Rotterdam’s Funky, Wacky Rapid Transit

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The Netherlands has a strange history with metros, and so today we will start back where it all began - looking at the very unique, and rather odd Rotterdam Metro (and RandstadRail)!
Special thanks to @OntarioTrafficMan and Jan-Peter de Graaff (@jpdegraaff ) for providing the amazing footage used in this video!
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Ever wondered why your city's transit just doesn't seem quite up to snuff? RMTransit is here to answer that, and help you open your eyes to all of the different public transportation systems around the world!
Reece (the RM in RMTransit) is an urbanist and public transport critic residing in Toronto, Canada, with the goal of helping the world become more connected through metros, trams, buses, high-speed trains, and all other transport modes.

Пікірлер: 476

  • @Laluan
    @Laluan Жыл бұрын

    Rotterdam metro driver here.. Great video with no false information. I wanted to add one thing about our Future plans; there are many (almost mandatory, because of the population growth) routes on schedule, but no one wants to pay for it. Glad you sorted out everything, so now people from all over the world can enjoy our beautiful system! 😃

  • @connorcrowley1

    @connorcrowley1

    Жыл бұрын

    Aren't you guys opening het strand end of month? That is an interesting bit of single trackage.

  • @evandalen4227

    @evandalen4227

    Жыл бұрын

    Lets see if the promissed future will finally come true this summer..reaching station Hoek van Holland beach on the "Hoekse lijn" 😉

  • @6toeNL

    @6toeNL

    Жыл бұрын

    @@connorcrowley1 yep!

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    So awesome to see you watched! Thanks for the insightful comments too!

  • @Laluan

    @Laluan

    Жыл бұрын

    @@evandalen4227 March 31 will be the opening day! (if everything goes right)

  • @wewillrockyou1986
    @wewillrockyou1986 Жыл бұрын

    One of the things with the metro conversions of suburban rail in the Netherlands is that most of these rail lines have long operated as effectively isolated lines in the network. It was many decades since the last international trains went to Hoek van Holland, and the Zoetermeer/Hofplein railways routed basically exclusively into Den Haag Centraal. Under these circumstances it made basically no sense to keep them as railway and the change to metro/light rail was a huge upgrade.

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    For sure because it also enables more service!

  • @MarioFanGamer659

    @MarioFanGamer659

    Жыл бұрын

    The Sodner Bahn, which connects Frankfurt-Höchst and Bad Soden with each other, also is in a similar position: It's a shuttle between both stations and is fairly limited in scope but plans exist to integrate it into the U-Bahn network which extends it further south (this also had to be done anyway as the line will have a branch to Eschborn installed as part of an orbital line).

  • @2712animefreak

    @2712animefreak

    Жыл бұрын

    The U-bahn? Do you perhaps mean S-Bahn? This line is pretty far from the existing U-Bahn lines.

  • @MarioFanGamer659

    @MarioFanGamer659

    Жыл бұрын

    @@2712animefreak I really mean the U-Bahn: The terminus of Praunheim will be expanded westwards, making a connection to Höchst over Eschborn which in turn uses part of the Sodner Bahn. Look up the Regiontangente West to see what I mean.

  • @jamesgrover2005

    @jamesgrover2005

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RMTransit hi thanks for the great content, I'm from Hoek van Holland, small issue, den Hague is not where you put the label on the map, it's further north up the coast. Where you put the label is the greenhouse area of the Westland, forgivable because it all looks like a city and one village joins into another. Have a great day

  • @DeeZedEx
    @DeeZedEx Жыл бұрын

    As a transport planner in The Hague, you forgot the main advantage of the conversion: usage! Ridership boomed after the conversion to metro (or tram-train for Zoetermeer). Turns out having a direct connection through the city center and a higher frequency is more important to users than the advantages of mainline trains. Also fun fact: there are freight trains using a small portion of the Rotterdam metro network (in Vlaardingen). These use the old conmections to the port from when it was a mainline railway.

  • @IIVQ

    @IIVQ

    Жыл бұрын

    These freight trains are wider than metro trains. Thus, they have a special track that sits about half a metre further away from the platforms, the end of which can be seen at 9:16

  • @yunleung2631

    @yunleung2631

    Жыл бұрын

    You have a dream job!! I wish I can work your job.

  • @andrewmasin5787

    @andrewmasin5787

    Жыл бұрын

    @@IIVQ The American term for this is a "Gantlet" track.

  • @OntarioTrafficMan

    @OntarioTrafficMan

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, I mentioned the freight trains and gauntlet track in the video on the Hoekse line, referenced here

  • @IIVQ

    @IIVQ

    Жыл бұрын

    @@andrewmasin5787 The British term is "Interlaced".

  • @alex2143
    @alex2143 Жыл бұрын

    What should be noted is that the Dutch public transit network (especially in the Randstad) is truly a network. What you don't see is how the entire national passenger rail network ties into these networks, and how this is bolstered by excellent walkability and bikeability.

  • @nlx78

    @nlx78

    Жыл бұрын

    Cries in Hellevoetsluis', still have to watch the majority of the video, maybe he mentions it later, but the end point in Spijkenisse has been left open since (where those carts crashed on whales when the breaks didn't work, some 5 year ago. But unlike the initial plan of growing to ~120,000/150,000, we grew to around 50,000 and to many people it's pretty useless to finish it. Their excuse is; " It would bring a lot more crime..." > I'm 44 and have been reading about this plan on and off for my whole life. As a child, there was a still a tourist tram here, which used to be a direct line from a ferry here, to the South of Rotterdam (Rosenstraat). That line went through Spijkenisse, so at least now we got a sort of straight cycle path out of it, lol. But when you look at the map, the best location would be Halfweg II, the edge of Spijk. Make a big (Free) parking lot and station, people from Brielle, Oostvoorne, Hellevoet and even from the island Goerree, would take the metro there. With bus and metro it's really not that appealing when you also have to take another form of transit when you get of the metro. Sometimes it's better to drive to Slinge, park there for free and then hop on.

  • @EvaWhoDraws
    @EvaWhoDraws Жыл бұрын

    as someone who grew up in suburban USA, living in Rotterdam is amazing, theres literally every type of public transit available with the buses, trams, metro, trains, and even ferries, I use the metro nearly every day so its nice to see it appreciated, and to remind myself I'm lucky to live in a place with such reliable frequent public transit!

  • @tujueinternational1521
    @tujueinternational1521 Жыл бұрын

    The two trunk lines of the Rotterdam Metro System were named Noord-Zuidlijn and Oost-Westlijn, and later renamed to Erasmuslijn and Calandlijn in 1997. The current system of letters and colours were introduced because it was confusing for non-locals.

  • @Bstingnl

    @Bstingnl

    Жыл бұрын

    Even more so confusing when both lines were tied together at Spijkenisse, because how can you have a Western most branch that meets up with the Southern most branch? So they dropped the names and colours (red and blue), and gave them all their own letter and colour.

  • @Bianca_Toeps

    @Bianca_Toeps

    Жыл бұрын

    As someone from Zoetermeer who has lived in The Hague and Rotterdam, I still find it confusing when they say "richting De Akkers" or something. How am I supposed to know where that is? Aren't there akkers everywhere? 🤣 It would have always seemed more logical for me to say "westbound" or "eastbound" or something.

  • @egregius9314

    @egregius9314

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Bianca_Toeps Exactly! It has been a pet peeve of mine, how unclear the routes and directions are when you're standing on the platform itself. Unless you're experienced, it's just confusing. They could learn from Budapest, where they list the stations the rail line will go to, visible from the platform, behind where the metro stops.

  • @lzh4950

    @lzh4950

    Жыл бұрын

    Shenzhen's metro also originally named its lines but later changed them to numbers e.g. _LuoBao_ (罗宝/羅寶) line is a portmaneau of _Luohu_ (罗/羅湖) & _Baoan_ (宝/寶安), 2 of the districts served by the line, but it's now known as Line 1. On the other hand Japan's subways/metros are still sticking to their lines' names, but their meanings can be more transparent than you think e.g. _Fukutoshin_ (副都心)- "auxiliary metropolis centre", _Tozai_ (東/东西) - "east west". Singapore's also sticking to naming its lines but there came a time where it was probably running out of names to give, hence we get the generically named Downtown Line (I would've called it the _Bukit_ ('hill/mountain' in Malay) Line as it serves *_Bukit_*_ Panjang_ town, *_Bukit_*_ Timah_ region & _Kaki _*_Bukit_* neighbourhood)

  • @OpenbaarVervoer2D

    @OpenbaarVervoer2D

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Bianca_Toeps Metrostation Berkel Westpolderhas the words Noordwaarts and Zuidwaarts (Northbound and Southbound) from outside visible to the respective platforms.

  • @6toeNL
    @6toeNL Жыл бұрын

    Hey! The Hague (mentioned at 2:47) is up north from what you showed in the video. You actually showed "Westland" a big agricultural logistics and production hub of vegetables and flowers/plants in greenhouses. They should be linked up with a metro to The Hague and Rotterdam as there're only bus routes that take ages to get you to The Hague and Rotterdam. The extension of line B between Hoek van Holland and Schiedam suffered major budget and planning overruns and they're now in the final phase of completion as the extension from Hoek van Holland Haven (port) to Hoek van Holland Strand (beach). The metro literally halts at only 100 meters from the beach and they had to engineer tracks that didn't suffer from sand accumulation. This is a new section instead of a converted section and they're planning to open it to the public in the coming weeks. The former national railway line has a rich history. It served major international trains connecting Great Brittain via ferry and Europe via the Orient Express, Scandinavian Express and Rheingold Express.

  • @frankhooper7871

    @frankhooper7871

    8 ай бұрын

    Glad to see this mentioned. It struck me immediately and compelled me to double-check on Google maps.

  • @anteeklund4159
    @anteeklund4159 Жыл бұрын

    When I visited Rotterdam and took the metro, I was very confused seeing catenary after getting of the train, as I clearly remember having seen 3rd rail at the station when getting on the train

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    There really isn’t a lot of systems where you can do that!

  • @robk7266

    @robk7266

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@RMTransit Boston

  • @ItsMeMars

    @ItsMeMars

    Жыл бұрын

    Something Amsterdam ditched, but those metro’s itself are still in service. The line itself is now only purely driven with trams.

  • @RichardHoogstad

    @RichardHoogstad

    Жыл бұрын

    Seeing a train doing a conversion from the 3rd rail to overhead wire while being in motion is one of those things that never get old to me. You can see this happen at Station Capelsebrug. That or at Schiedam Nieuweland 6:12

  • @meltrain
    @meltrain Жыл бұрын

    4:18 Before the end of 2009 they actually had names similar to London, with the north-south line being Erasmuslijn and the eas-west line being Callandlijn (the portion to Den Haag was not connceted to the rest by then). It turned out that especially tourists, but also natives, found it very confusing, so they decided to give each branch its own letter.

  • @AlRoderick
    @AlRoderick Жыл бұрын

    The Hague is beautiful! It's something I wish a lot of my countrymen would see before they die! Like Henry Kissinger for instance.

  • @marcomontella6006
    @marcomontella6006 Жыл бұрын

    I suggest to take a look to Den Hague Central station. Beside Rotterdam metro terminal station, inside the hall an elevated tram track passes by with a stop to interchange with rails and metro. Very peculiar and interesting design

  • @Danielhake

    @Danielhake

    Жыл бұрын

    I go there every workday, so if you need any photos...

  • @8Termini

    @8Termini

    2 ай бұрын

    The weird thing is that the whole expensive metro terminus thingy was built atop Den Haag Centraal to free up tracks 11 and 12 under pressure from NS/Prorail. Which promptly neglected to do anything with the tracks for the next ten years or so. They're only just getting upgraded.

  • @dgrbcreations
    @dgrbcreations Жыл бұрын

    The Netherlands is one of the most forward thinking countries on Earth! They combine marvellous engineering with simple, pragmatic concepts.

  • @Tamwyn107

    @Tamwyn107

    Жыл бұрын

    Netherlands* holland are two federal states/regions in the country

  • @defaultmesh

    @defaultmesh

    Жыл бұрын

    so forward thinking in fact that they forgot about what happened between 1945 and 1949

  • @o_s-24

    @o_s-24

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed

  • @emileku

    @emileku

    Жыл бұрын

    @@defaultmesh ?? what are you even referring to?

  • @heidirabenau511

    @heidirabenau511

    Жыл бұрын

    *Netherlands.

  • @Bstingnl
    @Bstingnl Жыл бұрын

    Fun fact, when the first metro line opened in 1968, is was one of the shortest at the time at less than 6 km. All the branches have a history of being extended little bits at a time with for instance the terminus station on the Western end having been Coolhaven, Marconiplein, Schiedam Central and currently Hoek van Holland Haven which from the looks of it will finally be officially extended and opened to the public to Hoek van Holland Strand (the beach!) next month after many years of delays. This is also why at Coolhaven and Marconiplein the platform is in the middle (departing trains could be on both tracks), while on most stations they are on the right side of the driving direction.

  • @91JRH
    @91JRH Жыл бұрын

    Fun fact: Since the first line opened in 1968, The Netherlands had one of the shortest metroline of the world by only 5,9km in lenght. The first line, line D/E was only from Rotterdam Central Station to Zuidplein.

  • @adriankovac1943

    @adriankovac1943

    Жыл бұрын

    And now at 160km it is probably one of the longest

  • @remcobrouwer3781

    @remcobrouwer3781

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the line went one stop further to Slinge :-). And in the seventies it was extended to Hoogvliet-Zalmplaat and later to the current end point Spijkenisse.

  • @91JRH

    @91JRH

    Жыл бұрын

    @@remcobrouwer3781 It was one year later when it was extended to Slinge.

  • @eddys.3524
    @eddys.3524 Жыл бұрын

    A small addition on "De Hoekse lijn" is that that track is also used by freight trains. In the video at 6:12 you show one of the stations where a 3rd rail is visible, That rail is part of the "solution" so freight trains can pass the stations, since the Metro has another format than the regular freight trains. One extention on the Hoekse Lijn still in progress is the connection to the beach.

  • @ronaldvanhemiksem3544

    @ronaldvanhemiksem3544

    Жыл бұрын

    The extension to the beach can be seen multiple times in this video, with running trains. However, these trains are running in test operation on the new section and don't take any passengers yet. But at last, on March 31st the extension will finally be opened!

  • @SeverityOne

    @SeverityOne

    Жыл бұрын

    Ah, thanks for that. I found the extra set of rails confusing, but yes, it has to do with the profile ("profiel vrije ruimte"). There's a similar situation somewhere in Germany.

  • @rishipranavramakrishnan689
    @rishipranavramakrishnan689 Жыл бұрын

    Considering your channel is literally called Rotterdam Metro Transit, it's no surprise this is your most requested video.

  • @khanproductions6537
    @khanproductions6537 Жыл бұрын

    OMG I am so happy that you made a video about the Rotterdam metro! I use this metro almost every day. Btw, there might be an extension of the metro network coming soon, as there are plans for another north-south line, connecting the current north-south line directly to the more eastern part of the west-east tunnel. However, it is more likely that this will become a tram line.

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the info! I’m happy you enjoyed

  • @maartenbaas8513

    @maartenbaas8513

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi Khan, sorry to say that option has been scrapped. It will be another tramline along the strevelsweg across the new bridge to Kralingse Zoom. Main cause was the cost of course of a new metro tunnel (and the scrapping of the new stadium).

  • @khanproductions6537

    @khanproductions6537

    Жыл бұрын

    @@maartenbaas8513 as far as I know the final decision hasn't been made yet. But yeah, it's 99% surely gonna be another tram line, even though the city council wanted a metro :/ (thx national government)

  • @TaronTT

    @TaronTT

    Жыл бұрын

    Verdomme, ik had nooit verwacht jou nog eens hier te zien... Hopelijk gaat alles goed daarzo :D

  • @benheaton4486

    @benheaton4486

    Жыл бұрын

    Where do you keep up to date on this? I try to follow the city’s projects but haven’t yet found a great source

  • @SpeedBird6780
    @SpeedBird6780 Жыл бұрын

    Metro line E was converted from a unprofitable branch line to a successful metro line. The same happened with the Hoekse lijn.

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s a very interesting approach!

  • @Thomas_TdK

    @Thomas_TdK

    Жыл бұрын

    The hoekse lijn wasn’t unprofitable for the NS

  • @fen0221

    @fen0221

    Жыл бұрын

    The ns itself is unprofitable for the country😒

  • @Thomas_TdK

    @Thomas_TdK

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fen0221 have you seen the Rail companies in the countries around the Netherlands? The NS is pretty good

  • @OntarioTrafficMan

    @OntarioTrafficMan

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fen0221 NS turned a profit every year until the pandemic, and those profits were returned to Dutch taxpayers.

  • @bhavin_ch
    @bhavin_ch Жыл бұрын

    Fun fact (and also personal opinion): Rotterdam metro has a very weird vibe with puke green tinted glasses and green seat covers on an otherwise grey & red train. Makes you feel like you're in the matrix :D

  • @dustin10weering20

    @dustin10weering20

    Жыл бұрын

    i have never thought of it that way

  • @OntarioTrafficMan

    @OntarioTrafficMan

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah the green tint does give it a kind of plasticky feel

  • @dustin10weering20

    @dustin10weering20

    Жыл бұрын

    @@OntarioTrafficMan luckily the plastic seats have been gone since 2018 and have all been converted to fabric on the old metro's (SG2/1 and MG2/1)

  • @momo1435
    @momo1435 Жыл бұрын

    One more quirky part of the metro is on the line to Hoek van Holland between Schiedam and Vlaardingen. Here the former railway, now metro tracks are still used by mainline freight trains during the night when there are no metro services. They had to create a solution with the track as seen at 9:15 at 2 station to fit the wider freight trains into the loading gauge of the metro.

  • @OntarioTrafficMan

    @OntarioTrafficMan

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes that's why he referred to my video on the Hoekse Lijn, which discusses those things

  • @markdebruyn1212

    @markdebruyn1212

    8 ай бұрын

    They also run during the day (outside rush hours), as i happened to be on a Metro train waiting on a station to let a freight train pass

  • @Quentin-vi4zi
    @Quentin-vi4zi Жыл бұрын

    Welll… Lets just say that Dutch people are very active on KZread and love to see stuff about their own country, which is why I’m not surprised at all that this was recommended a lot😂 (I’m from the Netherlands as well so I know)

  • @thomasrandwijk

    @thomasrandwijk

    Жыл бұрын

    Gekoloniseerd 😂

  • @OntarioTrafficMan

    @OntarioTrafficMan

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thomasrandwijk Aangezien dat Reece en ik Canadees zijn is het eigenlijk jullie die G E K O L O N I S E E R D worden!

  • @OssWiX
    @OssWiX Жыл бұрын

    what makes the rotterdam metro stand out to me compared to the one in amsterdam is the demographic using it. From experience the rotterdam metro is filled much more diverse, and especially has a high number of elderly people with walkers/mobility scooters using it compared to transport elsewhere in the country.

  • @connorcrowley1

    @connorcrowley1

    Жыл бұрын

    Rotterdam is a proper city. Amsterdam is an oversized tourist town.

  • @MrAronymous

    @MrAronymous

    Жыл бұрын

    Because it serves more central and important areas. Meanwhile many Amsterdam neighbourhoods aren't served by metro so many people don't have a need for it and rely on buses and trams instead and for many people the metro is completely irrelevant in their daily lives. I also think most of Amsterdam's elderly tend to stick to their own neighbourhoods more because they are more complete (more to do) than the average Rotterdam neighbourhood.

  • @JaccoSW

    @JaccoSW

    Жыл бұрын

    As someone from Rotterdam I visited Amsterdam last weekend. Where I prefer taking public transport in Rotterdam I mostly walk in Amsterdam. I was however a bit taken aback when I walked through the party districts. There was a much more hostile atmosphere than in the crowded places in Rotterdam. Not aggressive mind you, but less friendly. I've also encountered more hostility in the Amsterdam public transport system than in the Rotterdam one.

  • @mfbfreak

    @mfbfreak

    Жыл бұрын

    Amsterdam, with its pre-war city centre, was developed around walking and cycling, and in general much more compact. You can almost always just walk to everything you need. Rotterdam, on the other hand, was designed with the post-war car boom in mind. Distances are larger, you have more wide roads to cross. People who would normally just ride their mobility scooter along the narrow car streets or walk along the sidewalks, probably choose or need to go by public transport in Rotterdam.

  • @connorcrowley1

    @connorcrowley1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mfbfreak and Ajax lost.

  • @ageoflove1980
    @ageoflove1980 Жыл бұрын

    What really should also be mentioned is how in The Netherlands the "last mile" problem is of course completely solved by cycling. Its all a tiered system : bike -> tram/bus/metro -> train -> high speed train/plane or the other way around of course. This system completely replaces the need for a car since it truly provides a door-to-door service. The massive bike parkings and very cheap rental bikes (ov fiets 4 euro per day) are an essential part of this. The metro system therefore does not have to be as dense as for example London or Paris where ideally a station is within walking distance. Walking is only 5km/h while cycling is 15km/h on average.

  • @MarioFanGamer659
    @MarioFanGamer659 Жыл бұрын

    Rotterdam Metro certainly reminds me of a more grade separated version of the Frankfurt U-Bahn, you thus can see this explainer as a precursor to the latter's which itself will (probably) function as a precursor to the Stadtbahn explainers of Cologne, the Ruhr Area and Stuttgart given these share more characteristics of trams than Rotterdam and Frankfurt's systems do.

  • @life.with.sabine
    @life.with.sabine Жыл бұрын

    The Hague is a bit misplaced in the shot with the airport. It is a bit further north close the big highway interchange called prins clausplein. Where you put The Hague now is hoek van holland plus what is called westland and has a lot of agricultural companies harvesting fruit and vegetables using greenhouses.

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, there are a crazy number of greenhouses!

  • @fen0221

    @fen0221

    Жыл бұрын

    It is not just “a bit” misplaced. The text is positioned on an entire different municipality. I’m just being clear on this. On the map itself it already says where The Hague is

  • @RobertDoornbosF1
    @RobertDoornbosF1 Жыл бұрын

    Yay, I requested this video a while ago. Can't wait to watch it😊🔥

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Yay! Thank you!

  • @bkleijer
    @bkleijer Жыл бұрын

    Addition: The metro line will be extended to the beach at Hoek van Holland on March 31, 2023. All residents of the Rijnmond region can walk to the beach in 1 minute from the Strand stop.

  • @chatkat
    @chatkat Жыл бұрын

    Some possible interesting facts; it was the first metro system in The Netherlands and upon being built the smallest in the world. Needed to be built because the old Willemsbrug clogging up. Also apart of rail maintenance the system makes a profit.

  • @91JRH
    @91JRH Жыл бұрын

    The metro of Rotterdam make use of the signalling system LZB (Linienförmige Zugbeeinflussung). LZB is also used in Germany for the high speed train lines. From station Melanchtonweg in Rotterdam (Line E) the metro will use overhead wires, but it is also a switch from the LZB system to the ZUB 222c, because the trams of the Randstadrail use ZUB 222c signalling system.

  • @OntarioTrafficMan

    @OntarioTrafficMan

    Жыл бұрын

    Beveiligingssysteem in het Engels is "signalling system", of "train protection system"

  • @DanelRahmani
    @DanelRahmani Жыл бұрын

    From my experience Rotterdam has a quite incredible system which makes travelling so fast and easy. I'd honestly recommend you take a look at the transit system of Groningen, it's a quite small city in the north of the Netherlands but it has one of the best bus systems in the world in my opinion and it shows that public transport can work even to rural areas.

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    I will definitely cover the Netherlands more in the future

  • @DanelRahmani

    @DanelRahmani

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RMTransit that'd be really great to see, there are some quite unique transit systems here so there's more than enough to cover

  • @Danielhake

    @Danielhake

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree. Groningen buses have metro like infrastructure in places, grade separated with even an elevated station (Ulgersmaweg). The main routes are (being) electrified. Only Almere is better.

  • @hintmations
    @hintmations Жыл бұрын

    Love it! I've very fond of rotterdam's transit and I really appreciate it when you make videos like this.

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad you enjoy it!

  • @dutchuncle3310
    @dutchuncle331010 ай бұрын

    As briefly mentioned the Netherlands public transport system is interconnected.The Rotterdam Metro is a perfect example off that. On the south side of the city of Rotterdam ( Station Zuidplein) is a large bus terminal that serves as hub into the city and the national railway system that connects rural areas a far as Zealand ( approximately a hundred kilometres away) into the system. In the city centre ( station centraal) the metro connects to the national railway system and international trains plus it serves as hub to the Rotterdam Tram system which mainly covers Rotterdams urban area on the north side of the city.

  • @jermaineschweig8904
    @jermaineschweig8904 Жыл бұрын

    There is an actual practical use to the 4 bogies setup. In the afternoon they will decouple 1 of the units and return it to the depot, its to ensure to keep maintanance at minimum. The older 3 bogies train rarely get decoupled anymore, however 2 units are always needed because 1 unit only has one cab, so they almost always run 3 units. But in the past they’d run 4, but the newer stations don’t support 4 unit long trains. Only line C and D can in some surcomstances run 4 unit long trains. They don’t ever do this anymore sadly.

  • @connorcrowley1
    @connorcrowley1 Жыл бұрын

    Funny that your first clip of R'dam metro was at Den Haag NOI! They really are twin cities. I live on that line and great service, because of the interlining better service than I ever had in NYC. P.S. you left out the fact that R'dam is so much better than A'dam! P.S.S. the different brands are actually different operators with different ownership schemes.

  • @RobertDoornbosF1

    @RobertDoornbosF1

    Жыл бұрын

    Probably because 1 of the lines extend to Den Haag

  • @connorcrowley1

    @connorcrowley1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RobertDoornbosF1 i know! My local stop is on that line.

  • @RobertDoornbosF1

    @RobertDoornbosF1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@connorcrowley1 Ah okay, couldn't figure from the name ur a local😅

  • @connorcrowley1

    @connorcrowley1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RobertDoornbosF1 well... Technically I am from Noord Holland.

  • @RobertDoornbosF1

    @RobertDoornbosF1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@connorcrowley1 No no I didn't mean that you aren't a local. Just that I couldn't figure out from the name. If you were like Kees Boerman I probably would not have commented

  • @bossfight6125
    @bossfight6125 Жыл бұрын

    Rotterdams metro system looks amazing, almost just as much as Amsterdam, the stations and rolling stock look spectacular

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Couldn't agree more! Though it is also rather strange!

  • @ronaldvanhemiksem3544

    @ronaldvanhemiksem3544

    Жыл бұрын

    I would say the Rotterdam system is even more beautiful than the Amsterdam system, as the only impressive part of the Amsterdam metro is the new Noord-Zuidlijn. That's the only part of the Amsterdam Metro system that really feels like a metro line. The rest of the Amsterdam network (apart from a few kilometres underneath the city centre) is more like an S-bahn (like in Berlin), which runs next to the NS national rail tracks for it's full length, only with some more intermediate stations.

  • @SeverityOne

    @SeverityOne

    Жыл бұрын

    Calling something from Rotterdam "almost as good" as something from Amsterdam isn't going to make you a lot of friends in Rotterdam. 🙂 There are basically three major difference between the two cities that are relevant to their metro systems: 1) Amsterdam is built on a swamp. 2) Rotterdam was bombed into oblivion during the war. 3) Some very stupid mistakes were made in Amsterdam. Comparing Rotterdam and Amsterdam is like discussing the relative merits of Dutch and French in Belgium: a subject best left well alone. The cities have very different vibes to them. The way I see it, mostly because of the bombardments of Rotterdam. (There were more, mostly by the allies, but the one of 14th May 1940 by the Germans was the most devastating.) Amsterdam looks much like it did in the 17th century. Rotterdam has amazing architecture, but I feel that the heart was ripped out of the city in 1940, and you can see the result to this very day.

  • @bradcapello6875

    @bradcapello6875

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@ronaldvanhemiksem3544 Juist. 🙂

  • @momo1435
    @momo1435 Жыл бұрын

    The lack of recent investments into the Dutch rail network, both mainline and metro systems is really down to our center right neo liberal government who are not at all interested in public transport. They only want our rail networks to become more efficient without having to do any major investments to actually improve the network.

  • @RealConstructor

    @RealConstructor

    Жыл бұрын

    Bullocks, this government coalition reserves a 4 billion extra investment in public transport. That is on top of the regular budget. I’m not a fan of this government coalition but your statement is false.

  • @TheSymposionNights

    @TheSymposionNights

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RealConstructor Yeah, sure! That's why our prime minister calls his own party the "Vroem, vroem-partij" for no reason... Furthermore, one investment in our transit system doesn't make up for years of desinvestment. This lack of insight in the importance of the commons, is, by the way, typical of the neoliberal worldview.

  • @MrTurbo_
    @MrTurbo_ Жыл бұрын

    Line E used to only be served by randstad rail which used to have way superior metros than any other line, later all the old metros on the other lines got upgraded seating and a couple years after that they all started using the same metros, the branding at that point stopped making sense and i think the only it still exists is because it costs money to change it and nobody really seems to care, also the old metros used to be shorter, 3 wagons would be about the size of 2 new ones which created more flexibility as they could even go up to 4 wagons long which is still more than they can achieve with the new ones because the metro would be longer than the stations, hence why 2 wagons seems to be the default, they still sometimes take out the old metros though, i think they are stored in Rhoon but they only do that when there are issues with the other ones

  • @m.oskam92
    @m.oskam92 Жыл бұрын

    It is funny how you look at the Rotterdam transport system @RMTransit. I grew up in Spijkenisse, where the C and D lines end in the south part. I have seen a lot of the metro lines expand over the years. When I was a child the C line was called Calandline and went from Marconiplein to Capelle a/d IJssel and de D line was the Erasmusline going from the Akkers (where the famous metro landed on the whale tails) to Rotterdam Central Station. I used the metro a lot in my school time and in my opinion the Rotterdam metro line is one of the most clear compared to Paris or NYC.

  • @mfbfreak
    @mfbfreak Жыл бұрын

    Missed an opportunity to show the picture of the metro accident where the front car of the metro ended up on a big whale tail statue! Truly one of the best pictures i've ever seen.

  • @vision_is_augmented1213
    @vision_is_augmented1213 Жыл бұрын

    Hi RM, love your vids. When discussing tram systems with NIMBYs I find that there are two things they are worried about: Safety and noise. They say that trams are dangerous (due to collisions with cars, I know, the irony) and that they make an infernal noise when passing by, which is especially problematic for people who live close to tram lines in urban areas. I would really like to see a video from you on these topics. I have the impression that these issues can be addressed with proper traffic planning and noise-cancelling technology, but I actually don't know... so I'm a little stumped when I discuss trams with NIMBYs. Thanks for all your great work!

  • @mfbfreak

    @mfbfreak

    Жыл бұрын

    Trams are objectively more dangerous than buses when making them share space with pedestrians, cyclists and cars. In Amsterdam, per passenger-kilometer, they're the most lethal method of transport to other road users. Tram gutters also cause many accidents with cyclists. There are many places where cyclists and trams share the same space. The reason for the many deaths caused by trams is simple: a tram weighs about 5 times more than a bus, and rail brakes are much less powerful than tires on asphalt. This results in a brake distance that's just unacceptable when you make such a vehicle interact with other vehicles and pedestrians. With today's very effective electric buses, a dedicated bus road constructed in much the same way as a tram track, is the ideal solution for situations where you otherwise have a rail vehicle interacting with other road users. You have a slight rolling resistance penalty, but if you really want, you can make it a trolleybus system like in Arnhem. Where you can keep rail vehicles physically separate from the rest, they're more efficient and safe enough. Any transit system should be tailored to the situation. We have better alternatives to trams in the situations where interaction with other traffic is a given. We have better alternatives to buses where traffic is separate. With regards to sound - i've stayed at someone's place in Amsterdam De Pijp a couple of weeks. They had very thick sound isolating windows and special sound isolating ventilation systems. Nothing came through those windows, except the deep rumble of steel wheels on steel track. Vibrations travel through the earth into the house. Buses were completely inaudible - even though those were still diesel ones at that time. Finally, the most modern trams of Amsterdam are the loudest in curves, which is really painful to those who lived near a tram line for years without being bothered but are now confronted with the metallic squeal multiple times per hour. They're trying to fix it, idk if it's already done or whether nothing can be done.

  • @davidvandereijk3071
    @davidvandereijk3071 Жыл бұрын

    Someone who uses the RET Daily/weekly I didn’t even need to read the title when I saw the thumbnail of the ret metro

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    That makes me very happy and means the drawing was good!

  • @xander1890
    @xander1890 Жыл бұрын

    been waiting for this for a while!

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching!

  • @marktownend8065
    @marktownend8065 Жыл бұрын

    The Sheffield Supertram network in the UK also has that split level platform arrangement at Rotherham Centrall station on a recent extension, where low floor tram-trains share track with high floor heavy passenger rail services and freights. I think limited level crossings, perhaps exclusively at the lower frequency extremities of a light metro network, are OK as long as the general traffic level and its management ensures road vehicles can't block back across the rails, which risks delaying trains even if they can always safely stop clear of such obstructions. Fixed obstacle detection technology using radar or lidar scanners installed at the crossing might enable these to become compatible with future automation of metro driving. In central sections of lines where very high frequency of rail service operates, level crossings are definitely undesirable, not least because their highways would be closed for extended periods, rendering them fairly useless, except perhaps for very low demand access purposes.

  • @WizardOfOss
    @WizardOfOss Жыл бұрын

    Great video (as always!), but you missed the unique structures they have in Spijkenisse to prevent trains from crashing down ;-)

  • @coletti7095

    @coletti7095

    Жыл бұрын

    😂🐋🐋

  • @OntarioTrafficMan

    @OntarioTrafficMan

    Жыл бұрын

    No it's quite normal for there to be a tail track at the end of a metro line

  • @crytocc

    @crytocc

    Жыл бұрын

    @@OntarioTrafficMan I'm afraid you missed the reference :) Have a search for "walvis metro"!

  • @ouwebrood497

    @ouwebrood497

    Жыл бұрын

    At least a picture of the crashed metro on the whale tails.

  • @bradcapello6875

    @bradcapello6875

    Жыл бұрын

    De walvissen 😅😅🐋🐋

  • @henreereeman8529
    @henreereeman8529 Жыл бұрын

    Great vid as always!!

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed!

  • @gwnlars_8306
    @gwnlars_8306 Жыл бұрын

    Well done explainer, but on 3:03 you're showing the Westland-region as The Hague ;)

  • @jorgrademaker
    @jorgrademaker Жыл бұрын

    As a Dutch viewer of your channel, I'd like to compliment you on your pronunciation of the Dutch words. Very well done!

  • @sytze5
    @sytze5 Жыл бұрын

    Been waiting for this one, great video!

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed!

  • @gregderise9969
    @gregderise9969 Жыл бұрын

    Doesn’t look like the easiest to learn the most effective way to get around town. Must have been a piecemeal design

  • @apveening

    @apveening

    Жыл бұрын

    It was a piecemeal design, but it isn't that difficult (assuming one can read a map).

  • @mdstopmotions318
    @mdstopmotions318 Жыл бұрын

    Uhh, Reece, Den Haag is not there where you put it at 3:04. It's waay more north to that, closer to the big junction between the A4 and A12 motorways, the Prins Clausplein. The area you're calling Den Haag is actually called "westland" and consists of a lot of greenhouse farms and not many large towns.

  • @mdstopmotions318

    @mdstopmotions318

    Жыл бұрын

    Another fun thing which you mentioned were line names like in London, because the Rotterdam metro actually had line names before they switched to the A-E format. The north-south line was called the "Erasmuslijn", while the east-west line was called the "Calandlijn". From what I know they stopped using the line names in 2010.

  • @vwabi
    @vwabi Жыл бұрын

    Living in Rotterdam for me definitely means switching transport mode a lot. I'll take a national train from Alexander to Centraal, transfer to a metro to Maashaven, then transfer to a tram to the football stadium.

  • @l_k9462
    @l_k9462 Жыл бұрын

    Love this video and the system! It really reminds me of a larger and improved version of Tyne and Wear metro (even thought of making a video suggestion about it to you), another fairly odd system which uses a lot of former (and it some sections even current) suburban heavy rail lines

  • @flits1
    @flits1 Жыл бұрын

    that the dutch transit system is one of the best in the world keeps surprising me cuz for me as a daily commuter though its not bad i feel like it could be so much more

  • @wewduck6874
    @wewduck6874 Жыл бұрын

    I've been waiting for this one for a while!

  • @jimsapounas818
    @jimsapounas818 Жыл бұрын

    Great job once again! Would love to see a video covering Athens Metro in the near future!

  • @akittenplays4104
    @akittenplays41042 ай бұрын

    im living in rotterdam currently and i love the system. very frequent service, and great interconnectivity with NS and trams.

  • @oscarandria
    @oscarandria Жыл бұрын

    I have lived in Rotterdam for almost a year now, and have never used the metro. I use my swapfiets. Thanks for this though. I'll probably use it more now!

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    You definitely should!

  • @schtormm

    @schtormm

    Жыл бұрын

    Of course your transport use heavily depends on where you have to go, if you can be there faster on a bike than with public transport the bike is the better option most of the time

  • @oscarandria

    @oscarandria

    Жыл бұрын

    @@schtormm yeah for sure. I live in Noord, so pretty central. But I was thinking more about the metro to The Hague. Compared to having to take NS, that’s a steal

  • @schtormm

    @schtormm

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oscarandria in price and convenience yes, but time-wise it takes a bit longer

  • @oscarandria

    @oscarandria

    Жыл бұрын

    @@schtormm true. But as a student, im in no rush haha

  • @abbiearcher4716
    @abbiearcher4716 Жыл бұрын

    Rotterdam isn't the only Metro with level crossings because IIRC so does the Tyne and Wear metro.

  • @MarioFanGamer659

    @MarioFanGamer659

    Жыл бұрын

    He wasn't implying it's the only one (he mentioned them on the Chicago L and Oslo T-Bana as well), he was merely highlighting the side effects from the conversion.

  • @LNTutorialsNL
    @LNTutorialsNL Жыл бұрын

    Schiphol is in theory 24/7 available by rail, but during the night there are only very inefficient trains that only go a few times per night. So it might take a few hours (!) extra getting there compared to getting there during the day

  • @ssj3gohan456
    @ssj3gohan456 Жыл бұрын

    One of the really cool things about the Rotterdam/The Hague metro and tram service is that it's both relatively sparse but also super effective. Ridership is incredibly high and bounced back immediately after covid restrictions, showing that this is real demand that is very hard to destroy. In fact, increasing ridership is the main driver for new extensions and upgrades. Without this system, the MRDH (metropolitan area of Rotterdam and The Hague) would be one big traffic infarction. These systems, along with the Fyra and regular NS rail system, make it so we can have regular roads and not-too-intrusive highways (The Hague has NO highways running through the city, just 2-lane and super-infrequent 4-lane roads, and it's got the highest population density of any city in the Netherlands and even Europe depending on how you count cities). That's the good, but there is also plenty of bad. Connectivity in the Westland area is nonexistent, even though its greenhouse-heavy construction hides quite high population density. Connectivity in the greater The Hague area is also very one-sided, with radial lines being excellent but tangential transportation being mostly absent, so some extreme examples make you travel for an hour on the tram to get 1km across the city. The south of the Rotterdam harbor area is very poorly served, even though it is a major job center. And connectivity to Zeeland, even Hollands Zeeland, is very poor. And lots of other things to improve.

  • @adm1nspotter
    @adm1nspotter Жыл бұрын

    7:38 what an awesome guideway!

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree it’s super unique

  • @angelgames9351
    @angelgames9351 Жыл бұрын

    The Rotterdam metro reminds me a lot of the Hannover stadtbahn system, I took it once and it felt pretty weird so it would be interesting to see an explainer about it

  • @ronaldvanhemiksem3544

    @ronaldvanhemiksem3544

    Жыл бұрын

    What do you want to be explained about it?

  • @nyukeit
    @nyukeit Жыл бұрын

    I had no idea I wanted to learn so much about transit until this guy came along. Now this is my favorite lunch pass-time.

  • @renskedunnewold1995
    @renskedunnewold1995 Жыл бұрын

    I live on the E line right between Den Haag C and Rotterdam C. It's great. Metro one way to take me to my office in Den Haag, metro the other way for friends, family and fun. I grew up near (a different stretch of) our metro, and I never would have moved here if the metro hadn't been extended. It's my favorite local from of transit

  • @TwingoFanCraze
    @TwingoFanCraze Жыл бұрын

    I always take Line E to Den Haag centraal and then take the tram to the beach

  • @johnjuiceshipper4963
    @johnjuiceshipper4963 Жыл бұрын

    It’s so cool how familiar all of these pictures are, I’ve used the metrosystem so often, it’s a great way to get around.

  • @michael-rg1by
    @michael-rg1by Жыл бұрын

    i love your videos❤️ have you planned to do one for cologne?

  • @woutertje62
    @woutertje62 Жыл бұрын

    I love the bit between Schiedam and Vlaardingen that also accommodates freight trains. at 2 stations there are switches to move the freight trains not on a completely different track but one with the same gauge but about a foot to the side to clear the stations.

  • @bobofhydra
    @bobofhydra Жыл бұрын

    amazing video as always, at some point I would love to see you do a video on the Klang Valley Integrated Transit in Malaysia! :D

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Send me an email if you’re located in the area!

  • @nickjasperse9903
    @nickjasperse9903 Жыл бұрын

    Yes my favorite

  • @roobertjuh
    @roobertjuh Жыл бұрын

    I love seeing this! (Even before I've actually watched it). It's my favourite system in the Netherlands, can't wait for the Hoek van Holland Strand extension to finally open this summer 😍

  • @ronaldvanhemiksem3544

    @ronaldvanhemiksem3544

    Жыл бұрын

    I've got good news for you. You won't have to wait until this summer. The new extension will be taken into service at March 31st!

  • @HiMyNameIsShitBye.

    @HiMyNameIsShitBye.

    Жыл бұрын

    IM GONNA GO TO HOEK VAN HOLLAND BEACH LETS GOOOOOOO

  • @rubentreingames6466
    @rubentreingames6466 Жыл бұрын

    Let’s go when I saw the SG 3 metro in the thumbnail I was already hyped

  • @benharris8013
    @benharris8013 Жыл бұрын

    Hello! Could you do a video on the Tyne and Wear metro?

  • @vinylcabasse
    @vinylcabasse Жыл бұрын

    in my first visit to amsterdam in 2012 i rode the stena line and got off at hoek van holland. i think my love of everything dutch started there - i actually made a point to stop in rotterdam for a few hours.

  • @TheRubinho96
    @TheRubinho96 Жыл бұрын

    So cool to actually see a video about a system that I use at least a couple of times every week!

  • @bossfight6125
    @bossfight6125 Жыл бұрын

    Next Transit Explained: Boston, Munich U-Bahn, Seoul, Shanghai.

  • @MarioFanGamer659

    @MarioFanGamer659

    Жыл бұрын

    Munich U-Bahn was already explained.

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Lots more videos to make, but not Munich!

  • @jack2453
    @jack2453 Жыл бұрын

    It used to be possible to land in Hoek (known in English as Hook of Holland) from the UK and get on a train to anywhere in Europe. Now you just end up on the Rotterdam metro.

  • @markdebruyn1212

    @markdebruyn1212

    8 ай бұрын

    The so called boat train stopped running since 2017

  • @jack2453

    @jack2453

    8 ай бұрын

    @@markdebruyn1212 Exactly. Yet another backward step in sustainable connectivity in Europe. It used to be possible to make seamless train-ferry-train connections in Dover, Calais, Ostend, Hoek etc and the infrastructure and the connections have just about all disappeared (Harwich and Holyhead clinging on)

  • @markdebruyn1212

    @markdebruyn1212

    8 ай бұрын

    @@jack2453 Sorry, i that tran actually stopped running in 2007

  • @jabindahed
    @jabindahed Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Please do a video on the Doha metro!

  • @Hollandstation
    @Hollandstation Жыл бұрын

    Great video explaining the Rotterdam metro network! Did you notice those doubled tracks around the platforms on the Hoekse lijn? that's because freight trains are still allowed on that piece of metrotracks. I was really suprised when I found out about that.

  • @markdebruyn1212

    @markdebruyn1212

    8 ай бұрын

    One time i happened to be on the Metro and we had stay on Schiedam Nieuwland Station, to wait for a freight train to pass

  • @Hollandstation

    @Hollandstation

    8 ай бұрын

    @@markdebruyn1212 That's so rare! When where you there? Because I made a video about the subject but I couldn't find when the freight train run. And waiting for a freight train is obviously pointless

  • @markdebruyn1212

    @markdebruyn1212

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Hollandstation I believe they only run 2 or 3 times a week (they also do not run during the rush hours)

  • @Izithel
    @Izithel4 ай бұрын

    6:55 The R-Net branding has been mostly superfluous as far as I know, outside of a unified livery it has only involved minor changes to scheduling to improve connections slightly between lines operated by the different companies. It's basically just a marketing for supposedly higher quality than normal public transport lines that connect between the various cities in the Randstad. 8:03 the odd shape is because Zoetemeer was envisioned as an Commuter town or Bedroom community for The Hague, the rail line and road connections were build to allow easy commuting by its residents to The Hague. The "Urban Train" was modeled on German S-Bahn and French RER systems, but outside of this one line the concept never really took off leaving it as a very unique heavy rail system until its conversion to light rail.

  • @GwildorS
    @GwildorS Жыл бұрын

    Great video, cool to see our network clearly explained. I have two additions, from someone who is living here since a few years: There are currently a few ways to cross the river in the center of the city: a car/bike/bus tunnel, the Erasmus bridge for car/bike/trams, another bridge for car/bike and of course the E and D metro lines. There are serious plans to add a new crossing a bit to the east. The current plan is to make it a car bridge that maybe will also have trams, but a lot of people are in favor of a new metro tunnel instead, which likely will be more expensive but requires less space. This would connect Zuidplein (E/D line in the south) with Kralingse Zoom (A/B/C line in the east), forming a sort of triangle. Other than that, there have been proponents and various designs to introduce a circle line, but that doesn't have much traction yet as it would be pretty expensive and that money is currently better spend by expanding or adding branches.

  • @ouwebrood497

    @ouwebrood497

    Жыл бұрын

    Also there are a few water taxis to cross the Nieuwe Maas.

  • @schtormm
    @schtormm Жыл бұрын

    Also: weirdly enough the main central station isn't where all the lines converge, it's Beurs station which is a very loooooooong station in the center (shopping and business district)

  • @erikhutt5957
    @erikhutt5957 Жыл бұрын

    Could you do a video on the Buenos Aires Subte. The system is large, cheap, and highly diverse (Trains, trams, commuter rail, BRT). Their bus system is a marvel of efficiency and the interconnectivity of each mode is amazing.

  • @Roanmonster
    @Roanmonster Жыл бұрын

    What is probably one of the best things about the RET metro is how insanely reliable it is. Currently there are some issues with the NS (lack of personnel almost in every layer of the organisation), and I have had the unpleasant surprise of rail maintenance (ie no trains), broken trains, accidents etc. more than once. Well, literally never on the metro, I have always been able to take the metro (within service hours obv) and my mother has taken the metro for most of her working life almost daily, we have had to pick her up only once because of some major accident.

  • @jackmehauf8664
    @jackmehauf8664 Жыл бұрын

    Could you do an update on the Toronto King Street transit priority corridor? What the more perminant plans are for it and maybe talk about the poor state of repair the temporary measures are in right now? I remember people being excited about it but its fallen apart and kind of being forgotten which is a real shame!

  • @0h0h0h0
    @0h0h0h0 Жыл бұрын

    OMG craaaazy I'm seeing both my old house (next to Rotterdam CS) and the metro station that I always use (Schiedam Nieuwland at 6:15 ) here. Funny that you use that one because literally none of my friends know the metro stations beyond Schiedam Centrum. 😂

  • @dalentoish
    @dalentoish Жыл бұрын

    It's weird to be that early...

  • @joop1991
    @joop1991 Жыл бұрын

    3:03 That isn't Den Haag, you're pointing to Hoek van Holland. Den Haag is at the top of the screen

  • @VuurwerkNederland
    @VuurwerkNederland Жыл бұрын

    There are actually some plans to expand the metro network with a completely new line. This new line should run between Kralingse Zoom on the east-west trunk to Zuidplein on the north-south trunk. A new tunnel or bridge over the Nieuwe Maas is discussed, to improve connection between the east and south of the city. However, the debate on this line is still going, and there are also plans to build just a tram line to save costs.

  • @coletti7095

    @coletti7095

    Жыл бұрын

    The metro on this portion is definitely needed as it is part of the future ring line, if it ever comes to exist

  • @markdebruyn1212

    @markdebruyn1212

    8 ай бұрын

    Din't they also wanted to built a line to Lombardijen at one point

  • @rachelhendriks8814
    @rachelhendriks8814 Жыл бұрын

    the metro in rotterdam is one of my favorite public transports in the netherlands

  • @leonleon5013
    @leonleon5013 Жыл бұрын

    Hi , are you planing some videos on french network ? Many city in france have metro and tramway network (Lyon, Marseille, Toulouse, Lille, Renne ....) ?

  • @dl4608
    @dl4608 Жыл бұрын

    The line to the beach isn’t fully operational just yet. It has been terminating at the ferry terminal (Hoek van Holland Haven) since that opened a few years ago, but the final stretch was only just recently confirmed to be opening on March 31.

  • @SarahJigglypuff
    @SarahJigglypuff Жыл бұрын

    I have to travel with the Rotterdam metro every day and while it's not terrible, it's not great. There have been a lot of issues in recent years, such as months-long maintenance work and lack of staff, impacting services. The green line wasn't fully in use from September 2022 until literally this month, which meant that the metros that *were* in use were extremely busy during peak hours. The Rotterdam-The Hague line was also an absolute nightmare when I had to use it in 2019, when you'd be squeezed into the carriages along with the hundreds of other passengers like sweaty, smelly sardines. Things are better NOW, but as a daily commuter, it also has its downsides.

  • @jasperjonkers3615
    @jasperjonkers3615 Жыл бұрын

    It might not be exactly up your ally, but Utrecht is if you ask me a great example of how to do transit properly with regular buses, trains and cycling and without many modern solutions. High frequencies all throughout the city and metro area, with fast connections right into the city centre. Coolest feature if you ask my: every major bus line has a last departure at exactly 1:00, after the last regular intercity train from Amsterdam arrives at 0:51. This means regular PT runs slightly longer than in Amsterdam & Rotterdam, and I find this to make quite a big difference to regular people going into the city in the evening. Although unfortunately, night buses have still not resumed due to staff shortages. Its a cool sight to see about 25 buses leave simultaneously. We also had 17 double articulated buses running the tram-like route 28, but sadly 10 of those got caught in a fire a few months ago. We also got the busiest train station in the Netherlands, and a tram, although we absolutely suck at those. Oh yeah, were competing with Copenhagen for best cycling city, not in the last place due to the largest bicycle garage in the world. And we recently replaced a highway through the centre with the canal that was there before it. Just some regular city marketing here😛 but also a reminder that sometimes, good old buses work well or even better than tram/metro.

  • @sams3015
    @sams3015 Жыл бұрын

    I was in Rotterdam briefly last month, I’d love to go back. This system reminds me of something I’d create in Simcity4 or similar games lol

  • @Mansaber
    @Mansaber Жыл бұрын

    Dutch freight train driver here, we also use the metro line on a small piece of track to get to a freight terminal. From Schiedam we get on the metro line to Vlaardingen.

  • @andriiret
    @andriiret11 ай бұрын

    The Rotterdam metro is REALLY insane

  • @BrunoAlexLUX
    @BrunoAlexLUX Жыл бұрын

    Awesome video! Has there been a video on any Portuguese metro system?

  • @RMTransit

    @RMTransit

    Жыл бұрын

    Not yet!

  • @f.g.9466

    @f.g.9466

    Жыл бұрын

    Currently the Portuguese systems don't really stand out, there are loads of much more interesting transit systems. The good news is that there are plans for expansion that would/will change that. Lisbon getting extensions to the metro, 3 new light rail lines, lot's of upgrades to the suburban railway and potentially a new line, new interfaces... if these things get built then it will become a really interesting transit network.

  • @debries1553
    @debries155310 ай бұрын

    3:45 , beginning of section "The Rotterdam Metro", showing instead a tram/trainstation in The Hague's business centre.

  • @Nuhaantje
    @Nuhaantje Жыл бұрын

    The cities of Rotterdam and The Hague have many services operated and or governed by one single authority, the Metropol Region Rotterdam The Hague (MRDH). Public transit is one of them. Having an interconnected system enhances the connectivity. Public transit is operated by RET (metro, tram and city busses in Rotterdam), HTM (tram and city bus in The Hague) and currently EBS (regional busses. Note that regional busses share aspects of both the RET and HTM colourscemes. The bilevel boarding system makes sense if you concider that metroline E feeds into the metro system, while the Zoetermeer tramlines feed into the tram system and there's only a hand full of shared stations. The double platform enables full accessibility for wheelchairs. Both Rotterdam's Metro and The Hague's tram is fully part of the R-net network. A network of high quality, high frequency and fully accessible public transit in the larger Randstad region (thus the R in R-net). The RandstadRail was a joint venture between RET, HTM and Q-buzz (which used to operate the regional busses) to create a high quality and high frequency triangle service between The Hague, Rotterdam and Zoetermeer (one leg was to be temporarily operated by busses as plans were made for a rail connection between Rotterdam and Zoetermeer, which never came to fruition). The only reason why the logo's are still in use is because the trams and metro's haven't been overhauled yet. An other funny detail is that not all Rotterdam metrosets are able to operate on the intire network as the network has many different electricity systems (1500 volt overhead, 600-750 volt third rail, and 600-750 volt overhead) as well as Signaling and security systems. Part of the network operates as a "sneltram" (fast tram, unguarded level crossings with a "negenoog", nine eyed signal) and part of the system operates as a light train or metro, with 2 types of 'regular' signals and guarded level crossings. The platform hights and distance from the track is consistent throughout the network. Note that metro trains are narrower then the freight trains that use a small section of the Hoekse Lijn thus the need for a slight ofset secondary track at the stations so freight trains don't run into platforms.