A bus bridge was in place between Fort Lauderdale and Miami.Do you know whether Brightline has contingency plans for such situations (such as a bus shuttle maybe) or is it just everybody to themselves?
A bus bridge was in place between Fort Lauderdale and Miami.Do you know whether Brightline has contingency plans for such situations (such as a bus shuttle maybe) or is it just everybody to themselves?
The problem with the New River Bridge is not its age, though some repairs needed to be made to it in preparation for Brightline Service as described in (PDF) New River Bridge FAQ. The problem is that with projected increased traffic what with both Bridghtline and TriRail service being added, boats will have a relatively small window of availability of the Waterway. Hence there is a plan to either build a higher bridge or a tunnel, yet to be determined exactly what, to mitigate the situation.Wasn't the FEC Bascule bridge a replacement. It has been many years but it certainly seemed very new late 1999.
Year Month Ridership Tix Rev-A Tix Rev-B PPR-A PPR-B Tot Rev Total PPR
2022 January 64,243 1.3 $1,254,666 $20.24 $19.53 1.5 $23.35
2022 February 77,806 1.6 $1,624,589 $20.56 $20.88 1.9 $24.42
2022 March 107,069 2.3 $2,289,135 $21.48 $21.38 2.7 $25.22
2022 April 93,922 1.9 $1,926,340 $20.23 $20.51 2.3 $24.49
2022 May 102,796 2.2 $2,178,247 $21.40 $21.19 2.6 $25.29
2022 June 92,304 1.7 $1,713,162 $18.42 $18.56 2.1 $22.75
2022 July 111,582 1.9 $1,896,894 $17.03 $17.00 2.3 $20.61
2022 August 100,116 1.9 $1,917,221 $18.98 $19.15 2.4 $23.97
2022 September 91,577 1.8 $1,769,268 $19.66 $19.32 2.5 $27.30
2022 October 102,615 2.1 $2,126,183 $20.46 $20.72 3.0 $29.24
2022 November 102,544 2.2 $2,213,925 $21.45 $21.59 3.4 $33.16
2022 December 183,920 3.7 $3,733,576 $20.12 $20.30 5.1 $27.73
2022 1,230,494 24.6 $24,643,207 $19.99 31.8 $25.84
| | MIA-AVE | AVE-FLL | FLL-BOC | BOC-WPB | WPB-ORL |
MIA-AVE | | 485,061 | | | | |
MIA-FLL | | 356,802 | 356,802 | | | |
MIA-BOC | | 570,077 | 570,077 | 570,077 | | |
MIA-WPB | | 546,898 | 546,898 | 546,898 | 546,898 | |
AVE-FLL | | | 284,914 | | | |
AVE-BOC | | | 102,629 | 102,629 | | |
AVE-WPB | | | 364,954 | 364,954 | 364,954 | |
FLL-BOC | | | | 374,222 | | |
FLL-WPB | | | | 229,081 | 229,081 | |
BOC-WPB | | | | | 336,597 | |
MIA-ORL | | 1,489,329 | 1,489,329 | 1,489,329 | 1,489,329 | 1,489,329 |
AVE-ORL | | | 493,981 | 493,981 | 493,981 | 493,981 |
FLL-ORL | | | | 1,138,012 | 1,138,012 | 1,138,012 |
BOC-ORL | | | | | 447,550 | 447,550 |
WPB-ORL | | | | | | 720,273 |
| | 3,448,167 | 4,209,584 | 5,309,183 | 5,046,402 | 4,289,145 |
| | | | | | |
Curr. Equip. | | 3,258,720 | 3,258,720 | 3,258,720 | 3,258,720 | 3,258,720 |
| | 105.81% | 129.18% | 162.92% | 154.86% | 131.62% |
Thank you for doing so. It was much easier to digest in layman's terms than trying to decipher an entire report.So, I've spent a lot of (digital) ink on discussing these issues.
I concur with the stop idea but have to point out that each stop extends the route time. American trains, unlike others, seem to take an inordinate amount of time at intermediate stops versus European ones where people line up to board and board quickly.So, I've spent a lot of (digital) ink on discussing these issues. What do I think ridership and will look like in 2025? My best guess is this, assuming supplemental equipment ordering happens to accommodate more riders:
(1) The estimates for the existing three stations are about right. Honestly, they might even be low to the tune of 10% or so - from what I can tell from my data-grabbing a few years ago, there are probably a number of peak-ish trains that are either selling out or getting reasonably close to it that they're losing riders to a lack of space on the "right" trains. By the same token, there's empty space on the far-off-peak trains (say, the 2345 out of Miami on weeknights - that's probably never going to be a sold-out train).
My estimate: 1.25m riders for the original three stations. Average revenue of $25-26/passenger.
(2) The estimates for the two new stations are a bit high, for two reasons. First of all, the ridership estimates in these disclosures have been chronically on the high side, so in general I am going to continue to assume a bias towards the high side until I see a reason to believe that this is not the case. Second, as of right now only 11 of the 18 daily trains are stopping at those two stations. While I can understand not bothering with stops for (say) the first train or two of the day, if the rest of the trains don't add stops at those stations it will limit ridership accordingly. Without access to Brightline's data, I suspect that the ridership estimate on the Aventura-Miami pair is on the high side in particular (though I note with amusement that this pair wasn't even deigned important enough to include back in the 2019 slap-on figures). I'm inclined to knock these estimates down by about a quarter.
My estimate: 1.85m riders for the "rest of South Florida". Average revenue of $24-25/passenger.
South Florida totals: 3.10m riders. Average revenue of $25/passenger.
(3) The ridership numbers for Orlando are probably junk, based on how far off the initial estimates were (South Florida per the above is about 1/3 lower than the 2017 projections. Despite these misses, whereas the combined MIA/FLL/WPB-ORL ridership there (3.56m) plus the added Aventura/Boca ridership (about 100k) was about 3.65m, in the current study it goes up to about 4.3m. Note that the underlying 2017 data did not include Disney Springs (that bit was slapped on later, and boy did it show it) or Boca/Aventura (also slapped on, with either their numbers being incredibly low or the other numbers being incredibly high - WPB sending almost 1.7m to ORL but BOC only sending 75k there is just absurd). Miami-Orlando ridership in the 2017/19 projection was 948k; in 2022, it shows up at 1,489k. West Palm Beach was 1,689k in the 2017/19 projection; now, it's 720k (and even if you were to accrue Boca's ridership to West Palm, Boca only has 447k riders so you're still down about half a million net). This comes across to me as a blatant case of somebody just making up numbers. I'm just going to knock this estimate by 40%, from 4,289k to 2,573k based on existing errors (and I think there's a case it could be a bit lower - a drop of 50% honestly seems viable to me). I'm also going to drop revenue to $100/ticket (I think that number is more likely to hold water given the lack of a Tri-Rail-style competitor.
My estimate: 2.57m riders to/from Orlando. Average revenue of $100/passenger.
Tallied up, this gives 3.10m pax/yr in South Florida at $25/passenger ($77.5m); 2.57m "long distance" passengers to/from Orlando at $100/passenger ($257m) for $334.5m in ticket revenue. I will assume another 18% in Ancillary Revenue ($60.2m); this is about 1/3 lower than Brightline's projections (it is proportionally higher than the share Brightline projects, but substantially lower than the 30-odd percent that shows up on the current report) for about $394.7m. This amount is probably not enough to cover interest on the bonds. I could be off by a buck or two (particularly in South Florida), but if I am it's because of inflation (they were assuming 2% inflation) not because of cost pressures.
And as I said above, all of this assumes that Brightline is going to invest in additional cars - even in my reduced scenario, you're probably looking at needing sets in the 7-8 car range to achieve plausible load factors (Brightline's projections probably need to get up into the 9-10 car range). If they don't add equipment, then they can only fit about half of the pax indicated at the Fort Lauderdale-Boca Raton chokepoint and everything becomes a mess. Notably, Brightline's projections don't indicate points where they'd be adding equipment - and even for "just" the existing operations, by their own projections ridership would eventually outstrip the capacity of the existing 10-set operation even with trains extended to a full ten cars. I also cannot find an estimated equipment replacement timeframe despite the charts going out into the late 2050s.
There's one saving grace - Cocoa might be worth another half-million riders or so, partly as a "feeder" to the Orlando airport (Brightline's parking is cheaper than non-"economy" airport parking is at MCO) and partly with folks heading to South Florida. And a proposed Martin County station might add a similar number of folks. I think those two might provide just enough riders to get Brightline "over the hump"...but again, they're going to need more equipment to make that work.
The rest of the Orlando-area operations are simply something that cannot be evaluated at this time since we don't know what the station locations (or even how many we ultimately get) will shake out as.
I agree wholeheartedly. My analysis is strictly a question of the interaction of Brightline's decisions about stopping patterns for various trains with the report's ridership projections. If BL doesn't stop most/all trains at those stops, it will suppress ridership at the skipped stops as a result, and ridership at those stops will come in even lower.I concur with the stop idea but have to point out that each stop extends the route time. American trains, unlike others, seem to take an inordinate amount of time at intermediate stops versus European ones where people line up to board and board quickly.
Point well taken and the population is there as is the demand. I lived in Palm Beach and Palm Beach Gardens for many years and a fast train direct to the Orlando airport for international flights would be much more attractive to me than going down to Miami.I agree wholeheartedly. My analysis is strictly a question of the interaction of Brightline's decisions about stopping patterns for various trains with the report's ridership projections. If BL doesn't stop most/all trains at those stops, it will suppress ridership at the skipped stops as a result, and ridership at those stops will come in even lower.
I agree that Americans do not seem to want to board a train quickly which is odd. If you use the NY or DC metro, the crowd generally stands to the side of the doors to allow people off then board relatively fast. Amtrak does not seem to have that same mindset. Is it a generational thing? A lack of train experience thing? My money is on the latter. Luggage adds fuel to the "slow movement" fire. And families with tons of luggage is what central Florida is about, when it comes to tourism.I concur with the stop idea but have to point out that each stop extends the route time. American trains, unlike others, seem to take an inordinate amount of time at intermediate stops versus European ones where people line up to board and board quickly.
Amtrak does not seem to have that same mindset. Is it a generational thing? A lack of train experience thing? My money is on the latter. Luggage adds fuel to the "slow movement" fire. And families with tons of luggage is what central Florida is about, when it comes to tourism.
In a lot of cases it doesn't seem to be a case of "want to". Sometimes it takes time for the doors to get opened. Way, way too many stations don't have level boarding. And so on.I agree that Americans do not seem to want to board a train quickly which is odd. If you use the NY or DC metro, the crowd generally stands to the side of the doors to allow people off then board relatively fast. Amtrak does not seem to have that same mindset. Is it a generational thing? A lack of train experience thing? My money is on the latter. Luggage adds fuel to the "slow movement" fire. And families with tons of luggage is what central Florida is about, when it comes to tourism.
Honestly, you could probably find some early-retirement folks interested in making some supplemental cash for those positions, too.Seriously, when I rode BL like a year ago or so, they did a kindergarten walk from the waiting area to the platform. Only thing is, at FLL, there was a train approaching for WPB and MIA at the same time. The "guides" did little after getting the passengers to the platform. No digital displays to confirm which train was going which way.
On the way TO FLL, there were DOZENS of passengers, with many kids, who just would not stand up at all until the train was completely stopped. This was despite calls from the PA to do so. Seeing no one disembarking, the people boarding went ahead and did so.
They probably could use a few more ambassadors on the train and on the platform - like some low rent high school kids that enjoy riding trains....errr...interns.
I don't really see it having much impact as an airport feeder because an hourly service is simply not attractive on such a comparatively short distance.There's one saving grace - Cocoa might be worth another half-million riders or so, partly as a "feeder" to the Orlando airport (Brightline's parking is cheaper than non-"economy" airport parking is at MCO) and partly with folks heading to South Florida.
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