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@electro_sykes Жыл бұрын
Sydney Metro could look like this one day, these things just take time. Afterall, Rome wasn't built in one day
@auratesanhandle2 Жыл бұрын
well technically you this isn’t your first. 2 years ago, you had a comparison between Australia and Singapore :)
@wengkiong Жыл бұрын
Very well researched and presented video! 👏🏻 Bravo! Thank you! Singaporeans are lucky in the sense politicians plan for the country and for future generations, not for their own immediate political popularity 😊
@RelaxNChillOut Жыл бұрын
in Sydney or Australia, the politics get in the way of building large scale infrastructure. We change government every so many years, we never get an opportunity to complete anything large and meaningful. ie. Look how much money has been wasted on high speed train studies. Studies after studies after studies and then they scrap it because it doesn't suit the budget. Atleast the Singaporean government have the bigger picture in their sight.
@electro_sykes Жыл бұрын
@@RelaxNChillOut In Australia, politics build large scale infrastructure, but try to make it car dependent so they don't have to pay much for the operation, as a lot of that comes outta your own pocket instead
@damacaroni9911 Жыл бұрын
As a Singaporean, Australian, I respect this a lot.
@boonhowemoh9807 Жыл бұрын
As a Singaporean and Australian, you probably need to hand in one of the passports 😅
@damacaroni9911 Жыл бұрын
ehhh, I'm way to lazy to do that, Singapore has easier entry to passport holders anyways, so I'll take my chances.@@boonhowemoh9807
@damacaroni9911 Жыл бұрын
What? What do you mean, "lies again", are you implying I'm a liar?@@NazriB
@ChenJiaRuiNhps8 ай бұрын
me singaporean chinese
@locuzsteaks17 күн бұрын
@@boonhowemoh9807so you’re a singaporean citizen of australian ethnicity or background
@tobsong Жыл бұрын
Haven’t even mentioned the fare of MRT yet, an end to end 47.7km trip from Changi Airport to Tuas Link cost only $2.26, which is unthinkable for Sydneysiders! And I really like the naming system of the stations in Singapore, eg. EW01 for Pasir Ris meaning it’s the first station on the east west line! very friendly to tourists.
@arkynkueh Жыл бұрын
Actually, EW1 is Pasir Ris station, not Changi Airport, which is CG2.
@tobsong Жыл бұрын
@@arkynkueh ah ok thanks, you got my point
@gwarguraqueentrickstarcoat9110 Жыл бұрын
Well you able to spend less $3 on your trip is actually thanks to how Land Transport Authority here in Singapore caluclate based on their own formula where based on inflation, Singporean disposable income and other reasons that keeps it affordable to many Singporeans including me to be able to ride Public transport within good reason Plus its a big plus for low and middle income singaporeans here as cars are mostly quite expenive here in singapore compared to countries like USA or Austraila for that matter However, only sad tging to say parts of the system such as the LRT system is still design poorly for commutors though I hope the LRT system can be improved.
@tobsong Жыл бұрын
@@gwarguraqueentrickstarcoat9110 good to know! Here in Sydney it costs me $7.35 one way to work in the city, so about $30 each day for my wife and I, while it costs me $15 for an early bird parking and $8 toll charge, there’s just less incentive for me to use the public transport when I need the flexibility and a happier wife. That being said, the car price in Singapore is crazy so most people do have no choice but to use MRT I assume. Singapore is one of my favourite cities, apart from its climate lol
@RUHappyATM Жыл бұрын
@@tobsong But would you live and die in Singapore?
@boonhowemoh9807 Жыл бұрын
One of the key points (which you briefly mentioned) is that Singapore government has something at almost every MRT station as a destination. These could be shopping centres (most of them very well integrated with the stations), but it is also the commercial hubs and government buildings (e.g. ICA, MOE, NEA). Most importantly, these ensure that commuters go in each direction to all stations (where they work) throughout the day, unlike many cities, where morning peaks have everyone going one direction to city, and evening peak having everyone going out of cities, with the stations very empty thoughout the day otherwise.
@whynotsa6866 Жыл бұрын
that's true, I do wonder if braddell building is a mall tho, have not gone in there. my father did tell me it was an office building...maybe its a mixed use mall?
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
@@whynotsa6866braddell is residential
@whynotsa6866 Жыл бұрын
@invinciblemode braddell has a station because next to it is braddel house. if you search it. it shows that it's a office space with stores on the outside. it is definitely still in Toa payoh tho, so quite residential
@boonhowemoh9807 Жыл бұрын
@@whynotsa6866 Braddell station is mainly for residential, but there are some commercial buildings and schools nearby as well
@uwet.8826 Жыл бұрын
Good point. In fact, I government agencies were told to move out of the CBD 20+ years ago, in order not to compete for the most valuable land with businesses and drive up their costs.
@craigsomerton235911 ай бұрын
We absolutely loved Singapore and were blown away at the convenience and efficiency of the MRT system. Compared to Sydney's fragmented busses and trains, it was astounding. We especially delighted in the way the MRT seamlessly integrated with shopping areas - you can literally traverse these subterranean areas for hours, as we did, avoiding the heat and humidity, only briefly popping-up above ground to get our bearings.
@dxnerd86 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: they have a metro station called Canberra. About as close as the national crappital will come to a proper mass transit system.
@dxnerd86 Жыл бұрын
Well I really need to learn to watch the video BEFORE commenting. Great minds think alike!
@lzh4950 Жыл бұрын
Its named after the nearby Canberra Dr & Link, which like other roads in Sembawang suburb (where this station is in) are named after places in the British Empire, probably when the country was still a British Crown Colony (there's also Montreal Dr & Durban Rd nearby)
@jace888au Жыл бұрын
Impressive how you’ve applied the SMRT’s efficiency to the speed at which you uploaded this video after coming back from holiday! It’s such an amazing place and shows what a strong and deliberate focus on city planning can have on uplifting a country… even smaller things like time-based pricing to spread out peak hours. It’s funny also to see how complex the MRT map has become compared to when I was growing up and only had the red and green lines (which was far easier to memorise). Ps shout out for bedok!
@monketok141 Жыл бұрын
I loved the MRT when i was visiting but I honestly loved the bus network even more. A lot of the MRT stations, probably because some also double as evac shelters, require so much walking to get from street to platform level. The busses went everywhere and as was mentioned, are very frequent as well.
@oldskoolmusicnostalgia Жыл бұрын
Buses would work nowhere as well if the MRT wasn't doing the heavy lifting of providing high density transit.
@laggeddot Жыл бұрын
Spot on. I have just returned to Sydney after a trip to Singapore. The MRT was excellent. I just sold my home on the Northern Beaches because of the dreadful traffic and zero public transport. I now live in the Sydney CBD and love it. The Northern Beaches have this mentality that if they put in trains, people would come to their haven, so they put up with an outdated infrastructure. I feel sorry for those trapped there when the boomers have all died. I love your insight for better planning.
@trishd2163 Жыл бұрын
Great post! I agree I lived on the northern beaches till 2020-21. I went back recently and was astounded how horrible and worse the traffic has become. It’s so congested. It’s going to be a frustrating place to live and get around long term.
@laggeddot Жыл бұрын
@@trishd2163 It's a nightmare there now. You can't get out of Manly on the weekend without waiting for 3 ferries, and if you drive, you sit on Military Road in a traffic jam. There is a shortage of bus drivers so many busses don't arrive. I really hope the Metro eventually covers more of Sydney.
@Spacemonkeymojo Жыл бұрын
@@trishd2163Everywhere is becoming congested because the government is importing hundreds of thousands of people to keep house prices high.
@Spacemonkeymojo Жыл бұрын
@@laggeddot I have a feeling that even if the Metro covered a lot of Sydney the roads would still be extremely congested. Like Singapore car prices should go up and the cost of owning a car should also increase greatly.
@yesbeautyfly3 ай бұрын
Northern Beaches are expensive due to lack of rail network. Buses are very frequent but old tram tracks were pulled without a trace.
@papa_gowon Жыл бұрын
The Circle Line being an actual circle on the map is so aesthetic.
@officialvisaural Жыл бұрын
One other crucial thing is how the branding/design is so consistent across transport modes. It’s like a theme park and spares so many people every day the extra mental load of processing the meaning of every sign they read (because the font tells them that the sign in question is part of the public transit network)
@exploringsydneysrailways Жыл бұрын
Good video! I've wanted to go to Singapore for a while to check out the trains, and this is just more motivation to go. One point I'll make about frequency: Singapore has the big advantage of being a newly-built railway system where every line runs on dedicated tracks. As most Australian networks were built long ago when the answer to how to expand railway coverage was to build a branch, the networks have loads of branches which is the main thing that reduces frequency. Sydney does have high-frequency lines like the North Shore Line, where stations like Waverton get a train every 3 minutes in peak times, but the reason so many trains stop there is because 3 branch lines from the west combine on this corridor, with each of those branches getting much less frequent trains. Unfortunately fixing this is very expensive because it requires redirecting lines onto newly-built routes, and this is exactly what Sydney Metro City and Southwest, Cross River Rail, and the Melbourne Metro Tunnel are doing, but it will take a long time to get to high frequencies on every line just because of the capacity constraints that branches cause.
@placeholderblankspace Жыл бұрын
Singapore did do an oopsie with the circle line and made it branch in the city, so… there is that. But that’s only like 5 stations that are really near each other so it doesn’t really matter… yet
@jk35260 Жыл бұрын
Most of the lines are underground. Building these underground network for the MRT is far from simple.
@jk35260 Жыл бұрын
Building a train network in Singapore is much more expensive than in most other cities, because the city is very densely populated and has many existing infrastructures. The underground space is already crowded with pipes for water, electricity, waste, and telecommunications. This makes it very challenging to construct the rail network. However, Singapore also has a unique advantage over other cities. Most of its population, about 85%, live in high-rise buildings. This means that the train stations are very close to where people live, usually within 15 minutes of walking distance. The train network is also well connected with the bus network, making public transport very convenient and accessible for most residents. Singapore is a remarkable city that runs very efficiently. I think it is the most efficient city in the world.
@emptyangel Жыл бұрын
I love how you've featured local transport KZbinrs into your video. :) Great video! Thanks.
@kupiokerr9436 Жыл бұрын
9:28 "...density and frequency are intrinsically linked together..." Sydney doesn't understand this 😢 Please visit Hong Kong's MTR. That company literally pays dividends. (SEHK: 0066) Also, the "weird loop" Downtown Line (DTL) Singapore deserves its own video.
@yesbeautyfly3 ай бұрын
High rise buildings always link with low birth rates. Look at HK, Singapore, Seoul, Tokyo & etc. The above places will dry out for people naturally.
@jtjx1354 Жыл бұрын
As a singaporean, I absolutely agree with your points. However, I do have some things that I would like to add on. In my opinion, another main reason for the success of the SG MRT is also in part due to our political system. Whilst we are a democracy as well, one differentiating factor between us and countries like Australia is long term political stability. SG has had one ruling party for close to 60 years which makes it much easier to plan far ahead and pass bills to build more rail, whereas in Australia, you could have one party plan everything for the term and if they lose their lead the next election the opponents may just scrap the plans entirely. Point is, its definitely easier for SG to have rail plans into the 2040s when its government is more confident that it will be able to still be leading by that time to carry it out.
@OldDavo1950 Жыл бұрын
The Bus system is pretty good as well, hardly any need for a car. And the Park connectors for cycling simply the best. Most desirable Asian city to live in. I love the place, climate suits me as well. If money was no problem I would have a winter bolt hole in Singapore.
@danishrusdi Жыл бұрын
Yup, as a Singaporean myself, I do agree that we have mastered the Public Transit orientation and are improving it for the future, with our MRT at the core.
@RobertMurphy-sx8lc Жыл бұрын
Building the "bare bones" of a station did happen in Sydney - the proposed station at Woollarah on the Bondi line. It was not completed because the NIMBYs were worried about the sound pollution (?). If it were covered over, that should stop most of the noise and make space available for flats etc. on top.
@lzh4950 Жыл бұрын
Since 2018 Singapore has added metal skirting along some stretches of railway track above ground & they seem quite effective at absorbing the trains' noise
@chiakum Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. As a Singaporean, I truly appreciate your extensive research and explanation of the MRT System.
@FollowTheSunAustralia Жыл бұрын
I nearly died when you showed the price of Singapore cars , it reminds me of Australian cigarettes and how the high price affected sales drastically
@sanitygone-l9y Жыл бұрын
singapore tries to keep the total number of cars in singapore at only 600,000.
@she3esh Жыл бұрын
an estimated 20.7% of all tobacco consumed is black market in Australia (KPMG, 2019), a black market that did not exist 20 years ago and that doesnt even take into account vapes being everywhere. a massive policy fail
@lzh4950 Жыл бұрын
Australia, alongside the UK, is also probably one of the few places where cigarettes cost more than in Singapore
@liongjiahwong54787 ай бұрын
I am a retiree 78.. I had a monthly concession at $58.00. I travel at least 4 trips a day. Each trip is 99 cents.
@DallasRabot Жыл бұрын
Another awesome video… hope you do a collab with RMTransit’s channel in the future. I also hope you do a video across the ditch in Auckland which has a pathetic train network.
@Sone_carat90 Жыл бұрын
To all tourists visiting Singapore, please do not eat or drink in our MRT stations and trains. I know it’s hot in Singapore but you can drink right before you step into the station. Too many times people spill their drink in the train and we do not have janitors on board. Also, there’s a $500 sgd fine if caught eating or drinking 😅
@Karl-going-solo Жыл бұрын
That's the only thing I don't like about Taipei and Singapore MRT and the only thing I like about Melbourne's Metro is that you can eat and drink on the train
@rodneyleong3787 Жыл бұрын
I've seen those signs on the train and stations. There's no fine for durian on the train?
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
@@Karl-going-solo why would you want to eat in the train? The longest trips here are about 50mins or so. It’s very rare to travel more than 30mins on the train.
@Karl-going-solo Жыл бұрын
@@invinciblemode for short train rides you wouldn't really need to eat but living in the furthermost terminal station from the CBD I've often had train rides lasting much more than an hour. unfortunately Melbourne trains get delayed very frequently
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
@@Karl-going-solo that never happens in Singapore, so it’s fine to ban eating and drinking. Keeps our trains clean too. Save on manpower costs with a simple rule.
@timothyteo4602 Жыл бұрын
As a Singapore-born Australian citizen whose grown to love the well-planned public transport system of Singapore, the shoddy lack of proper public transport infrastructure here in Adelaide as compared with Sydney or Melbourne drives me absolutely nuts
@boofheadgerry11 ай бұрын
Hi, a great videoclip about the Singapore MRT as compared to the Sydney suburban rail system. There are a number that I must make, Singapore is smaller that Sydney being approximately 50 kms east to west and 25 kms north to south. Where as Sydney is over 60 kms east to west and 70 kms north to south depending where you measure the city from. Singapore is more congested than many parts of Sydney but the populations are fairly comparable of about 5.4 million people. As you mentioned Singapore commenced building their MRT system from 1987 as compared to Melbourne/Sydney where their suburban rail systems are over 120 years old and is from the steam era. Singapore had a blank canvas (so to speak) to work and could design their system for the modern era where as Melbourne/Sydney are trying to modernise their systems from the steam era. The Singapore Government to their credit is very pro-active in relation to the MRT system and openly discourages car transport where as the NSW and Victorian Government as beholden to the road transport lobby and invests billions into road transport. However there need to be money spent on roads in Melbourne/Sydney as there is quite a lot of heavy haulage trucking transport that goes through those cities which must be catered for, where as Singapore has very little heavy trucking haulage. Some of Melbourne/Sydney's rail corridors still have freight transport such as the Long Island steel train on the Frankston line in Melbourne and the Maryvale paper train on the Packenham rail line where as Singapore's MRT does not have any freight services. You mentioned that Singapore is proactive in building stations for future use which is very logical. In Perth there is a provision on the Mandurah rail line (in the freeway) for a future station at South Perth however realistic this is unlikely happen any time soon, if at all. There has been land reserved for a future rail station at Bennet Springs East on the Ellenbrook rail line which is under construction now, this station is likely to be built within the next ten years. However to sum up, Singapore is a world leader in their MRT systems and Australia public transport networks could learn a lot from the Singapore MRT. Keep up the good work.
@fauxpassant Жыл бұрын
Welcome to Singapore! Heard your commentary of SG transport system and comparison between SG and Sydney's system, and I'm so glad you're back in Singapore to see the recent developments in our MRT system!
@blokeabouttown2490 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video. Singapore is one of my favourite places to visit and I'm glad I'm not the only one who has such a great appreciation of the MRT there. It's amazing to think that their extensive MFRT didn't even exist before 1987.
@gekkomonster7837 Жыл бұрын
Literally just stepped off the plane from a weekend in Singapore.. love the MRT
@PM_ME_MESSIAEN_PICS Жыл бұрын
Tan Kah Kee station is almost surrounded by single family housing - the home prices there are stratospheric so I wouldn't think anyone would buy up the area for redevelopment
@placeholderblankspace Жыл бұрын
A lot of the Bukit Timah stations are more meant to serve the institutions around the area than the housing, given that Bukit Timah housing tends to be the high SES side of things. There are some stations that just get really Low footfall due to its placing (Cashew, Lentor, the Tuas stations) though
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
@@placeholderblankspacecrucially though DTL brings the high density west side (CCK and Bukit Panjang) into the city easily.
@lzh4950Ай бұрын
Tan Kah Kee is an inner suburb that ironically in Singapore can be less densely populated than outer suburbs e.g. Bt Panjang. Probably as the former were built earlier before the country's post-WW2 population boom. It causes inefficiency though as you then have to build heavy rail far out into the outer suburbs because many of your people live in more outlying instead of inner suburbs, but the stations along the way, which are in inner suburbs, may be underutilised e.g. Cashew, Lentor (there could be a huge integrated mixed-use development there though as I read from somewhere online that 3-4 plots of land there were sold to the same property developer soon after the station was built, as more bidders dropped out from later land sales/auction, probably as they feared an oversupply of land & property near Lentor station with so many plots of land being sold in close succession. Maybe the gov't is eager to develop & populate that area ASAP to boost the station's ridership)
@sleepy_dobe Жыл бұрын
As you've said, we're land scarce. So being a small island, it's easier to reach almost everywhere via public transport and private cars are rarely absolutely necessary. Australia though not huge by global standards, is massive compared to Singapore. And there are many rural areas that are not served by public transport. It would also not be feasible to do so since ridership would be low (being rural and all), and public transport in those areas would either be very expensive, or a loss-making endeavour for the transport operators. So a car becomes a necessity for those living/working in the rural areas. In the cities where it's more built-up and more densely populated, yes, public transport makes sense and the more connected, the merrier for all. And that's why Singapore is also known as a city state. Because the whole island is as good as one big city. It's not a one solution fits all, but yeah, copy the good bits and leave out the bad parts wherever it fits your situation. That should really be what every country in the world should be doing. Singapore included.
@oldskoolmusicnostalgia Жыл бұрын
The trouble is that even in the metro areas Australian public transit is rather shitty. Sydney and Melbourne have comparable populations to Singapore yet public transit considerably worse. Ah, and unlike Singapore they are hell bent on worsening it further by betting heavily on light rail.
@exchangAscribe9 ай бұрын
australia is a big country with lots of land, but most of it is unpopulated with people not living there. so if you measure the actual land being used, its comparable to many other cities or countries. i could see there being transit in rural cities/areas, but not to or from rural areas. as you said, it wouldnt be used enough to cover upkeep.
@slambam3991 Жыл бұрын
Great video and spot on commentary about everything Singapore does well (and less well - the surprisingly car-centric road designs). I only visited Singapore at the end of last year but this reignited my urge to go back. Also, I'm visiting Sydney later this year so I'll have to binge your channel before then haha
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
The car centric parts are really rare though, only present in older parts of the city.
@lzh4950 Жыл бұрын
@@invinciblemodeI think the gov't had cargo vehicles in mind when designing its roads to be car-centric
@uwet.8826 Жыл бұрын
While your video's focus is the MRT, I think the 2040 Transport Master plan would make it more complete. To create a public transport system that people want to use, the vision is to create a public transport network that brings people to the nearest suburb centre from where they are within 20 minutes and to bring people to the city centre from wherever they are in 45 minutes.
@FromtheWindowSeat Жыл бұрын
Thanks for making this … hadn’t realised how much the MRT had expanded in recent years. Impressive! Keen to return to check it out.
@AlexVorstermans Жыл бұрын
When I visited Singapore last year, the Singapore City Planning museum was a delight. To see the amount of foreplanning that went into the construction of the city was amazing, especially as a public transport and engineering enthusiast! Plus, it was just a walk away from the Maxwell Hawker Centre, meaning you can enlight yourself on this wonderful infrastructure and then get a delicious chicken rice!
@AlexVorstermans Жыл бұрын
Also a larger reason for it's continued and singular vision in planning infrastructure has been due to the relative stability of government (having the same party in power since formation helps!), whereas in Australia we see political parties take opposing stances on infrastructure (see Labor wanting to cut Sydney Metro, Libs opposition to the original Epping-Parra link etc.)
@vintagedigital108 Жыл бұрын
For all around the world building metro system, consider building it above ground or on the ground more. Not only it’s cost effective, but also easier to add new stations and extend the existing lines.
Жыл бұрын
Whether that's cost effective depends on what else people can do with the land. In Singapore almost all railways are other underground or on pylons, because the land is so valuable.
@lzh4950 Жыл бұрын
@ Also because newer MRT lines tend to serve neighbourhoods that're already built up decades earlier (since they're typically the more peripheral areas of suburbs originally served by connecting buses instead to older lines' stations in the suburbs' town centres), probably as the gov't wanted to be more confident that the stations would have enough riders, so there isn't much room left for stations to be built above ground. Sometimes the stations also end up having to be built further away
@lexburen593210 ай бұрын
metro above ground. Can make it as well and LRT light rail transit. Metro above ground defeats the purpose of being a metro. But can be combined underground and above ground.
@jim_ouk Жыл бұрын
I visited Singapore back in July for only 3 days - and it's still the best 3 days I've had in my life. I knew their public transport was the best too when I was researching what to see in Singapore, but my family INSISTED we take rideshare instead. It was expensive compared to just walking into a station, and on top of that I had to pay a cancel fee once because the Grab app made me choose the wrong location. I say Grab because it's the main service in Singapore and South east Asia. Uber doesn't operate at all in Singapore. Also, 18:54, hot over there isn't it? Not as bad as Cambodia, which I went to before spending time in Singapore. Wait till' you see the traffic there, and the 'public transport.'
Жыл бұрын
Uber used to operate here, but they left the market.
@lzh4950Ай бұрын
There was an oopsie when residents of the newly-built Tengah public housing suburb initially couldn't get a phone signal to book a Grab or a shared bicycle. The telecom carrier (Singtel) said it was still waiting to be given access to the apartment buildings' rooftops to install its cell towers & antennas
@Browns-z6m Жыл бұрын
Lovely content as always! And hey thank you for being kind to take a pic with myself and my son! Wishing you all the very best in life.
@yukko_parra Жыл бұрын
I swear Singapore's buses are amazing. no traffic at all and on time. The first place where I could trust the bus.
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
There are no traffic because everyone are on trains + the car tax which aims to keep total number of cars at 600,000 at any one time.
@lzh4950Ай бұрын
A more common complaint I heard of are 'ghost' buses - which are missing from apps showing you how long to wait for the next bus. & during the annual F1 race, buses that have to be diverted away from Marina Centre as a result have this service completely switched off
@Karl-going-solo Жыл бұрын
Awesome video mate. I've been to Singapore once in 1997 and the MRT was still pretty good back then. I must go back and experience the vast changes to it. I lived in Taipei for a while and its MRT system seems comparable to Singapore's. It is so frustrating using Melbourne's metro system. I guess Melbourne is a few hundred years behind having a similar density and hence comparable metro system to those two cities.
@PrograError Жыл бұрын
Taipei literally came to and learn from SMRT / LTA
@Karl-going-solo Жыл бұрын
@@PrograError I wish Australia would learn from Singapore as well
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
@@Karl-going-solosame, as a Singaporean I much prefer Australia’s climate. But we can’t change our climate so I hope you can implement a great transit system
@CuriousDiaries Жыл бұрын
Sharath, I’m a big fan and love your art of story telling! I’ve been to Singapore more than a dozen times and couldn’t agree with you more! MRT is the best thing ever built! We Aussies need to follow this model!
@danial4752 Жыл бұрын
I love the humour you keep inserting in this video! Keep it up bro.
@HenryMidfields11 ай бұрын
I was over at Singapore, exploring the city last weekend. To be honest, I was kind of underwhelmed in certain aspects of Singapore Metro. - In places like Outram Park, I've noticed the hard way with how much walking I had to do to get from one line to the other (or even the platform to street level depending on the exit). I mainly used the Downtown and East West Lines, and the only cross-platform transfer I used was at Tanah Merah. Probably not all that bad if you're commuting and you're used to the climate, but for someone with a suitcase and a few hours of lacking sleep strait off the plane and not used to the sweltering heat, it felt like forever. - There is also a surprising amount of missed connections between the different lines within Singapore's CBD and inner areas, including how the Downtown Line completely bypasses both Raffles Place and Marina Bay and their other lines, or how it doesn't stop at Dhoby Ghaut between Belcoolen and Fort Canning. (And ironically, Sydney Metro would end up resolving with Martin Place.) - You've already mentioned this, but, yeah, the surprising amount of Stroads even in the inner cities like Chinatown when I don't recall even Sydney CBD doing that. Sure, sometimes the metro stations can provide a way below, but I don't really think they're that worth the surprising amount of extra trouble considering how deep some of the stations (and even the concourses) are. Mind you, this is coming from someone who used to live in Tokyo and who lives in Surry Hills (and avoids a lot of Sydney transport's deficiencies). A pleasant surprise, is just how much cheaper it is compared to Sydney. I would never have thought that a $2 trip from Downtown to the Airport would be a possibility!
@willx93528 ай бұрын
Singapore is a densely populated city and nation! This is quite different from Australian cities and Australia itself.
@trishd2163 Жыл бұрын
Amazing Video! What an incredible transport system. This video has made me want to visit!!😁
@placeholderblankspace Жыл бұрын
08:44 you’ll find the running done at City Hall/Jurong East across the platform, or when doors are closing on a train… but yeah less so of a long distance run through an interchange
@lzh4950Ай бұрын
Quite a no. of times the connecting train leaves just as the train that people that want to transfer from reaches the interchange. Sometimes a few trains of the latter arrives before the next train of the former does, increasing the risk of the interchange platforms overcrowding
@placeholderblankspaceАй бұрын
@@lzh4950 yeah it's kind of a mess which sucks but can't be helped i guess
@engardepostsg Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the shoutout Sharath! But uh, at 12:54, Gul Circle on the "East Coast Line"? The station is at the total opposite of the East area hahaha!
@BuildingBeautifully Жыл бұрын
🤦🤦 damn it, I misspoke and never noticed!
@fexdeth Жыл бұрын
What a great way to have a holiday :) Any chance you could investigate Sydneys obsession with speed bumps?
@Zendefone Жыл бұрын
Fantastic vid, beautifully explained. 👏
@person8807 ай бұрын
Nicely done. I think the very affordable fares, safety, cleanliness, and generally quiet and considerate riders are also worth mentioning as all of this impacts an individual's overall experience. One more thing is the fact that you can pay with your contactless credit card and don't even need to register or buy a transit card at all, so this can be an option for some people. Great job to Singapore!
@yesbeautyflyАй бұрын
A Subsidiary of Singapore Airline provides really cheap budget return flights (less than AUD600) to connect Sydney & other major Australian capital cities, but their MRT to Changi Airport shut earlier than T8 in Sydney & Sydney Central still has Intercity trains to depart after midnight to reach terminals around 3am.
@rufrrnurgh Жыл бұрын
As a Singaporean, I see this as an absolute win.
@ianhomerpura8937 Жыл бұрын
3:30 indeed, I really do not get why the hell a city that will host the Olympics come 2032 does NOT even plan to having a proper mass transit network. Paris built the RER and LA expanded it metro just so it can bring people to and from venues much easier for their respective Olympics in 2024 and 2028.
@ThysiosX Жыл бұрын
On a more positive note, the Sunshine Coast is upgrading it's heavy rail line, adding a new route to Maroochydore and planning a light rail in preparation for the Olympics. Though there's a bit of backlash against the light rail unfortunately. But here's hoping they'll ignore the NIMBY's and we'll get it.
@thunderwalk Жыл бұрын
i was there recently and my mind was truly blown by how efficient the public transport is. we in australia need to learn from it
@kefinjanitra1880 Жыл бұрын
Singapore is one of the best transport system for sure. I hope you can come and visit Surabaya too. We need a lot of reviewers and content creators to raise the issue of how important transport system is.
@Bus_Enthu_Ian Жыл бұрын
As a Singaporean public transport enthusiast, I can agree to everything that is said over here, great video! However, I would like to point out a mistake at 12:55 where you mentioned "East Coast Line". Correction, it is actually the East West Line. The East Coast Line is a defunct railway line along the Thomson East Coast line.
@BleekersSG Жыл бұрын
What a great video! I have always wanted to start a series about MRTs in SG! This video might have just spur my motivation, thanks bro!
@pauljhseow Жыл бұрын
Singaporean here, loved your video! On the point on journeys between heartland areas though, some journeys aren't as train-friendly yet (such as from Yishun to Punggol, or Marine Parade to Hougang) even though they might be quite short in distance. Hopefully new lines would be even less city-centre centric as even the Circle Line is actually quite southern and isn't as central as the map suggests :')
@mystarmach Жыл бұрын
Thanks for saying that about EVs not being the solution! Driving around in a sexy future car is always gonna seem 'cooler' than hopping on the train, so it's important to point this out whenever possible.
@lzh4950Ай бұрын
Read that Singapore was also slower to introduce incentives for EVs as it might've feared that would discourage people from using public transport. For public buses, I guess we're taking baby steps - after failing 2 hybrid bus trials (1 of them was a Sunlong bus I rmb) due to high cost I think (excluding the trial of a Volvo B5RLEH loaned from NSW from 2014-5, as that was done for Volvo's own data collection instead), we finally bought 50x Volvo B5LHs in 2018, & from around 2020 we've bought 100x electric buses from brands like Linkker & Yutong
@edgyguy8240 Жыл бұрын
Well informed and researched video, sir. Keep it up!
@hardly.rivai_YT Жыл бұрын
*SYDNEY:* Trains that delayed (most of the time), buses that cancelled due to driver shortages, ferries that can't cope with high swells and trams that crack whenever they turn. Our public transport is not world-class... 😕 *SINGAPORE:*
@rileyeyeyy Жыл бұрын
Do you expect ferries to be perfectly fine during 20 meter swells or what?
@hardly.rivai_YT Жыл бұрын
@_RlLEY- Ferries in Sydney can't travel in 20-metre swells. However, the Freshwater ferries are capable of operating at a maximum of six. What I'm talking about is the Emerald Series II ferries that were built overseas. It can only go 4.5...
@rileyeyeyy Жыл бұрын
@@hardly.rivai_YT what lines do they serve?
@Respectable_Username Жыл бұрын
"Frequency is freedom!" I echo, throwing hopeful eyes at the Metro Southwest upgrade freeing the T3 from the throttling of the City Circle. "Frequency is freedom," I whisper, crossing my fingers as I squeeze my eyes closed in the hopes that once the Sydenham link is opened, frequency along my whole line may rise to sensible levels, especially during peak hours. "Frequency is freedom," I sob, the only aspect of living on the North Shore that I now miss, even when I'm so happy to be free of its stroady suburbia in almost every other respect.
@FKYUNimbys Жыл бұрын
Great video, unfortunately in Sydney, we will never have anything like Singapore because we are becoming more and more car-dependant and people are generally hate high-density living. I am looking at Sydney becoming more like LA in the future. If Sydneysiders want better public transport, they'll need to do something like: -Force people who want single detached housing to live in rural areas/outer suburbs/further away from stations and shops and put more high rises closer to stations. -Force people off cars by placing a toll system that charges people to cross between city councils and only exempt those who really need it (workers who drive as part of work, families with young children below 12, families with carers for elderly/disability) -Forcefully build rail lines everywhere and tell people in the beaches to suck it up. GOOD LUCK!!!!!!
@lzh4950 Жыл бұрын
Singapore is now switching from using physical static gantries for electronic toll collection (which we call the ERP) to a satellite-based system, which promised to be more flexible & to allow for distance-based tolling, but distance-based tolling is now put on hold as it might raise the cost of business by too much for logistics companies. Maybe there could be a lower tariff rate for commercial vehicles compared to cars, but both distance-based
@legendspike1387 Жыл бұрын
Can you please make a video about Hong Kong's MTR network and its public transport? Hong Kong has a world class transit system (just like Singapore) and their solution to car traffic are top notch. The city is TOD and is so well planned and it makes millions of dollars from the transit system. The city is home to the most high rise and skyscrapers and they built it near the stations (at most within 1km which already considers far), so more than 5 million people use it everyday. Their frequency of the metro is much higher than Singapore, their trains arrive every 1 min in peak hours and around every 3-5 mins in normal times. Their metro almost covers up every corner of Hong Kong , if not, they would have other public transports like double decker trams, double decker buses, minibuses, ferries and light rail which also covers up every corner of the city. They even got a high speed rail connecting to mainland China, a normal metro line which connects to mainland China and an airport express line which directly brings you to the city or CBD within 25 mins (note that Hong Kong's international airport is really far away from the city).
@samimikaba3 ай бұрын
at really high peak on circle line, it takes around 45 seconds between a train leave and the next one arriving. literaly like a constant walkalator
@danielsmyth7508 Жыл бұрын
please please please do a video on the srl, despite it being in melbourne. really want to hear your thoughts on it, specifically how to decrease the cost
@CuriosityMine Жыл бұрын
That circular line on the map satisfies parts of my brain I did not know required satisfying.
@mark123655 Жыл бұрын
Sydney does however have an issue with building future platforms and never using them - Redfern, Central, St.James and more recently St.Leonards. As plans and objectives change - not helped by not having a bipartism 20-30yr plan. (Of course Singapore doesnt need to worry about messy things like changes of government) Also Woolahra (but thats kind of a different story). A good infill station would have been Waterloo on the Airport line, unfortunately the gradient is way too steep to retrofit. Camelia was considered but rejected. Reportedly development is unlikely to happen as decontamination is likely too expensive - asbestos, chrome-ore and oil processing are just some of the former toxic land uses
@rileyeyeyy Жыл бұрын
I don’t think Waterloo needs a station but it’s not because they don’t deserve it. I think it’s because getting to the airport from the cbd needs to be as quick as possible for travellers.
@caver38 Жыл бұрын
Underground trains have existed in major cities for a very long while , it is to be seen if Singapore can maintain the system in the long term
@aviacraft Жыл бұрын
You should visit Hong Kong and its MTR Network! I think it surely rivals Singapore's MRT in terms of efficiency with 99.9% reliability; incredible station infrastructure and an almost 90% ridership rate. Plus, they have similar population densities there. Also, they run Sydney's Metro system (majority stakeholder), so there are going to be many similarities there!
@lzh4950 Жыл бұрын
MTR is more expensive & has less open-concept stations than MRT but also has more convenient interchanges between lines (probably as MRT lines were planned more separately from each other & thus not so well integrated)
@fangwong8778 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this video. Wish you added subtitles. Cheers
@rodneyleong3787 Жыл бұрын
Singapore has done a fantastic job with transit, expanding and improving the network over the past 20 years. Compare that to San Francisco when it took about 20 years to build a four station value engineered subway extension. You should take a look at Hong Kong's MTR next.
@theozwolf Жыл бұрын
OK normally I love your videos, this one I have mixed feelings about. 1) The Population of Singapore and Sydney is roughly the same, but the sizes and therefore densities are stupidly different. Singapore is 728.6 km² while Sydney 12,368 km² (15 times larger). I strongly think that if you tried to enforce such densities in Australia you would have a revolution on your hands. As your well aware it's a LOT cheaper/easier to make a profit, when the density is 15 times higher 2) It doesn't mean we shouldn't incentivise high density living near transport hubs, but we have to do something about the cost of such places, a local integrated development, the smallest of apartments were well north of a million dollars. (Glen Waverley) 3) My biggest problem with the video though was the almost nonchalant suggestion of taxing cars here like they do in SIngapore. All that would do is hurt those on the lower end of the spectrum, those who live in the non serviced outer suburbs. And those who live out on the land of course. In short those who can least afford it, and don't have an alternative. 4) We need to FIX public transport first, not penalise the poor to effectively subsidise the rich. I mean we can't even get a SINGLE intercity train line right. Crying out loud we have one of the busiest AIR corridors in the world in Melbourne & Sydney, and do you know the average speed of the train between those two cities is? 86km/h. (For comparison, the STEAM train running that service 100 years ago average speed? 77.25kn/h) Personally I believe if we could get the public transport right, australians WOULD use it more often, no need for a stick.
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
There’s a need to differentiate between city and rural living. If you’re designing a city, by default the policies that Singapore have implemented are a necessity. There’s no doubt about it. The car tax applies in Singapore because the whole country is a city. We have no rural areas where a car is a requirement. Sydney and other Australian cities could benefit from a dense core and dense residential suburbs with a low density outer rural area. These are a result of zoning laws and designing cities around public transport and not cars.
@islandcoma Жыл бұрын
Having lived in Singapore for 7yrs, i can't say enough good things about Singapore public transport. Shout-out to good ol' Circle Line!! Holland Village:)
@eternng5706 Жыл бұрын
Proud of my country Singapore!!!!! Clean, convenient and efficient
@kalon9999 Жыл бұрын
Being half the size of Sydney certainly helps...
@JessicaTaylorPMC Жыл бұрын
It's almost the same population packed into half the space, that makes it way harder.
@illiiilli24601 Жыл бұрын
@@JessicaTaylorPMCmakes it harder to build but easier to induce demand and ridership
@DevynCairns Жыл бұрын
The way to get around that is to focus largely on a smaller area than the entirety of the suburbs, but still larger than just the CBD. Encourage development in lower density areas within that smaller area, and you can effectively shrink the city.
@Ostsol4 ай бұрын
Where I live we've only been extending mass transit from it's initial, very limited form (NE to downtown) in the past twenty years. It's been very slow going and it's all light-rail. In the west they're building elevated rail, but some of the lines just run along existing roads, meaning they're subject to the limitations of normal road traffic. I used to take the bus to work and it took about an hour and 20 minutes, which about as much time as it'd take by bicycle. It wouldn't be a bad thing if I could go most of the way by rail, maybe switching to a folding bike at the beginning and end.
@brettyallop6018 Жыл бұрын
I visited Singapore back in 1992 and was seriously impressed by the MRT back then! I'm sure I'd be blown away by it now! In addition to the two missing links that you mentioned, a cicle line and the Northern Beachs line (NIMBY driven / stalled .... not sure of the appropriate verb), Sydney's two big issues are frequency and reliability, apart from the unspoken horror of the D-Sets that is! Great video, celebrating the courage of Politicians with vision rather than self perseverance!!
@wengkiong Жыл бұрын
I think you meant self preservation 😊 Singaporeans are lucky in the sense politicians plan for the country and for future generations, not for their own immediate political popularity 😊
@Bwebber99 Жыл бұрын
Never bothered to check the cost of MRT journeys always cheap, I was there in 2000 when Singapore had 2 lines has grown so fast.
@ManiRam-bk4es Жыл бұрын
As a Canberran, everytime I passed that eponymous station on the NS line, wondered at the irony that differentiates super-efficient Singapore, and the self-indulgent, pompous Aussie capital. A sore point though about the MRT, the long walk needed at interchanges and at stations like Outtram Park; how are the old and the infirm expected to negotiate this?
@HenryMidfields11 ай бұрын
I was kind of disappointed about that too. There seems to be a number of stations like that when I visited Singapore last weekend like Outram Park as you mentioned. There's also a surprising amount of instances where I had to either cross an 8-lane road (which is not very safe) or get down into the station itself (which is more of a pain than I thought because of how deep even some of the concourses are) to cross underneath.
@lzh4950Ай бұрын
Travellators were added at Outram Park in 2022, though I was disappointed that its interchange to the latest Thomson-E Coast Line involved more vertical circulation than expected. Maybe that line should have used stacked side platforms instead with each platform at the same level as 1 of the station's other connecting lines' concourses, for greater convenience when transferring
@voiddustry58798 ай бұрын
im a singaporean :> im pretty impressed how our metro system actuall progressed this well.
@trainsandmore23197 ай бұрын
Other flaws include narrow sidewalks outside of the downtown that sometimes become overcrowded because it's located in a busy area that's often near an MRT station (idk why cars still continue to get more space than pedestrians smh). It was a bit of a pain walking from the Lavender MRT station to a nearby mall just to buy a cheap universal adapter while dodging crowds of pedestrians on a narrow sidewalk.
@Darkraid Жыл бұрын
Would like to add this the major housing towns in Singapore more than one MRT stations. For example, Punggol has 3 stations, Punggol, Punggol Coast and Riviera
@jasonwhiteley3612 Жыл бұрын
Castle hill station(on the metro) has pedestrian tunnel straight into the shopping centre from the concourse very convenient.
@Kai_Squared Жыл бұрын
Slaving myself in Sydney at the moment but Singapore is the best country I've lived and worked in.
@BenPearlman Жыл бұрын
I think while the high registration approach works well for Singapore, being a city state, Australia would need to be more targeted in our approach as many areas are not accessible vie PT. Instead replacing fuel duty with a high congestion charge would be a good idea, with the proceeds used improve PT in those same areas
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
Just have ERPs into the CBD area which will tax the shit out of drivers for driving into the city instead of taking a train. We have this too in SG fyi.
@chickennoodle6620 Жыл бұрын
The Suburban rail loop has a big issue with massive gaps between stations too.
@tstcikhthys Жыл бұрын
Very much so! I was recently there, and it was definitely a joy to ride. BTW, _kilometre(s)_ rhymes with "nanometres", not with "thermometers" (because it's a unit of measurement, not a measuring device).
@perhapsme988 Жыл бұрын
I agree that, for Sydney rail network, should have link from North West to St George's district. Same from Chatswood to Liverpool directly. We should also increase capacity of existing lines with more carriages. Extend platform length in major stations. 2 more carriages added is 25% higher capacity. No need for train time table changes. Suburban stations don't need to have platforms lengthened. People just ride in carriages appropriate for their station destinations
@Brucetiki15 ай бұрын
Having recently come back from Singapore, I was amazed at the frequency. It ended up being a bit of a running joke about missing a train and waiting a couple of minutes for the next train. In fact, in one instance, we just missed a train and the next train was 1 minute away! And frequency doesn’t drop off at night. I was amazed it was still 4-5 minute frequency late at night ! And it’s relatively cheap too! It was roughly $40 for just over a week there. Pretty sure I’ve spent $40 in a day on Sydney’s network!
@ivanflinnable Жыл бұрын
❤ Singapore and definitely great public transport. It’s too hot though. Brisbane and Sydney’s weather is nice hot compared to Singapore’s uncomfortable hot you need three outfits a day. 😅
@YoutiaoVlogs Жыл бұрын
As train operator I agree and I love the TEL Thomson east coast line as I stay along the TEL
@MrChowTheTroll Жыл бұрын
Singapore is a pretty good example but it’s dense so yeah its easier to place metro…. I find Tokyo metro system to be pretty okay but its bastardised by heaps of private companies and you have to hop between fare gates if u have switch between lines and new fares I think Sydney can learn from both, but not the bastardised privatisation of Japan. At least they don’t have that with each bus companies charging seperate rates for different companies….
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
It’s dense by design
@pearlbayud5180 Жыл бұрын
Just remember that SG is around a quarter / Half the size of Sydney....... I lived in SG for 3 years about 10 years ago and have visited several times since, for work and SG by far has the worlds best transport network based on its size and SG being a City country. Why...., due to its govt and its drive to be efficient. Now to compare SG to Sydney , Brisbane etc you have to look at culture, Govt and geography plus history. For Sydney, it had the most integrated tram network in the world and if that tram network was still in Sydney today it would make all our lives so much better including those in the north shore areas. This part of history of Sydney was due to bad govt decisions at the time. This also includes Brisbane, which also had a great tram system. All this torn up for buses. Why did Sydney and Brisbane not develop a better transport network well that's all due to Govt that thinks about its 4 year term and its budget then re election cycles, plus bad transport planing, just look at the ridicules monoral in Sydney as an example. You're 100% right with Brisbane and its obsession with buses, just awful to get around in that city. Culture, Sydney for so long has been a place where the culture is the quarter acre block and its only been the past 10-15 years that this has started to change, Singapore has been about mass density for decades because you really can only expand up not out like Sydney and Brisbane, which leads to geography, SG is tiny and with not much land to spread out and develop you can only build within a small area and Govt, hands down the SG govt has made there transport system available for everyone and its cheap, but to own a car in SG WOW so it has been a Govt policy that has created all this to better SG and also within to maximize what it can do within its boarders
@ronaldhee6608 Жыл бұрын
Great job, mate! I'm sure there's a better video explaining the MRT system here, but I haven't seen it ... :) The only thing you seem to have missed is how transport is integrated (to be fair, you alluded to this). Many metro stations are also next to bus terminals, and I'm pretty certain every single metro station has a bus stop next to it. As in one minute walk from the bus to the metro concourse. So for example, I would often take a bus to the metro, take the metro, change to a bus. In addition, the transport card will calculate this as a single trip! So that last bus might only be zero to twenty cents. The whole journey may be a US dollar and change. Yup. The cost of public transport is nearly ridiculously low, so much so I know people who have stopped driving. End to end, a metro trip might cost around two bucks US. End to end. Lastly, your comment about too many roads? Some roads have been repurposed as pedestrian walkways. The next town to be built has a carfree centre. Keep up the good work!
@ronaldhee6608 Жыл бұрын
Oh yes, and that the major metro stations also act as bomb shelters.
@rubberroast159818 күн бұрын
Great video. Im going there for a day in two weeks. Do you have to pay for each ride or is there also an option for a day pass on the MRT?
@jseden1 Жыл бұрын
Well done brother. Fabulous city
@biocapsule7311 Жыл бұрын
It's help that Singapore government has priority on land use. Most US cities for example can't do it well because it's too expensive to compensate or work around private real estate. City planning is very important for density, large countries often has too much land for most of it's history so it's often not planned well to begin with because they tend to build outwards thinking there are plenty of space. And it also took years to get it right, hence the newer stations have better amenities then the older lines stations.
@rickyrickstan563 Жыл бұрын
This should’ve been called Singapore’s mrt is beautifully built
@trendy4tmrw Жыл бұрын
Wow, a circle loop like this would be game changing in Philadelphia
@David-eq8wf Жыл бұрын
I agree with 80% of what you said. Taxing cars like they do in singapore is going to create serious back lash. Also, minimising incentives to use cars by providing better options is the better choice. Public transport is shit in most of Australia and that's ignoring the glaring safety issues. Having high density around train stations, security, and the capability to go anywhere by train is a great idea. we need more train stations but that shouldn't result in closing roads and getting rid of cars
@kennylee89365 ай бұрын
Most people drive because that's they're only choice of travel. If anything, people who love drive should advocate for better PT because then that will lead to less congested roads as people who would prefer PT will have it, and it frees up the roads for people who actually need them.
@randomdigress Жыл бұрын
I had once heard a foreigner commenting that SG train station felt like an airport