Rede Integrada de Transporte
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Rede Integrada de Transporte (also known as RIT, Portuguese: Integrated Transportation Network) is a bus rapid transit system in Curitiba, Brazil.
Curitiba has a well planned transportation system, which includes devotion of lanes on major streets for a bus rapid transit system[1]. The buses are long, split into three sections (bi-articulated), and stop at designated elevated tubes, complete with handicapped access. [2] The system, used by 85% of Curitiba's population[3], is the source of inspiration[4] for the TransMilenio in Bogotá, Colombia, Metrovia in Guayaquil, Ecuador as well as the Orange Line of Los Angeles, California, and for a future transportation system in Panama City, Panama, Transmetro system in Guatemala City. Guatemala, the Metrobús of Mexico City and for the city of Bangalore[5].
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[edit] History
By the 1960s, Curitiba's population had ballooned to 430,000, and some residents feared that the growth in population threatened to drastically change the character of the city. In 1964, Mayor Ivo Arzua solicited proposals for urban design. Architect Jaime Lerner, who later became mayor, led a team from the Universidade Federal do Paraná that suggested a reduction of traffic in the downtown area and a convenient and affordable public transit system. [6]
This plan, known as the Curitiba Master Plan, was adopted in 1968. Lerner closed November 15 St. to vehicles, because it had very high pedestrian traffic. The plan had a new road design to minimise traffic: the Trinary Road System. This uses two one-way streets moving in opposite directions which surround a smaller, two-lane street where the express buses have their exclusive lane. Five of these roads form a star that converges to the city centre. Land farther from these roads is zoned for lower density developments, to reduce traffic away from the main roads. A number of areas subject to floods were condemned and became parks.[7]
In the 1980s, the Rede Integrada de Transporte was created, allowing transit between any points in the city by paying just one fare.[8]
[edit] Routes
[edit] Terminals
Curitiba has twenty-one passenger terminals where it is possible to change buses without having to pay for a new ticket. They are located on Express lanes and offer travellers great flexibilty.
[edit] Criticism
This bus system is criticized by light rail transit (LRT) advocates, who show that passengers stand in the busses and who, in light of American passenger comfort standards and traffic laws, question the applicability of this system as a transportation solution for cities of the United States. In order for the system to work, there is a need to designate lanes or exclusive roads solely for public transit, and limit or close off city centers to private cars, a change which, besides needing drastic legal and political decisions, does not fit, in the critics eyes, with the spirit of city residents in the United States. These sources also discredit the low price claimed, and note that operation costs have never been disclosed[9].


