Tag: travel 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!

Travelling by Transit across the Rustbelt – Part 4: Exploring the Erie Canal

If you haven’t already, it’s probably best to start with Part 1.

My leisurely ambling East had almost succeeded in filling in the time until my rendezvous in Syracuse. I had one spare day up my sleeve and three different ideas about how to fill it:

  • I could stay in Buffalo another night and get tickets to see Jagged Little Pill, the Alanis Morissette Broadway musical that was in town that night in the aforementioned theatre district,
  • I could head to Rochester and check out the drag scene there that I had heard so much about,
  • Or I could go straight to Syracuse and spend an extra day there while I awaited the arrival of my compadre.

For reasons I will come to shortly, after much deliberation I settled on Option 3.

Leaving Buffalo

In a story that will surprise absolutely no one Buffalo, like Detroit…and Cleveland…and countless other rustbelt towns and cities, no longer has rail service to its grand old train station. Instead, Amtrak trains call at one or both of two different stations (spoiler: not for your convenience).

Trains coming-from/bound-for Canada and Niagara call at Buffalo Exchange Street, a classic Amshack located directly under the I-190 flyover which is, at least, centrally located Downtown and close to the LRT.

The view from Platform 1 of 1 at Buffalo Exchange Street Amtrak Station.

The Lakeshore Limited coming-from/bound-for Chicago sadly doesn’t pass by this section of track and has instead been relegated to the distant suburban Buffalo Depew Amshack. Depew is in a light industrial area on the Buffalo urban fringe a few miles from Buffalo Niagara International Airport. It has plenty of parking but is sadly barely connected to Downtown by Buffalo’s transit system.

Getting from Depew to Downtown on transit requires two buses and somewhere between 80 and 120 minutes, depending on your enthusiasm for navigating American stroads on foot. That’s for a trip that is 20 minutes by car or under 3 hours if you fancy the walk. Tempting.

Depew Station courtesy of Google Streetview.

This lack of connectivity was yet another reason I gave the Lakeshore Limited a miss coming from Detroit.

Buffalo’s answer to Michigan Central: Buffalo Central Terminal

Opened in 1929, the grandiose Buffalo Central Terminal brought all the trains stopping in Buffalo together at a brand new union station. The building is epic, built as it was at the height of the golden era of rail travel. 1929 is actually really unfortunate timing as the Great Depression and subsequent road building spree made it just about the high water mark for intercity rail travel in the United States. The terminal is located a bit out of Downtown so that trains passing through the city from New York to Chicago could call there as well.

Like Detroit’s Michigan Central Station she is a grand old dame. Unlike Detroit’s Michigan Central Station she is ‘an unrenovated gem’ (would suit a motivated buyer looking to add value) and the rows of abandoned platforms give a strong dystopic energy. Horror film directors take note!

Buffalo Central Terminal. Credit: David Pape

Thankfully the community of Buffalo seems well aware of what they have in the building and there are efforts being made to the restore the building in some capacity, although that vision is unlikely to include rail travel.

The New York State Empire Service

4 trains a day head from Buffalo downstate to New York City, via Syracuse.

Two ‘Empire Services’ running from Niagara Falls that leave at 4:30am and 7:30am, mainly designed to get people to business (or pleasure) in the state capital Albany or NYC.

The aforementioned Lakeshore Limited leaves at a more leisurely 9am, but from the largely inaccessible Depew station.

The last option is the Maple Leaf that, like the name suggests, connects New York state with Canada, running daily between Toronto and NYC. The Maple Leaf leaves Buffalo heading South at 12:30pm, so I opted for that one. Apparently this is a risky choice because delays at the border crossing often mean the train runs late, and once an Amtrak train runs late it often gets really late as it can be held for extended periods in sidings to keep freight and other passenger services on-time.

4 trains a day might not wow international observers, but for regional America it’s basically incredible. Even better, the journey time of 2 hours 20 minutes is as fast as driving on the interstate.

Like most rail journeys a trip on the Empire Service is a beautiful one. Thanks to the topography of the Adirondack and Catskill mountain ranges, highways, railways and canals (more on that later!) are wedged into the valleys on their way across Upstate New York. This is great news for leisure rail passengers as for most of the journey from Buffalo to New York City the trains run alongside either the Mohawk or Hudson Rivers.

An elevation map of New York State. Trains, boats and automobiles all get upstate following the Hudson Valley north from NYC and then taking a 90 degree turn heading due West along the Mohawk Valley towards the Great Lakes. Basically the dark green bits.

This makes choosing the correct seat essential to maximising the views, a process that takes place onboard the train rather than ahead of time like it might on a flight or in Australia or Europe. The Man in Seat 61 has some good suggestions on that.

I was only going to Syracuse though so my seat selection was based on one thing and one thing only: an uninterrupted view of the Buffalo Central Terminal as we motored by!

The view of Buffalo Central from the left-hand side of an NYC bound Maple Leaf service. The colour of the sky is partly the smudgy Amtrak windows but mostly the smoke haze from the Quebec wildfires that were raging in June 2023.
The remains of Buffalo Central. All 14 platforms have been abandoned since 1979.

Syracuse, New York

The Amtrak station at Syracuse is yet another wonderful example of how far American railways have fallen.

The very 1990s William F. Walsh Regional Transportation Center looking its best under a hazy sky.

The train line through Downtown was dismantled to make way for a (you guessed it!) freeway, so the new station is a greyhound terminal/train station combo kind of near a mall and a stadium but mainly behind a huge warehouse.

Still epic. Downtown Syracuse’s old train station was closed in 1962 because the railway it fronted onto was ripped up to make way for Interstate 690. It’s now home to the offices of a TV station.
I managed to snap this photo of the other side of the long closed downtown train station from a bus travelling on I-690. There’s a huge mural of a steam train in line with the road deck.

Syracuse itself is very cool. America has a wonderful abundance of midsize towns and cities that just ooze potential. I’m sure some people like them just how they are, but in the large swathes of vacant land and gorgeous art deco buildings I see the makings of brilliance. I suppose there are just so many towns and cities like that that there isn’t the demand to kick things up a gear so they just kind of sit.

My attempt to capture the faded grandeur of Downtown Syracuse.

I come from a country where housing is so scarce that you literally cannot buy a house for less than 6 figures and if you want to live somewhere that has, you know, bars and buses and a university and a stadium and, like, things, you’re going to need at least half a million dollars. Going from that to seeing what is on offer in the Rustbelt I must say, I was tempted to bag my very own fixer upper then and there. The weather is a bit of a downer, though.

I was there in summer so didn’t have to put up with brutal winter these parts are famous for, but the weather wasn’t great either because Canada was on FIRE and New York (City) was getting smoked out, so of course it became international news. Guys, climate change can officially begin now because it has affected the centre of the known universe. The smoke was just as bad Upstate but the people there don’t make as big of a fuss about such things, and no one would listen even if they did.

If you’re wondering why my photos from Syracuse have such a handy apocalyptic vibe, well that’s partly just the rustbelt, but the thick smoke choking the air and making my eyes water probably helped as well.

There is plenty of room for in-fill development in Downtown Syracuse. The old train station is visible in the background.

So you’re probably thinking something like, yes, yes, nice old buildings, sad train station, but you could’ve been seeing the Alanis musical or Rochester drag! Why the rush to Syracuse?

Well, dear reader, because of one little incredibly important piece of nation building infrastructure; the Erie Canal.

The Erie Canal: America’s First Superhighway

If you aren’t familiar with the Erie Canal, I’ll let the opening paragraph from the Wikipedia article on it set the scene:

The Erie Canal is a historic canal in upstate New York that runs east–west between the Hudson River and Lake Erie. Completed in 1825, the canal was the first navigable waterway connecting the Atlantic Ocean to the Great Lakes, vastly reducing the costs of transporting people and goods across the Appalachians. In effect, the canal accelerated the settlement of the Great Lakes region, the westward expansion of the United States, and the economic ascendancy of New York State. It has been called “The Nation’s First Superhighway.”

People like to froth railways, highways and the like, but the importance of those early canals on America’s industrial development can hardly be overstated.

These days the canal is still in existence and if you own a craft with a sufficiently narrow draught you can still navigate the waterway approximately 4 months of the year. There seems to be some limited opportunities for tourism on the canal and I’m sorely tempted to pack it all up, do up an old canal-boat and start plying the canal from Albany to Buffalo in the summer months.

The original 1820s Erie Canal near Syracuse. This section is closed to boat traffic. You can see a newer, narrower aqueduct that carries the canal water over the creek below. The bike path on the right hand side is the original tow path.

Exploring the Erie Canal

If you want to explore the Erie Canal on foot or bike it is pretty easy. The old canal boats made their way along the canal being pulled by horses that walked on an embankment alongside the canal called the towpath.

New York State has been particularly motivated about repurposing the no longer required towpaths into public trails. Thanks to a mix of rail trails, towpath trails and a bit of on-road cycling you can ride your bike all the way from Buffalo to New York City on a wonderful right of way that the government has named the Empire State Trail. Given that the rivers, canal and then, later, the railways, led development of upstate New York (and much of the rest of the world besides) these trails run right through small towns and into major cities. It’s all very European.

Well would you look at that, the Empire State Trail also follows the Hudson and Mohawk Valleys.

Syracuse not only includes some excellent spots to stroll along the canal it is also home to the Erie Canal Museum – the main motivating factor for my extra day in Syracuse. I was also keen to check out Onondaga Lake: ‘the most polluted lake in North America’ but given the aforementioned air quality I figured it wasn’t a good day for a cycling trip around the lake. Although perhaps fitting for its epitaph?

In 1910 Onondaga Lake was a popular recreation spot. The 20th century was not kind to the lake, but these days as long as you don’t disturb the toxic sediment that has settled on the lake floor it isn’t actually too bad.

The Erie Canal Museum

The Erie Canal Museum is pretty much the ideal small museum. It’s right downtown and partially in an old building that was originally built as a weighbridge for the canal. Canalboats would pull into a lock that housed a giant scale, the water would be drained out and the toll to be paid calculated based on the weight and type of the goods contained within the boat.

There is a lot going on in this photo but bear with me. This photo is taken from inside the weighbridge building that now houses the Erie Canal Museum. The stone ledge behind the rope is the original water line and the pink and blue structure behind it is a recreated canal boat sitting in what would have been the original weighbridge. The framed photo shows the weighbridge in more functional times and in the cabinet in the foreground is a scale model of the whole operation.

The city has long since filled in this abandoned section of canal, but the mere existence of this one remaining sign helps a visitor better get a feel for what downtown Syracuse would’ve been like in the canal heyday.

A considered opinion.

I had a wonderful time exploring the Museum and chatting with the volunteers there and then took a bus out of town to walk a section of the old towpath.

You can still see a lot of original works along the way and the Syracuse bus system is just substantial enough that with a little bit of planning I could take a bus to a bleak strip mall/highway interchange, walk along the canal for half a dozen miles and jump back on a different bus in a quaint old canal village. I couldn’t argue with those $1 flat rate bus fares, either.

Super scenic. A section of the old Erie Canal towpath trail just outside Syracuse.

The Barge Canal

The larger Barge Canal is the more modern iteration of the Erie Canal, built in the early 20th century roughly halfway in time between the opening of the Erie Canal and today. The Barge Canal could carry larger barges and allowed the heavily degraded sections of downtown canalway to be filled in for development. It bypasses Syracuse quite a few miles to the north.

I didn’t visit the Barge Canal, but if you were to actually boat your way from the Hudson to the Great Lakes this is the canal you would go down.

It’s easy in the 21st century to think of the canals of Amsterdam or the like and think of what an asset they are to an urban area but in the pre-sewerage and heavily industrial downtowns of the Rustbelt a canal was definitely not a tourist attraction. It must’ve been a huge relief to locals when the Barge Canal was opened and the polluted gutter running through Downtown Syracuse was filled in.

Before there was a car park there was a canal and before there was a canal there was forest.

Onward Bound

The next day my buddy arrived into Syracuse airport and my watering eyes and headache from the previous days exertions had just about passed. Sadly the outdoor concert we were in town to see was cancelled thanks to the air quality, but we had just as good of a time pub crawling our way through this fun little city.

Irish pubs and flags abound. Don’t let the car-centric design fool you, rustbelt cities are surprisingly walkable. We found plenty of pubs, dive bars and breweries to keep us entertained for an afternoon.

 The following morning before sunrise we were bleary eyed and heavy headed making our way back down the hill to the Syracuse Transit Centre to board the Empire Service for New York City’s Penn Station. This time I made sure we sat on the right hand side to get the best of those expansive Hudson River vistas.

Bannerman Castle in the Hudson River, from the southbound Amtrak Empire Service.

That wraps up my adventures travelling by transit across the Rustbelt. If you’d like to get emailed when I blog please sign up below:

Travelling by Transit across the Rustbelt – Part 3: Niagara Falls USA

If you haven’t already, go and check out Parts 1 (Detroit) and 2 (Buffalo).

Niagara Falls USA by bus and foot

My Toronto friends have a habit of pulling a particular face when I deign to suggest making a trip to Niagara. It’s the exact same face that a certain kind of person (of which I confess to being one of) will give you if you mention a desire to visit the number one overcrowded tourist trap near their place.

If someone is visiting my neck of the woods I’ll probably dish out unsolicited advice that goes something like this…

“Bondi? Why? Bronte’s way nicer.”

“The Three Sisters? Well, up to you but definitely don’t go on the weekend.”

“The Hunter Valley? You mean Cessnock Heights!?” (jk who doesn’t love a wine region)

and for some Canadian flavour:

“Lake Louise? You know the Rockies is full of lakes that are just as epic and aren’t so popular you need to prebook a shuttle from the park and ride just to get there?”

So when I got this feedback on Niagara I could safely discount it as local’s bias and get on with planning my trip.

Niagara Falls, Canada or Niagara Falls, USA?

The first thing that will come up when you mention you are planning a trip to Niagara Falls is that the person who has been there before will tell you you simply must go to the Canadian side. I’m sure this bias is much stronger north of the border, but even tripadvisor seems to agree.

One thing I overheard, read online and was told countless times was that the all-important iconic view of the Falls is from Canada and that that is really the only side to see the Falls from.

I found the ambience of the Niagara Falls State Park on the U.S side of the border quite lovely, actually.

That was more than enough to send me gleefully rushing straight to the American side. After all, what’s more rustbelt than the more-rundown, less-loved version of an already tacky tourist attraction?

Transit from Buffalo to Niagara

Thanks, once again, to the general perception and approach of American transit agencies to being a safety net for the poor rather than a desirable means of transport competitive with the car, I was able to bag another brilliant transit deal: a $5 day pass within the Buffalo-Niagara region.

The price might be low but you pay for it in the system’s complexity.

The Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority runs buses in the Buffalo-Niagara area as well as Buffalo’s lone light rail line.

To get from Buffalo to Niagara Falls there are a couple of express options at various times of day, one of which goes to a suburban mall rather than Downtown Niagara. If in doubt, the hourly all-stops works well enough.

The NFTA network has a bit of spagetti energy and they don’t appear to publish a PDF network map. But they’ve given the public access to their network planning tool that not only shows route frequency and stop location but also includes some handy demographic data!

I rode the hourly 40 all-stops bus and it was decently popular. Riders were mostly locals using the intervening stops, but there was an Amish-looking father and son making their way to the Falls with a paper timetable in hand. I haven’t seen a paper timetable in years, but it will surprise absolutely no one that I used to have a not-insubstantial collection of Newcastle bus and train timetables to my name.

I’ve had a couple of conversations online with people who seem to think up to date route and timetable information at bus stops is basically pointless because ‘there’s an app for that’. This is frustrating to me because it comes from a place of assuming that everyone both wants and is able to be constantly connected. Is it really good policy for a public service to only provide information to people with a smartphone and an active internet connection?

It is a much smaller subsection of society that are unable to figure out when the next bus is coming from a simple paper timetable embedded in a bus stop and it doesn’t seem like that much to provide.

But I digress. As someone who mostly travels without mobile internet (“Could I also grab the wifi password?”) I must admit that our modern world is a trickier place to navigate sans internet than it once was. Few cities let you access their bikeshare programs without an active internet connection (shout out to a notable exception – Vancouver), getting a taxi now all but requires one and paper timetables are a thing of the past, or so I thought.

A pair of the many similarly dressed people I assume are Amish enjoying the view across the Niagara River to the more impressive Canadian-side skyline.

It was nice to see a father and son on a trip to enjoy an iconic national monument and a transit agency that understands the diverse needs of their constituency. I also enjoyed listening to a couple carrying cans of drink, an enormous plastic bag full of clothes and much else besides, give generous and probably too specific advice to the Amish duo. It was a wholesome American transit scene.

Arriving in Niagara Falls, USA

Stepping off in Niagara the joy continued. I was most surprised to see that the American side is beautiful in its own right and very, very popular. I had forgotten that the majority of US Americans don’t have passports and Niagara is an important nation-building pilgrimage! In fact, Buffalo was the first city in the world lit up by electricity thanks to Nikola Tesla’s brain (there is a statue of the man in each city, the Buffalo one is handily located right by the Downtown bus stop) and the incredible power of the Falls.

The Niagara Falls statue of Tesla. If you get on the bus to Niagara from Church and Main in Downtown Buffalo you can enjoy the Buffalo statue of Tesla while you wait.

Middle America was out in full force. Black, white, brown, Amish, you name it. The people watching rivalled the incredible majesty of the famous falls.

Happily settling for the second-class view of the Falls.

Hiking the Niagara Gorge

After ducking into a tourist information centre and being told it was “too far to walk” to the Niagara Power Vista I decided to take it upon myself to walk there. The Power Vista was about the only tourist attraction in the town that appealed to me – a museum to the city’s hydroelectric past, present and future housed in a functioning dam just north of the city. The dam was built by Robert Moses, who must’ve taken a well earned break from trying to ruin NYC with stroads and freeways to duck upstate and expand the role of hydro in the region.

For fans of awe inspiring natural beauty and post-industrial decay I cannot speak highly enough of this walk. Within minutes of leaving the Falls I was riding an elevator that was once part of a huge power station that had been destroyed by the water it was supposed to be harnessing. The river was fast flowing and devoid of watercraft, thanks to the enormous rapids downstream that limit access. I had been expecting to spend the day at what is functionally a carnival and instead had stumbled my way into a majestic gorge that played a momentous role in the industrial history of the United States.

The Niagara Gorge as seen from the lower levels of the abandoned Schoellkopf Power Station.

I took loads of photos (few other activities provoke this response), enjoyed the company of many birds and a couple of snakes, wandered about the graffiti-covered rusting relics and generally followed any distraction that grabbed my eyes. This unfortunately meant that I was running a bit tight to closing time of the Power Vista centre which, as described, was really far away.

Rusting relics; blissful solitude.

At Devil’s Hole State Park I found this old freeway lane that had been cut off from the adjacent highway and turned into a bike lane that ran the last mile to the museum. As I got closer I realised that the museum footbridge across the freeway did not include access onto my bike/pedestrian road. I thought about jumping various fences but this is a huge, functioning hydroelectricity producing facility in America and I didn’t want to get shot. There I stood, mere metres from the museum but more than 2km away on foot. It was half an hour to close so I gave up and trudged back to the park to rest my weary feet and figure out how to get home.

Power for Ontario (left) and New York (right). That building on the right is the Niagara Power Vista. Sadly pedestrian access from this point is over 2km away…

To catch a bus you have to think like a bus.

Waiting at Devil’s Hole State Park for a bus poses a tricky situation if you don’t have access to the internet. The obvious solution would be to just buy a goddamn sim card (adding roaming to my Canadian sim was prohibitively expensive) but I’m going to set that solution aside because: 1, I don’t want to and 2, I personally think that a public transport system should be usable without one.

At Devil’s Hole State Park there are three bus stops for three different bus routes, none which have a printed timetable.

3 bus stops, very few buses.

The first is a dinky tourist shuttle that runs back to Downtown and leaves from the car park (top left). This has no timetable so you can’t really plan ahead with it. Apparently it runs roughly every 40 minutes and you can track the buses on the app or in your browser, but I was wandering about roughly along its route all day and I can’t say I ever saw one…

I hate everything about this. Why even bother having wifi on your bus if the only way to find out when it’s coming is to look it up on the internet? Maybe get some wifi at your bus stops first, or, you know, run to a timetable!?

On the nearby street there are bus stops on either side for route 52. The 52 runs at an irregular frequency of anywhere between 30 and 120 minutes between services. The route is a big loop that takes 40 minutes to complete. This meant that whichever side I got a bus from it would be between 10 and 30 minutes to Downtown. I was vaguely aware of some of this (I had done a small amount of research before I wandered off downstream) so I knew that whichever side got a bus first, that was the one I wanted to be on.

The 52 ‘North End Circulator’ timetable makes for a brutal game of turn-up-and-go roulette.

I found myself a good spot on the grass where I could eye off all three bus stops and I waited. It took around 30 minutes until the more direct 52B came along, which, all things considered, I feel like worked out reasonably well. I swiped my day pass and headed back to Downtown Niagara Falls. Well, almost. The Portage Transit Centre where the 52B and other suburban bus routes terminate is awkwardly located at the edge of Downtown in a kind of run down supermarket carpark. So I had to walk the rest of the way to the trendy (for the area…) 3rd Street to get some dinner. I was absolutely starving after all of this and thankfully all-you-can-eat Indian seems to be a trend in Niagara.

The smokey haze courtesy of the Quebec wildfires did downtown Niagara no favours in the picturesque stakes.

I left the restaurant stuffed like a turkey with some time to chill before my all-stops bus back to Buffalo. I had just started gently perambulating to aid my digestion when I spotted an unexpected express bus which I felt the need to awkwardly attempt to run for. I was back in Buffalo all of thirty minutes later extremely satisfied with the day’s undertakings – and I hadn’t even gone to the casino!

Carry on to the fourth and final part 4: the Erie Canal.

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