramatta Light Rail, Sydney’s major satellite city will feature it’s own modest tram system. So too, since 2014, has Aubagne, 20 minutes by train from Marseille’s main station, had its own 7 stop tram system.

In the urban core of Marseille the tram typically runs in streets that have had car traffic completely removed, so too with George Street in Sydney.

Rue de Rome is for trams, bikes and people.

In both cities as the tram leaves the CBD it tends to run in a median or kerb right of way next to mixed traffic lanes and in both cities there are some short sections of tunnel. Sydney’s L1 is a bit of an outlier here running along an old freight corridor.

One key difference in the systems when considering the urban fabric more broadly is the length of the trams. Thanks to some weird wrangling with the RMS, Sydney’s L2 and L3 are serviced by coupled pairs of Alstom trams totalling 67m long – enormous in an urban environment. This was essentially done to increase the total capacity of the line without increasing service frequency – ostensibly to avoid delaying motorists at busy intersections along the route.

The trams in Marseille are a more conventional 42.5m long.

People, trams and outdoor dining. Rue de Rome has some serious George Street vibes.

It turns out the similarity of the two systems goes way back. In 1876 Marseille opened its first horse drawn tramway. In 1899, its first electric tram. The system was slowly dismantled and replaced with buses and trolley buses starting in 1945 and finishing in 1960. Only one 3km line remained in operation through this period. The first service in the modern network ran in 2007, 47 years after the old system’s almost total closure.

For comparison, Sydney’s first horse drawn tramway began service in 1861 and its first electric tram in 1898. Sydney’s tramways began to be dismantled in the 1950s to be replaced by buses, a process that wound up in 1961. The first stage of Sydney’s current light rail network opened up in 1997, 36 years later.

Evidently the processes that drove the demise of Sydney’s tramways played out the world over.

Buses

Fixed line transport (trains, metro, trams) are the friend of the tourist. It’s easy to figure out where they go, typically straightforward to acquire tickets and you usually don’t have to press the button or pull the cord to alight. Buses offer a more varied experience and in many cities they are totally impenetrable to visitors.

In this regard Marseille is a revelation. Cash payment is accepted on board (2 euro for a 1 hour any mode transfer ticket), almost every stop has a shelter featuring a network map, timetable and often a live next-service display, every stop has an easy to remember name and, best of all, on-board displays that actually work let you know where the bus is and what stop is upcoming – plus you can see where to transfer to other routes, trams and metro. Can you tell I’m a big fan?

This is actually a tram stop, but the info at bus stops was just as comprehensive.

There are some downsides: the system is extremely popular and not frequent enough. Bus overcrowding is severe more often than not. Fare evasion seems rife, although periodic tickets weren’t particularly expensive so maybe a lot of people have annual passes and just don’t need to tap on. We were waved onto buses on multiple occasions without paying for some reason or other. The buses mostly operated in mixed traffic though I have to say, despite the narrow roads and haphazard parking, traffic never seemed to be too bad. I’ve definitely been stuck in a lot worse bus traffic in Sydney. This could be a bias of the routes I was travelling on, maybe things are worse in commuter neighbourhoods.

A short wheelbase bus plying a narrow road in the old part of town. Note the bollards in the foreground to stop cars blocking the footpath and a car (legally) parked obstructing the footpath on the far side.

As in Sydney, rear door boarding is discouraged by signage, but unlike in Sydney it often happens anyway, particularly when there are a lot of people trying to get onto an already crowded bus. Despite the crowding I didn’t ever see a bus driver not let someone on (although a few passengers elected to wait rather than scrum their way on) and only once did our driver completely skip a stop with waiting passengers. As opposed to Sydney it seems like the onus of safety falls more on the passengers than the driver.

Onboard displays showing accurate next stop information are on every bus and they actually work! It reminded me of the time when Sydney Buses started having these circa 2005, but they were either always off, showed static or ran ads…not so useful!

Another funny similarity with Sydney is the existence of a B1, although Marseille has a B2, B3A and B3B as well. Like in Sydney the B1 signifier meant an important and frequent route. The Marseille B1 runs from a downtown Metro station out to an isolated university campus and seemed to operate in a mix of bus-only lanes and mixed traffic. Also like the Sydney B1 the Marseille B1 has its own vehicles, articulated buses instead of double deckers. Sadly I didn’t manage a photo of one.

Ticketing

Buying a ticket from the machines at metro stations (and some tram stops) is extremely straightforward. Just click on the photo of the British flag to swap it into English and select the duration of your ticket. 1 hour starts at 2 euro, 24 hours is 5.20 and as far as I’m aware you can go as high as an annual ticket. Options!

Buying the ticket on the bus is a little bit trickier, without French I’m not sure if the whole gamut of tickets was available onboard but we had no trouble buying 1 hour tickets from the driver. 

Contrast to Sydney where we lack time based fares which, despite some shortcomings, are very, very tourist friendly. On the plus side all opal services (pretty much all services) allow tap on/off with a credit card which is obscenely tourist friendly – at least if you aren’t price sensitive and have a credit card! The flip side of that is that paying cash fares is all but impossible in Sydney and to do so you’d have to figure out that you need to go to a convenience store and buy an opal card with cash there – tricky!

Suburban Trains

I didn’t take any suburban trains in Marseille so I’m going to refrain from commenting on them but I’m fairly sure they exist in some capacity.

Intercity Trains

Marseille St Charles is a terminus station along the same lines as the ‘Sydney Terminal’ intercity platforms at Central. From here high speed ‘TGV’ trains, express ‘Intercitie’ trains and local/regional ‘TER’ trains extend out across Provance, France and even to a handful of international destinations.

Figuring out which trains require pre-purchased tickets and how to nab the best fare isn’t super easy, but compared to schlepping to an airport, travelling through French stations is a breeze. In the past few weeks I’ve taken all 3 kinds of trains a bunch of times and as anyone who has trained around Europe can attest, the whole thing works remarkably well.

Marseille St Charles is at a junction point of the 2 Metro lines making it an easy connection to the rest of the city.

Sydney’s Central Station has roughly hourly departures on what are now called NSW Trainlink Intercity services – the equivalent of French TER trains – in 3 directions: North to Newcastle, South to Wollongong and West to the Blue Mountains. Our NSW Trainlink XPT and Xplorer trains are roughly equivalent to the French Intercitie trains, offering First and Second Class seats and requiring a reservation to travel. The frequency from Sydney is much lower than Marseille as you might expect and there is sadly no antipodean analogue for the French TGV.

Seaport

Getting a bit off topic from the realm of urban transport here but there’s an interesting comparison to be made between the two cities’ harbours. Both Sydney and Marseille have beautiful old harbours surrounded by historic architecture, luxury hotels and tourist orientated attractions. In both cities huge new container terminals have been built away from the old harbours, taking the necessary nuisance of global trade away from the panoramic views of the old port and freeing up much needed space for parking luxury yachts.

Both cities are both well and truly on cruise ship itineraries although Marseille is notable for also being a hub for enormous ferries that connect the French mainland with Corsica and also across to old colonial possessions in Algeria and Tunisia.

Sydney’s last ocean going long distance ferry left some 15 years ago when the Spirit of Tasmania axed their Sydney-bound service.

Urban fabric

Marseille has been continuously occupied since 600BC when it was founded from the sea. Culturally the city seems to be just as connected across the Mediterranean as it is to the French mainland.

Because of this long and varied history, much of the city was built well before automobiles were a consideration. On the positive side, the human scale of so much of the city is a pleasure to explore. On the negative side, people have surely asserted cars into this environment in which they don’t really fit and it is basically a clusterfuck.

In the more commercially orientated parts of the city bollards do the heavy lifting of stopping cars obstructing footpaths. In older and wealthier residential neighbourhoods cars are EVERYWHERE. They’re parked blocking the tiny footpaths and they’re parked partially obstructing intersections. The only saving grace is that thankfully the disease of the ever larger all American vehicle is (mostly) yet to infect Europe, so most cars are 2 door hatches or the size of a Mazda 3. Ten years ago this was true of Sydney, alas no longer.

The surest way to keep cars out of a street is with bollards, just ask the French.

Pedestrian environment

Given all the things I’ve outlined so far you won’t be surprised to hear that being on foot in Marseille is a mixed bag. Neighbourhoods are so dense that if you walk for an hour across the city you will without doubt encounter many interesting goings-on. This really makes it the perfect city to visit as a tourist.

In the Old Port and other central areas pedestrian amenity is amazing. Large boulevards and plazas are given over to people and restaurants and bars spill out into these enormously popular public spaces.

A typical street in the Vieux Port neighbourhood of Marseille.

This trend caught my eye as in much of Australia if a business wants to occupy part of the footpath they need a permit and they’re up against other footpath users for that right. All sorts of people require access to the footpath so in some respects it isn’t an ideal place to sprawl a commercial undertaking. But it’s a shame that like so many debates in Australia, this conversation pits different groups that want to use our (relatively wide) streets for anything that isn’t moving and storing cars against one another.

More Vieux Port. Contraflow bike lanes are pretty common and help make the city heaps more accessible on bike than it is in a car. They also make streets busier and less predictable which encourages people to drive more carefully and go slower. The speed limit here is either 20 or 30, but you’d be hard pressed (safely) going any faster than that anyway.

It’s wonderful to see a city that has reclaimed so much streetspace that a restaurant’s 20 outdoor tables can coexist with street vendors, people sitting around or waiting for the tram, people whizzing by on e-scooters and walkers of all speeds, ages and mobilities.

Micromobility

I spent my week in Marseille telling anyone who would listen (read: my friends) that the micromobility revolution was underway! It was exciting to see and not just when we doubled up on hirable e-scooters for the post-midnight run home one night.

E-scooters and e-bikes with buzzy one syllable names and distinctive colour schemes hang around on street corners, in plazas and occasionally en masse in designated storage areas. Unlike in Sydney, they are extremely popular. When your correspondent went to hire one (well not me actually, I didn’t have the requisite internet to download the app with) the first 5 or so we checked were all out of battery. On several occasions I saw people contracting to these international tech companies out there moving the scooters around and replacing their batteries.

There are millions more of these things about, but I’m not much of a photographer…

But it isn’t just the start-ups making this type of mobility seem like a bigger deal. Personal e-scooters and e-bikes seem to be just as common as the humble pushie in Marseille. The great thing is that because of the flexible use of public space for transport, the city is ready for it.

In Sydney we like to carefully delineate roadspace for specific uses. This means that the roads work very well for cars, okay for buses and pedestrians and quite poorly for cyclists. They aren’t really welcome on the footpath or the road.

In Marseille on the other hand, except in the parts of the city where cars are explicitly excluded, the road is for everyone. Pedestrians (old and young), cars, buses, motorbikes, pushbikes, scooters, wheelchairs, whatever. This definitely isn’t ideal, particularly for wheelchair users and the less mobile who have to navigate this treacherous landscape, but it does mean that when something that has the potential to totally change how we get around cities for the better comes along, society doesn’t freak out. E-scooters? No worries, I already have to dodge the motorised variety!

The pedestrian environment can be pretty hostile in Marseille, but at least you aren’t about to get run over by a 3 tonne ute!

Instead of waging war on e-scooters, as we are in Sydney, they are being embraced by the Marseillaise like no doubt so many other changes over the 2600 years they’ve been there.

Lessons for Sydney

This post is much longer than I intended (I never have been one for brevity) and I’m aware that I’m a transport and planning enthusiast who spent a grand total of eight nights in a foreign city. My insights might be interesting but they probably aren’t profound.

That said, I did want to end on a sort of summary of some of the transport/urban design wins from Marseille that Sydney could relatively easily adopt and a couple of other thoughts that comparing the two cities brought up for me.

  1. We need to start taking steps to limit the growth in size of passenger vehicles in Australia immediately. Marseille is car strewn, but it works(ish) because the cars are at least relatively compact. If we replaced all of them with Ford Rangers and SUVs the streets would be so cluttered that no one else, be they on foot or driving a bus, could get passed and the consequences would be deadly. In 99% of cases there is no need for people to drive such large vehicles, they do because it’s convenient, comfortable and you can. Our cities and states can take steps to stop this trend because we know where it leads: just take a look across the Pacific (from Sydney!) or the Atlantic (from Marseille!)
  2. We need to urgently build a network of dedicated micromobility lanes and low speed shared streets. In Sydney the roads belong to cars. That isn’t going to change anytime soon. People want to get out of cars for health reasons and because it’s more fun, cheaper and often faster. But we need safe spaces to encourage that. That means building a lot more dedicated bike/micromobility lanes that are wide enough for all kinds of users; I’m looking at you old guy going 30km/h down the footpath in your electric wheelchair. These lanes need to actually connect all the way to where someone wants to go. Enough with the piecemeal bike lanes that get tacked on when there’s spare space in the roadway. Enough with the chevrons and green paint on a 6 lane highway and calling it bike infrastructure. We need lanes that are separated from traffic or we need 30km/h maximum speed limits and streets that are designed to make going any faster than this completely unviable (see: the backstreets of Newtown).
  3. Frequency is freedom. If you are reliably running your public transport service at a minimum 10 minute frequency all day and into the evening people will use it. We need to stop freaking out about travel time in every conversation about improving transit in Sydney (which cost us several really useful infill stations on Metro West) and start making as many of our trains, trams, ferries, buses and metro as frequent as possible for as long as possible. This is already well underway.
  4. We can and should reclaim as much of the roadway from cars as possible. The standard street in Sydney is one chain wide, that’s just over 20 metres. In so much of the city that means 2 lanes of traffic, 2 lanes of parked cars and maybe 2m on either side for a footpath, trees, bins, cafe seating, bus stops, utility boxes and everything else. We need to take what’s been going on in the city and spread it to our inner suburbs by reducing the number of vehicle lanes, reducing the number of on-street parking spaces and creating more space for all the stuff that is currently crammed onto the footpath. I’m sure it seemed like a huge ask in Marseille and it definitely ruffled a few feathers when George Street was pedestrianised but in both instances no one is looking back. It’s just so much better now for everyone.

The missing links of the Orange cycling network

There’s really nothing particularly remarkable about the cycling network in Orange, New South Wales.

You’ll find a similar situation in Bathurst, a town that’s roughly the same size a half an hour drive away. You’ll probably find a similar situation in almost any medium sized regional town in the state.

In some respects, there probably should be. Orange is a prosperous town. Orange City Council charges some of the highest rates in regional NSW. The economy is diversified, being a small agricultural centre, an important health hub and a tourism destination as well as home to a small university campus, an enormous gold mine and a strong public service presence.

Orange might be seen from Sydney as a pinot sippers paradise, but like any regional town it’s much more diverse than the capital city perception belies. Like most towns Orange has a homeless population, some crime and drug problems and a pretty shocking pokies addiction.

Orange’s established middle classes and its disadvantaged residents might not seem to have much in common, but they do both tend to bike. While the prosperous denizens of (mostly) West Orange might have a double garage with 2 SUVs and half a dozen bikes (a mountain bike and a road bike for each member of the household as a bare minimum), those residing in the poorer parts of much maligned East Orange might ride because they don’t have access to a car.

Bike Town, NSW

In Orange, cycling is kind of a big deal. The mayor famously rides, there are 2 bike shops and a dedicated bike mechanic, there are 2 separate mountain bike trailheads (there was another, much larger mountain bike area in the nearby Kinross State Forest, but NSW Forestry decided to harvest that last year, alas.) and Council is even pushing an enormous new mountain bike trail system high on Mt Canobolas.

Given all this, I would have expected Orange to boast a reliable network of bike paths and a fairly stable population of commuter cyclists.

What’s interesting in Orange is that whilst there’s a lot of recreation riders and a smaller but significant number of people riding around the suburbs, it’s actually quite unusual to see someone that is obviously riding their bike into work. In fact, in the parts of Orange where much of the employment is concentrated, it’s unusual to see cyclists at all.

Take a look at this map of the bike paths in Orange:

A map showing bike paths in Orange NSW
Bike paths in Orange are numerous but disjointed.

Here I’ve marked any separated (not in traffic) cycleway I could find. Some of these are small gravel tracks through a local park, others are multi-kilometre concrete shared paths running alongside busy roads. Quite a few of them are recently built (last ten or so years) concrete shared paths that run next to creeks with lots of connections to the local street network.

In these covid times, they are extremely popular and a wonderful asset for those people ‘lucky’ enough to live near them (there’s not really any luck, they tend to run by the creeks in the wealthier  parts of town).

I’m not certain, being a recent transplant to the town, but I’m fairly sure more than half of these cycleways were built in the last decade. So things are happening.

What strikes me looking at this network is how disconnected it is. Aside from a long ride from sprawling North Orange to Dalton Street, a loop around the hospital in Bloomfield or a parabolic ride through 2 beautiful creek-side paths in West Orange, there isn’t really any way to get around town using this network.

If you want to ride in Orange, you’re going to have to get amongst the traffic.

This might seem like no problem, it’s a small town after all. And that’s true to a certain extent. There are plenty of streets I tend to gravitate towards that are light on traffic and a pleasure to ride down. Autumn Street in East Orange, shaded by huge London Planes that mark the changing seasons, is one of my favourites. Franklin Street, which is closed to cars at one point, is another.

But, by and large, traffic in Orange is pretty bad. Parking is abundant, streets are wide and difficult to cross and so people tend to drive even for short distances. Council has made some attempts to address this, mostly by building multi-lane roundabouts at as many intersections as they possibly can. These have the effect of increasing the speed of cars and making the streets even harder to get across as a pedestrian. Unsurprisingly, these have led to more cars and less walking.

For even relatively confident riders, navigating an endless run of multi-lane roundabouts is hard work and feels very, very dangerous. To their credit, most drivers in Orange seem to see cyclists as something of a curiosity and tend to slow down and give way. Most drivers.

So Orange has a lot of bikes, but people only ride them where there’s no other option or for rsport. On any given weekend you’ll find plenty of families and such riding on those extensive creek side paths, or driving their bikes out of town to Gosling Creek or Lake Canobolas to ride there, but what you won’t find are people riding around town because it’s a great way to get around. I confess to being one of the stubborn few.

I can see how this came to be. The Council saw the benefit of encouraging cycling so they started putting in some new paths. There were all these green corridors around the place that seemed like the obvious place to start, so they did. New suburbs popped up on the edge of town and changing development practices meant that these areas got some sort of bike path by default. This has left the town with a lot of bike paths, but only in areas that had the space set aside at some point. In the older parts of town there’s almost nothing.

From a functional stand point this means that while there’s lots of enjoyable spots to go for a Sunday arvo cruise, if you want to get from A to B it’s highly unlikely the cycle network is going to be much help.

To illustrate this point I’ve overlaid the main employment areas in Orange with the bike network. In the Centre of town is the CBD, to the very south are the Hospitals, to the far north is the University and the rest is a mix of retail and light industrial. I’d say a good 90% of the jobs in Orange would be based in these areas.

A map of Orange NSW showing bike paths and employment areas
If a bike path in Orange goes near your work it’s a total coincidence.

As you can see, the bike network doesn’t really go to most of these places. Where it does, it kind of skirts the edge. Not much help given these areas are going to have the most traffic, and lots of trucks at that. The only exceptions are the hospital, university and North Orange shops which have cycle paths running directly to them.

The other issue is that when you zoom in you realise that there are a lot of missing links. And I don’t mean the kind of ‘missing links’ the state government uses to justify literally any road between any 2 points. I mean missing link like you’re riding your bike along a great bike path and then it just ends only to start up again a block away. This happens a lot in Orange.

Take the trip from Orange Hospital to the CBD for example, probably the 2 main trip generators in town. There is a separated cycleway most of the way, but it has quite a few gaps.

A map of a part of Orange showing the gaps in the bike path.
Black is bike path, purple is a key employment centre, red is the street you’ll need to share with cars, buses and trucks to get back to the bike path.
  1. Turning off the Southern Distributor onto Anson Street the bike path abruptly ends. You’ll need to ride down Anson Street for about 100 metres, there’s not even a footpath for kids to ride on. I rode this way this morning and a semi-trailer went by me on what is a narrow street without any lane markings. Fun times.
  2. Heading North you’ll soon find yourself on a wonderful new path that runs alongside a small creek. The creek goes the whole way into town, so you’d think the bike path would too. Unfortunately, one block of it was never built. For some reason one tiny section of creek goes through a privately owned oversized backyard. In 2004 Council released a Development Control Plan outlining the possibility of acquiring just a small part of this large backyard to finish the path, but 17 years later that hasn’t happened.
  3. Back on the path and 2 blocks north it ends again. This time you’ll have to get onto Anson Street and pass through one of the aforementioned double lane roundabouts before rejoining the path in Matthews Park, home to a model railway!
  4. Finally, the path ends for real on Kite Street on the Southern edge of Orange CBD, one block short of the main drag, Summer Street. You’ll need to ride in traffic to get to your destination from here.

This is more or less how any bike trip in Orange plays out. Unless of course you’re riding through oft overlooked East Orange where there pretty much just isn’t any bike paths.

What can be done?

The thing about Orange is that the streets are famously wide. The town was laid out on a grid with all the streets in the old part of town being 2 chains wide. That’s about 40 metres in newspeak. Most of these streets are currently set up with one lane in each direction and loads of room for diagonally parked cars on both sides. There’s also quite often street trees between the kerbs. Some busier streets are 2 lanes each way with parallel parking on both sides.

The other thing about the streets in the 19th century parts of Orange is that they are on a grid. The great thing about a grid is that you can prioritise different types of traffic on parallel streets. The most obvious example of this is a one way network, but it can work in other ways, too. If there’s 4 parallel streets, you could, for example, have all open to local traffic, one also for buses, another for trucks with wider turning circles and another for bikes, with plenty of traffic slowing infrastructure and safe crossings at intersections.

Because the streets in Orange are so wide, putting in completely grade separated shared bike paths doesn’t need to come at the cost of reducing parking, let alone losing a traffic lane.

There are two streets in Orange that I think would be perfect for this treatment. The first is Lords Place, that runs North-South from the aforementioned bike path dead end on Kite Street. It’s not a high traffic street and it could easily have a bike path installed without dramatically altering existing traffic arrangements. The biggest barrier to be overcome for riders would be safely getting through the roundabouts at Kite and Byng Streets.

The other is Margaret Street, which runs East-West to the North of town. This street doesn’t have much through traffic at all, being broken by the rail line which has a pedestrian and bike only level crossing. A bike lane on Margaret Street could be easily implemented and would connect 3 separate parts of the network.

A map showing possible new bike routes that could be built in Orange.
How to fix those missing links.

There are a bunch of other places in town that could do with the missing link treatment, but these would be a huge start. A couple of relatively minor changes using existing street or green corridors could turn Orange’s fun and friendly weekend routes into a legitimate cycle network that would give people a safe and healthy alternative way to get around town.

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