John Maeda at
Simplicity says that statistically speaking, most of the time you try something, you will mess up. You don't know how things work, you aren't sure what to do, you make mistakes. The secret is that if you try a lot of different things, you will end up with a few ideas that work: if 1 out of every 100 tries produces something useful, it's obvious that the more tries you have under your belt, the more useful stuff you will produce.
This is one of the reasons I post so many times a day. It can't hurt, I figure, to keep adding ideas and links to this blog, and there is an off chance it will produce something useful.
This is a link to a map of the new UBC bus loop that shows where each bus picks up and drops off. The B-line buses are to the south-west and north-east of the loop because they need to straighten out so people can board.
The community shuttles are not shown as part of the bus loop. These buses board to the north of the Student Recreation centre, and their route is shown
here. They currently only cover the North end of campus, but we can expect services to expand to the South campus with increasing construction. In fact, residential construction all over campus increases the importance of the campus shuttles.
This map shows the proposed location of the new bus loop.
I'm not sure if I've linked to the
Strategic Transportation Plan yet. It gives some user statistics concerning students and others making bus trips onto campus. It also talks about how there are noise issues with diesel buses, and mentions that Translink has plans for a rapid transit connection to UBC. This must be the Skytrain station. I found the link to the Strategic Transportation plan through the campus plan
access and movement blog. This blog talks about all the different ways people get around campus: one suggestion is that UBC have attended bicycle parking. (
Post is here). Even more interesting is the post
that says funding is the biggest reason we don't have rail to UBC and that it's slated to be completed some time after 2021 unless money comes from an unexpected source. If thesis advisor M does agree that the bus loop is a good project, I think I'll send Mr. Richard Drdul a note...
The campus plan blogs are pretty interesting: I see that a lot of students seem intersested in a dry space to meet friends and study. It would be interesting to see if this could be blended with a new bus loop.