Transit planner
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Transit Planning or Public Transport Planning, is the professional discipline responsible for developing public transport systems. It is a hybrid discipline involving aspects of transportation engineering and traditional urban planning. Indeed many transit planners find themselves involved in discourse with urban landuse issues such as TOD (transit oriented development) and the like.
Transit planners are typically responsible for developing routes and networks of routes for urban transit systems. These may follow one or more models depending on the character of the communities they serve. For example, in traditional urban areas a system may attract enough ridership to support high frequencies of service. At these high frequencies services can operate at demand service levels where the specific frequency of service in each corridor can be independent and where transfers can reasonably occur at random. In less-densely developed areas service may operate somewhat infrequently. To optimize the quality of trips for customers, some systems compensate by operating a timed transfer system. In this model routes are designed to bring buses (or trains or ferries) together at a central location at predetermined times. Customers then transfer between the vehicles which leave a few minutes later. In systems committed to this system, routes are designed taking into account the route travel time.
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