Рет қаралды 309
Today we're talking about second ART trial in Putrajaya.
In Malaysian administrative capital of Putrajaya, people often drives to work or leisure as the bus service is lack of reliable frequency and the monorail project has been indefinitely postponed since 2004
Twenty years after 2004, Automated Rapid Transit (ART) has been put on three-months trial to test whether the service is suitable for a city like Putrajaya
Why is driving more preferable than bus in the administrative capital of Putrajaya and is ART the best way to solve the transit gap?
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REFERENCES
Bird, J., & Straub, S. (2020). The Brasilia experiment: the heterogeneous impact of road access on spatial development in Brazil. World Development, 127, 104739.
Borhan, M. N., Ibrahim, A. N. H., Syamsunur, D., & Rahmat, R. A. (2019). Why public bus is a less attractive mode of transport: A case study of Putrajaya, Malaysia. Periodica Polytechnica Transportation Engineering, 47(1), 82-90.
Cervero, R. (2016). Public transport and sustainable urbanism: global lessons. In Transit Oriented Development (pp. 23-35). Routledge.
Palazzo, P. P., & Saboia, L. (2012). Capital in a void: Modernist myths of Brasilia. IASTE working paper series, 239 (Modernism Unbound: Myths, Practices, and Policies), 23-38.
KEYWORDS: ART, autonomous rapid transit, Putrajaya, planned city, planned capital, ART trial, Putrajaya tram, Malaysia transit, Malaysia public transport