How San Francisco's Hills Saved its Streetcars

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 12 июн 2024
  • Why do Muni Metro's lines start with J? What happened to A through I?
    The story of how San Francisco's hills presented the challenge that made the five surviving streetcar lines resilient to modernity.
    Map:
    www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mi...
    0:00 Intro
    1:08 Public vs Private
    2:43 Where the defunct Muni streetcars went
    3:45 J-Church Liberty Hill Bypass & Golden Hydrant
    5:08 N-Judah Sunset Tunnel & Gravestones of Buena Vista Park
    6:26 K-L-M Twin Peaks Tunnel
    8:45 Market Street Subway
    9:26 Conclusion

Комментарии • 408

  • @marketstreetrailway
    @marketstreetrailway Год назад +353

    This is an absolutely brilliant explication of how five original Muni streetcar lines survived. A couple of notes, though, to clarify. First, Muni did intend to replace the J-Church in the early 1950s with electric trolley buses, which could easily climb Church Street itself, bypassing the, er, bypass. Neighborhood opposition squelched that. Second, BART never intended to establish a "second, local BART service inside the city". The Muni Metro subway level downtown, and its extension to Castro, was always to be part of Muni, and was included to get San Franciscans to vote for the BART bonds. In 1966, Muni asked voters to approve more bonds to make the Muni subway level a true Metro, including only the M and N lines, and putting the outer ends of those lines underground. But voters did not approve. That's how all five lines, the J, K, L, M, and N, ended up in the subway.

    • @ababababaababbba
      @ababababaababbba Год назад +21

      bart originally was going to go through the richmond and to marin until marin dropped out

    • @TohaBgood2
      @TohaBgood2 Год назад +13

      @@ababababaababbba Yes, but not through the second level of the Market subway. As always with BART, that was supposed to just be a spur off the main line. BART does this all throughout its system. The way the spurs all interline is supposed to match commuting patterns. BART brings people from out in the suburbs to denser and denser areas with the lines interlining more and more to eventually all join together in the Transbay Tunnel. The idea was that the BART lines would do the same in reverse once they reached SF. But we stopped funding BART so we only got half a system.

    • @TohaBgood2
      @TohaBgood2 Год назад +19

      Ugh, that crazy interlining pattern is still the transit mistake of the century! I understand that every SF NIMBY wants _his_ train to go all way downtown through the tunnel. But every single transit engineer that they asked told them that this interlining was an idiotic idea.
      As always, SF caved to the loudest activists and allowed this ridiculous service pattern that hobbles Muni to this day. I know that the T will now run into the Central Subway instead. And they seem to be intent on moving the single-car J onto the surface alignment on Market. And just maybe the L will be rerouted to Balboa Park instead of the tunnel. But that subway is still at least two lines too interlined. With street-running trams that get stuck in car traffic, the last thing you want to make them do is to interline in a complicated ballet of the absurd to all cram into one single tunnel. The fact that Muni still does these crazy maneuvers all these years later is insane!

    • @theleastofpilgrims3379
      @theleastofpilgrims3379 Год назад +1

      Thank you for clarifying that. Out of curiosity is there any concept art for how the Muni Metro would have looked had it been implemented as a heavy rail system?

    • @theleastofpilgrims3379
      @theleastofpilgrims3379 Год назад +1

      @@ababababaababbba Yes I recall reading that, and wasn’t there talk of a second transbay tube paralleling the Golden Gate Bridge?

  • @Kirschesaftmann
    @Kirschesaftmann Год назад +398

    To be fair, it is entirely possible ot have fast frequent service on surface level street cars, and many cities do it. The trick is to give these systems their own lane seperate from private motor traffic. Considering that there are two lanes of traffic and two for parking on most roads, along major public transport routes all you would have to do is turn the two parking lanes into private traffic lanes, and let the trams and buses have their own dedicated lanes on the street. It is a quick and very cheap fix for a massive improvement on public transport. If you want to take it a step further, you do what Zürich has done for decades, and other cities have also implemented, where traffic lights automatically stop cross traffic when a tram/bus is approaching so that public transport never stops at lights. At the end of the day its just a matter of priorities, and in the US public transit is unfortunately very far down on the list.

    • @weenisw
      @weenisw Год назад +23

      Thank you for saving me the time of making a similar point.

    • @neckenwiler
      @neckenwiler Год назад +47

      And, for the love of god, don’t have your trains stop at stop signs. Prevent cross streets from running through if you have to. Every time I watch a Muni line operating in mixed traffic, I die a little.

    • @vpolite1
      @vpolite1 Год назад +10

      Oh god!God!! Really!! San Francisco has twice the population of Zurich and occupies a quarter of the land mass. If you are going to be critical, educate yourself. Hell, San Francisco is not even the biggest city in the Bay Area. Don't be dumb.

    • @Ferrichrome
      @Ferrichrome Год назад +30

      @@vpolite1 huh? If anything what you just said just makes his point more valid

    • @melanierhianna
      @melanierhianna Год назад +5

      Checkout Manchester, UK which has a system which runs on the street in the city and streetcars but is a rapid transit system on its own network out of town.

  • @Unmannedperson
    @Unmannedperson Год назад +65

    The production value of this is INSANE for an 83-sub channel!

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe Год назад +1

      what is an "83-sub channel"?

    • @NateHarris69
      @NateHarris69 Год назад +6

      @@Yowzoechannel with 83 subscribers

    • @sotmMrPants
      @sotmMrPants Год назад +9

      7 days later and now it has 1.73K subscribers :D

    • @DavidCiani
      @DavidCiani Год назад +1

      114k views in 3 weeks. Looking forward to what the future holds!

  • @AV-de6hy
    @AV-de6hy Год назад +17

    Here in Toronto...we were lucky that we kept most of our streetcar system. It's good to see San Francisco also kept some of their line....

  • @hendrsb33
    @hendrsb33 Год назад +4

    Tbh,as a kid, I loved the old green Muni streetcars. The Key System in the East Bay was long gone before I was born, so taking BART over to SF to ride the Muni was always an adventure. As an adult now, I'd much rather take the Muni than driving and trying to find parking. This video really took me back in time.

  • @martinzfjr
    @martinzfjr Год назад +7

    SF native here --- excellent video. Keep it up.

  • @bartonpercival3216
    @bartonpercival3216 Год назад +3

    Fantastic video. Living in the inner Sunset district, I use to ride the N Judah all the time through the sunset tunnel to go downtown. I also miss taking the 38 Geary bus out to 48th avenue and Cabrillo street to Playland

  • @subaru4me
    @subaru4me Год назад +28

    Growing up in San Francisco in the 70's I remember watching the transition from the old streetcar system to the newer light rail style. We were completely amazed by the moving stairs in the LRV's.

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 Год назад +2

      Me too. We would always come to San Francisco to visit family back then,and I remember when they transitioned from the old PCC cars to the Boeing LRV and the Metro. Took a long time for folks to get used to.

  • @stephanweinberger
    @stephanweinberger Год назад +5

    Streetcar/lightrail hybrids are actually a perfect, flexible solution. Easily accessible, decent capacity, no need for expensive infrastructure where it's not necessary (and it can be gradually improved), relatively cheap to build & run (which makes it feasible to operate a dense network, which in turn improves accessibility and overall door-to-door speed), ...
    So if you don't need the capacity of a full-fledged subway this is a perfectly fine way to build public transport.
    But even if you do build a subway, on-street public transport can still be a valuable supplement for local trips/the "last mile".
    E.g. here in Vienna we made the mistake of ripping out streetcar routes when we built our subway; now the subway is overcrowded in some sections with people only going 1-2 stops, which would actually have been faster before in the streetcar (simply because of the subway's longer access way from street level to platform and the lower station density overall).
    Also: There are multiple solutions if your streetcars get stuck in traffic. Separate lanes, priorization at traffic lights (or even priorization of car traffic/gatekeeper signals, to clear the road ahead of the streetcar), ... it's only a question of priorities.
    Making on-street public transport more attractive also generally reduces traffic delays, even for motorists (simply because a passenger in a bus or streetcar only takes up a fraction of the space compared to cars; and because the vehicles are in operation all day, and not parked - still taking up valuable space - for 20+ hours).

  • @DavidStruveDesigns
    @DavidStruveDesigns Год назад +46

    Man, as someone living in the UK, I had _no idea_ just how darned _pretty_ San Francisco really is! Especially in the bright sun! It's made me realise just how little footage I've actually seen of San Fran, other than the classic "here's a quick look at a really steep street and an old-timey cable car". It clearly has _so_ much character and is actually a genuinely _good looking_ city, which is a really hard thing to achieve even with modern developments and more modern cities. Plus it looks like there's lots of green spaces and parks around with some really _fantastic_ views!! I'm rather jealous now. I live in a relatively flat, large-ish town, mostly consisting of similar/identical brick houses and not much else - and even where there _are_ hills there isn't much to see/look at and definitely none of the views you fine folks get!

    • @sunshineyellow
      @sunshineyellow Год назад +15

      Yes it's wonderful! Come visit sometime, it's not nearly as bad as everyone tries to make it out to be

    • @sonicwave32
      @sonicwave32 Год назад +8

      It certainly makes an impression on me pretty much every time I walk through it. Seemingly one of the few US cities I've been to where I can get around almost entirely on walking and public transit, and gives you the views for doing it too.

    • @peteralbert1485
      @peteralbert1485 Год назад +4

      @@sonicwave32 Yes, you nailed it! I've lived here since 1984 and I still feel this way.

    • @AlCatSplat
      @AlCatSplat Год назад

      @@sunshineyellow How much poop do you encounter on a daily basis?

    • @davezad
      @davezad Год назад +8

      @@sunshineyellow The thing to remember is that "everyone" is just a very loud but small segment of our population who have never been to the city before and should be ignored.

  • @uniworkhorse
    @uniworkhorse Год назад +12

    Dude, this is so cool to learn the lore behind the streetcars. We really live in a special place. That tip about why Castro's platforms are so ridiculously long blew my mind. Love this stuff.
    Also yes, Geary needs a streetcar sooooo bad oml the Richmond needs that so bad!

  • @peteralbert1485
    @peteralbert1485 Год назад +85

    Excellent explanation of how we got today’s streetcars/subway hybrid. I love the segues into local history (the fire hydrant, the gravestones, the Eureka Valley "ghost” station) too!

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 Год назад +3

      I remember going past Eureka Valley station at Castro when I was a kid.

  • @vovinio2012
    @vovinio2012 Год назад +8

    That`s a great story about tram in a big hilly city. And, what the most precious in this story - tram survived and his network is developing now.
    Here in my country capital city, Kyiv, Ukraine, some steepest lines were demolished "to make space for cars". Projects of tram tunnels were made, but not realised.

  • @lucaspadilla4815
    @lucaspadilla4815 Год назад +7

    As someone who lives on Dolores and uses the J regularly, this vid is great. Imo the J and N should be combined as complete streetcar line, that way there can be less jams and more frequency on the other lines in the market street subway, they can just transfer to the subway at Church station. Also couldn't agree more about Geary street (and tbh also Van Ness, Sunset, and 19th Ave could also use a subway)

  • @AlexDahl
    @AlexDahl Год назад +91

    Great video, I think a lot of the "wistfulness" for the streetcar era more harkens back to a time when people and cities actually cared about having good public transit infrastructure that, you know, worked for the public to maintain a sense of walkability. It's an ethos that most american cities (SF is a rare exception) have lost, by way of turning many streetcar routes into bus services then cutting those buses to provide infrastructure for cars. American cities used to have some of the best public transit infrastructure in the world, and now we just don't seem to care much anymore.

    • @Shinyarc
      @Shinyarc Год назад +4

      The thing is, america always goes with whatever is cheapest. When they were in their heyday, streetcars were simply the cheapest option for cities to maintain vs infrastructure for expensive cars, which very few people owned. It’s sad, but it’s true that once more people could get cars, it was simply cheaper for cities to cater to them

    • @Gary_Harlow
      @Gary_Harlow Год назад +12

      @@Shinyarc It isnt tho, check out the suburban growth ponzi scheme by not just bikes

    • @happyfriendshippal
      @happyfriendshippal Год назад +4

      @@Shinyarc it’s not cheapest. At least not in the long term. Generally American politicians make decisions based on what companies lobby them the hardest, not what is more affordable or good for the American people

  • @mauricepointer9555
    @mauricepointer9555 Год назад +2

    Great video! I love the hydrant that saved San Francisco, or at least that section. I live in Baltimore & remember before living there the street car lines. The dependence on the automobile and the bus killed what could have been a very good transit system. Thank you for posting and all the best.

  • @erikziak1249
    @erikziak1249 Год назад +12

    Most streetcars in Bratislava are separated, even in the city center. Running on the surface is not the problem. Nor is running through pedestrian zones. Running with cars is a problem and it can be solved super easily. Btw. very nice video, I learned something new about the SF system. I hope one day I will visit SF.

  • @philipbanks2462
    @philipbanks2462 Год назад +7

    Bravo! This video blew my mind 4 or 5 times. Can't believe the the recycled headstones at buena vista or that Bart was planning on stopping at Castro Street! 🤯

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe Год назад

      I feel the same way, having grown up in SF.
      This guy has made a compelling video with wonderful editing and fascinating history, and as many people have said, let's hope he continues :-)

  • @tylerkochman1007
    @tylerkochman1007 Год назад +2

    The J-Church bypass going behind houses always reminds me of the “Alley El” segments of the Chicago L, where the elevated CTA tracks have segments that literally pass through alleyways behind houses

  • @doublebasshq
    @doublebasshq Год назад +2

    Such a great video! Can’t wait for more SF vids from you!

  • @comrade8600
    @comrade8600 Год назад +7

    Love the firefighter supervisor to fire hydrant shot! Video is awesome. Please make more SF history videos!

  • @dshawster
    @dshawster Год назад +38

    I’ve always said BART should have served more than just market st, now I know there was a plan at one point so thanks for the history!

  • @stickynorth
    @stickynorth Год назад +17

    Great video! Your next one should be on unbuilt BART lines/projects like Marin County, Market Street (as you wonderfully alluded to here) a second bay crossing to name but a few...

  • @karla4799
    @karla4799 Год назад +2

    Great video! I love you included maps of the old lines. I didn't know there were so many lines back in the day. I very often drive by 15th St and San Bruno Ave, and always wonder why are there tracks there that lead to nowhere. Now I know maybe long time ago there was a street car line there. I personally love MUNI metro, being a teen in the 90's me and my friends were not about to pay for BART, with a fast pass we could get downtown faster, the zoo, or the movies at West Portal or Stonestown.

  • @heintmeyer2296
    @heintmeyer2296 Год назад +1

    Awesome video. My grandmother was a artist and salvaged a bunch of those gravestones to carve into sculptures back in the 20's

  • @bonitaextra6904
    @bonitaextra6904 Год назад +7

    Good video. Growing up taking the metro in the 80s, I recall muni ran 4 and 6 car trains in the Market St tunnel with L, M, and K trains decoupling into 2 car trains at west portal and J and N trains decoupling into 2 car trains at Duboce Ave.

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay Год назад +2

      Yes, and the coupling and linking the electronics was always a disaster as were the whole Boeing Vertol cars. At West Portal going downtown they used to practically crash them into each other, sometimes more than once.

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 Год назад +1

      @@emjayay Yep. The Boeing trains were crap. The doors always malfunctioned. As did the stairs when it would come in/out of the tunnel. And the AC often didn't work. I remember when they would couple the K/L/M all the way to West Portal,then separate them off. I wish the N ran 3-car trains,but the platforms on Judah/Irving/Carl St aren't long enough to accommodate them.

  • @sonicwave32
    @sonicwave32 Год назад +5

    I used to go to SF on weekends and would often overshoot my downtown Van Ness stop to ride the metro for fun. The transitions between the central underground section and aboveground sections are quite special IMO. The train just stops there while the steps slowly move into position, and suddenly you go from fairly normal subway right onto the tight, hilly streets of SF, and every so often move off the street again to grade-separated sections. It's cool to see some of the history visualized and to learn that these transitions were also what helped keep the metro in place. Definitely looking forward to you making more content about Fog City history!

  • @gabslanternfestival2323
    @gabslanternfestival2323 Год назад +11

    Pre-pandemic, my family used to travel to San Francisco a lot, and I was always eager to ride the streetcars as a railfan myself. We look forward to going back there sometime in the near future!
    ~A fan from the Philippines 🇵🇭

    • @tonyuzi881
      @tonyuzi881 Год назад +3

      Pinoy to kabayan, Ive been here since 94 but frequent traveller to PI, SF have change a lot ,too much homelessness and drugs (legal to shoot heroin) in the street especially the Tenderloin District, other parts are doing well and big development in the south of market (Mission Bay where the Warriors arena located and big hospitals...much better now after 3 years of pandemic but still financial district is slow (still lots of work at home so those buildings are just 40% occupied..

  • @philipgrasso6255
    @philipgrasso6255 Год назад +6

    Exceptional video-thank you for producing this. I’ve lived here my whole life and didn’t know some of these tidbits!
    Aside from a Geary subway, we need Divis/Castro from the Marina to Noe Valley!

  • @byDahlia
    @byDahlia Год назад +3

    The RUclips recommendation algorithm is coming in clutch. Just moved to SF recently and really enjoy this historical overview!

  • @willungs541
    @willungs541 Год назад +6

    Please keep making more of these videos. This is amazing. Thank you so much.

  • @rucinn1
    @rucinn1 Год назад +7

    This looks like your first video and it was very well done. Hoping for more of this content!

  • @stevenkeller3047
    @stevenkeller3047 Год назад +3

    I like the current MUNI trains and glad for the expansion.

  • @wonderpotato
    @wonderpotato Год назад +16

    I used to live on the N Judah line at Duboce Park and loved taking the Muni. Maybe it wasn’t super speedy on the surface streets but I loved the hybrid nature of the Muni. And to me it feels more sophisticated riding a streetcar like Muni than a bus, I’m not sure why

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 Год назад +2

      My parents lived at Duboce and Noe next to Duboce Park before I was born. Mom told me all the stories about the old days of Muni. I always rode the N to visit my dad when we were in town from LA. Still ride the N to this day.

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe Год назад +1

      Me too! On Scott across from what eventually became the Harvey Milk Community Center. My N Judah stop was right at the tunnel.
      I always felt there was a specialness about the rounded streetcars, and as a little kid attending Mission Dolores I often used to ride on the back (outside), hanging on to the wire for dear life, from Dolores Park to Market Street…fair memories. Settled in those sagging green seats, hearing the clink of the coins deposited in the fare box or the sound of the fare card being punched by the driver, standing up to pull the cord, exiting down the rears steps through the folding doors… all visceral body memories :-)
      There was a hierarchy of preference for me. I loved every thrilling cable car ride. Next were the green & creme streetcars with their clanking and occasional disconnects, then the electrified buses (the 22 was my regular), and finally the big old loud & rumbling (diesel?) bus lines slowly making their way.

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 Год назад +1

      @@Yowzoe My mom told me that she used to do the same thing through the Sunset Tunnel when she lived on Duboce with my dad before I was born. She did the same thing in LA with the Yellow Cars when she was a kid. I got to ride those as an infant right up to the last run in '63. I always remember how those old Muni cars would be heading through the Twin Peaks Tunnel,and right around Forest Hill,they would lose power. The pole always came off when the N would be making the turn onto Irving at 9th Ave. We stopped going to SF in the 70's after my mom remarried,but those were what I always remember about the old cars.

    • @Relaxanddo
      @Relaxanddo Год назад

      It's a beautiful city. It's nice to take it slow

  • @Alta-Moon
    @Alta-Moon Год назад +14

    I moved to SF last year and I always enjoy learning new things about this city. Thank you for the informative video. I never really questioned why some lines are serviced by bus and others by street car (as well as the letter/number naming system) but it all makes more sense with context.

    • @RaymondHng
      @RaymondHng Год назад +2

      Many of the electric trolleybus lines in San Francisco where once streetcar lines.

  • @jeffreyhunt1727
    @jeffreyhunt1727 Год назад +6

    This is such a fantastic and incredible video. Thank you for putting so much effort into it.

  • @FridayAdventureClub
    @FridayAdventureClub Год назад +4

    Amazing video! I’ve visited SF and all of the transit lines amazed/confused me. Great info and some great history tidbits!

  • @qolspony
    @qolspony Год назад +10

    Nobody in their right mind would have wanted to scrap the street car system. Especially if you considered replacing it with a more expensive BART system.
    The advantage of the street car system is that it is an on and off system. You get on on street level and off on street level.

  • @evelynyturralde4113
    @evelynyturralde4113 Год назад +2

    Your video is excellent! Well researched and clearly explained. As a fellow native San Franciscan I'm proud and appreciative of the wonderfully well planned public transportation we enjoy, especially the hardworking streetcars. Good job !

  • @bobsykes
    @bobsykes Год назад +1

    im love this! I lived for 14 years in South of Market, and used these lines every day I was there. Facinating history!

  • @incrediblelatte
    @incrediblelatte Год назад +4

    I don't own a car in SF. I rely on my bicyle and Muni. I love the Muni metro, the only thing I would change is honestly its frequency. The services could stand to be closer together. I rarely find the trains to be overly crowded with exception of the morning train to work which is during a peak rush hour time. Then I am usually required to stand until Embaracadero at which point I can sit but that is really a minor complaint for what is honestly a very nice way to get round. I do wish we'd retained some of those services above ground rail like they originally were over the bus system, though projects like the Van Ness Bus lanes do make it a bit easier to not fall victim to the traffic.
    I dont pretend to haver all the information just my own observations as a resident.

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 Год назад +1

      I rode the old cars above ground on Market as a kid in the 60's and 70's before and during the construction of the subway. The service was usually frequent on weekdays. And the traffic on Market east of Van Ness often caused delays. And the first couple of years of the subway,it only ran on weekdays,the J still ran above ground on Market.

  • @charliewatson6713
    @charliewatson6713 Год назад +29

    Really well done video! Thought I knew everything about streetcar history in SF but learned quite a few new things! Looking forward to more transit history content 👍😃

  • @nickclark2278
    @nickclark2278 Год назад +21

    As a transit planner I like the franken system - it provides good local coverage in the suburbs and grade separation and capacity down town.
    Full grade separation in the burbs would have led to less frequent stations and less vibrancy, access and activity

    • @RaymondHng
      @RaymondHng Год назад +1

      Market Street is now prohibiting private vehicular traffic east of 10th Street. This allows only buses, trolleybuses, and the F Market streetcar line to run on the surface of Market Street. The K Ingleside, L Taraval, M Oceanview, and N Judah run on tracks in semi-dedicated-to-dedicated lanes on city surface streets. Parts of the M and N also run on full grade separated tracks in the outlying areas.

    • @archstanton5973
      @archstanton5973 Год назад +3

      @@RaymondHng : "M Oceanview, and N Judah run on tracks in semi-dedicated-to-dedicated lanes on city surface streets" Uhhhhh no. Only PARTLY true.
      The M only is on private ROW from St. Francis Circle to the intersection of 19th Avenue and Junipero Serra. From there it travels on shared streets in the Oceanview where the M is slow as shiite.
      The N is only private ROW at 9th and Judah to 19th Avenue and Judah where it goes back to sharing Judah with autos though there are signs telling autos to stay off the N tracks.
      As a side note: many many eons ago, I was doing my graduate work at SFSU and working as an office monkey in the Financial District. I used to actually hop onto the M Oceanview TO Balboa Park station where I would transfer to a BART train headed to the Embarcadero Station and the office. Believe it or not, BART plus the M through Oceanview to SFSU was USUALLY faster than M through Twin Peaks tunnel to SFSU.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL Год назад

      Aren’t the main suburbs across the bridge? It would be nice if they ran the light rail down the other bridges like they did before.

  • @felixonrails
    @felixonrails Год назад +1

    What a wonderful documentary! I never realized these lines, and it's history when I visited San Francisco.
    If not for the social situation, San Fran is really one of my big heart places in the US.

  • @gavanwhatever8196
    @gavanwhatever8196 Год назад +5

    Hi from Melbourne, Australia. We also never lost our tram system which is the largest tram network in the world with around 250km (150mi) of track. Trams have priority on the road and cars behind or alongside the tram must stop when it does. I wouldn't swap our trams for anything.

    • @ktipuss
      @ktipuss Год назад

      Former Liberal Premier Sir Henry Bolte wanted to close Melbourne's tram system, but couldn't because the Victorian Government didn't own it. He did unfortunately manage to rip up the Bendigo and Ballarat systems in 1970 because the Vic government did own them (via the State Electricity Commission).

    • @gavanwhatever8196
      @gavanwhatever8196 Год назад

      @@ktipuss Didn't know that. The Libs seem to have always been anti-PT.

  • @phoule76
    @phoule76 Год назад +3

    this is probably why hilly Lisbon's trolleys survived, too, although being piss poor also helped to avoid an "upgrade".

  • @enepesf5126
    @enepesf5126 Год назад +8

    great video! love learning about SF history :)

  • @sergpie
    @sergpie Год назад +6

    You do a great service in the tribute and attention you pay to the details that have woven the urban fabric of your city. Really enjoyed the content.

  • @teeconsigliano7631
    @teeconsigliano7631 Год назад +63

    Thanks for the informative history. Even though streetcars can get stuck in traffic, I think they're more energy efficient, don't pollute as much, require less maintenance, and last longer compared to buses.

    • @DemPilafian
      @DemPilafian Год назад +14

      And streetcars are just more pleasant to ride. I want to love buses because they cost relatively little to deploy and are flexible, but I simply don't like riding them. Market Street has both busses and streetcars, and I'll literally watch the busses go by and wait so I can take a streetcar.

    • @scotttild
      @scotttild Год назад +1

      Track maintenance is almost as much as busses, and they require a lot of electrically to run. They are changing one carbon for another carbon, electrically does not come out of thin air. I happen to like the streetcars but they are just another mode of transportation not more or less anything then busses.

    • @DemPilafian
      @DemPilafian Год назад +1

      @@scotttild The whole *_"changing one carbon for another carbon"_* argument is deliberately misleading and has got to *STOP* now. It totally ignores the massive improvements currently being made to the power grid. On April 30, 2022 California for the first time ran on 100% clean energy with solar making up the largest slice.

    • @teeconsigliano7631
      @teeconsigliano7631 Год назад +5

      @scotttild I think the streetcars themselves are less maintenance than busses and last longer, and I've read differently on the energy consumption on using electric versus diesel (or at least electric is not putting out as much smoke close to you). I'm comparing to diesel busses of course, not electric or alternative fuel.

    • @AlCatSplat
      @AlCatSplat Год назад +5

      @@scotttild Where I live, power is generated through hydroelectricity.

  • @melanierhianna
    @melanierhianna Год назад +6

    I'm a Brit and I live in the UK, but for a while I was working off and on in the Bay and I love the SF streetcar system. I would ride it regularly. And Delores Park was a regular hangout so I know that hydrant, Church Hill, and the diversion well. My home city of Leeds removed its streetcars in the 50s. There was a plan to reintroduce them as a rapid transit system but was shelved due to budget issues. It means Leeds is now the largest city in Europe without a rapid transit system. I wish we had the systems that SF has.

    • @Stilicho19801
      @Stilicho19801 Год назад +1

      The Leeds budget problem is shared by SF. There is no local money for new Municipal Railway or BART projects. This leaves federal money as the only way to finance major transit improvements. Yet federal money today is spent on brand new light-rail systems in various auto-oriented cities around the country. These new lines are underutilized and may one day be abandoned or become tourist attractions.

    • @TohaBgood2
      @TohaBgood2 Год назад +1

      @@Stilicho19801 That's not entirely true. Those systems are usually built in areas that are already pretty dense and that were built around some old electric streetcar system to begin with. In most cases, those cities also commit to dense development around those new light rail lines. For example, Portland built a pretty incredible system from scratch! San Diego did a pretty good job of it too.
      Unfortunately, SF and San Jose refused to add more density round their light rail lines. This is the kiss of death for many systems of this kind. You need a ton of usually young people who want to take transit to make these kinds of systems viable in modern day America.
      That's why SF is often being deprioritized. If we refuse to add 4-5 story buildings around our lines then they aren't viewed as particularly viable. San Jose is getting the short end of the stick here with their system. SF at least had some existing density to work with. SJ had none and failed to add any to make the light rail system viable.

  • @ababababaababbba
    @ababababaababbba Год назад +2

    excited for more videos!

  • @TheFreddyKim
    @TheFreddyKim Год назад +6

    Amazing video! Really happy to see a transit-focused video of San Francisco. Can't wait for more!

  • @gabrielherrera5749
    @gabrielherrera5749 Год назад +9

    I never comment on videos but:
    Absolutely amazing. 10/10. Fantastic content. History, rail, and transit - I feel like this video was made for me. Subscribed. Looking forward to future videos!

  • @tedmiles2110
    @tedmiles2110 Год назад +1

    This is a good history of the Muni streetcar lines; I have ridden every one of them end to end. TM, SF Resident

  • @helloworlddon
    @helloworlddon Год назад +4

    Truly fascinating. You answered so many questions I've had about the muni for decades. Loved it so much i watched it twice and sent it to like 10 other people. Great job!

  • @BrandonCallender
    @BrandonCallender Год назад +5

    Good transit content AND fun facts about the city I didn't know? Definitely worth a sub

  • @metroredline
    @metroredline Год назад +1

    Wow, this is great. I've been to SF and ridden Muni Metro many times, but hardly ever outside of the Downtown area. This makes me realize I haven't really ridden on Muni Metro...

  • @notenoughpaper
    @notenoughpaper Год назад +6

    Idk, you can have both streetcars and subway. And you can have a subway line and a streetcar line on the same street, you see that quite frequently with the trams and U-Bahn in Berlin for example. Trams usually have one or two more stops between the U-Bahn stations and so kind of function like Local/Express

    • @anthonysnyder1152
      @anthonysnyder1152 Год назад +2

      We have that on Market St. Double decker subway underneath and The F heritage street car route above it in some dedicated lanes and is quite popular with tourists and commuters. Part of Market St closed off to cars a couple years ago to improve reliability of transit.

  • @davidko9289
    @davidko9289 Год назад +1

    Top notch quality! I've lived in SF my whole life and learned quite a bit.

  • @timeforbeans
    @timeforbeans Год назад +3

    Cool video, I love SF transportation. I found this very informative. Thank you.

  • @pegstevenson2164
    @pegstevenson2164 Год назад +9

    Wonderful! I thought I knew a lot about MUNI, but this is a great perspective and history. Subscribing!

  • @PokeDenny
    @PokeDenny Год назад +7

    Amazing stuff, keep it up! Love learning local history

  • @jakefranklin8630
    @jakefranklin8630 Год назад +3

    This is a great video, I knew nothing about the San Francisco street cars before watching. I was fascinated.

  • @gregoryking7266
    @gregoryking7266 Год назад +6

    Say it louder for the people in the back, a subway under Geary Boulevard is the number one piece of infrastructure that SF needs

  • @Eazy-E-40
    @Eazy-E-40 Год назад +2

    This was an incredibly fun watch! please make more videos in the future.

  • @ryanatkinson2978
    @ryanatkinson2978 2 месяца назад +1

    This is so cool! I lived in oceanview/ingleside for a year, right on the M line on Randolph, and would commute to the Castro daily on muni. This answers so many questions, and I had always wondered what the open section was leading into Castro station. I had no idea it was a ghost station! Hearing the muni sounds gave me major nostalgia

  • @corradoguglielmo1386
    @corradoguglielmo1386 Год назад +5

    Really well done for a new video! Also great to see a city that isn't always talked about like London or NYC or something

  • @edwardmiessner6502
    @edwardmiessner6502 Год назад +29

    4:52 The old unburnt side reminds me of Boston while the new rebuilt side has New York City vibes. Definitely the unburnt side is more charming and therefore more cherished.
    8:58 I think not building the BART Geary Street Tunnel was a mistake. It could have been the beginning of a second transbay tube!
    EDIT: I think San Francisco's hills are also why the city's trolleybusses/trackless trolleys survived. Boston recently got rid of theirs this past March! It was big mistake IMO.

    • @peteralbert1485
      @peteralbert1485 Год назад +8

      Geary as a BART subway (rather than Muni), in conjunction with the second Transbay Tube, is very much on the proverbial table right now with the Link21 project.

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 Год назад +1

      @@peteralbert1485 That's good to hear! 👍

    • @RaymondHng
      @RaymondHng Год назад +4

      Many of the electric trolleybus lines in San Francisco where once streetcar lines.

    • @corbettmalenfant2539
      @corbettmalenfant2539 9 месяцев назад +1

      originally the plan was to have Bart service through the Richmond and possibly a crossing to Marin by modifying the Golden Gate Bridge with a lower deck

  • @edfungus
    @edfungus Год назад +1

    Wow, you only have one video? The production and content are top notch! Looking forward to more videos :)

  • @gusb7664
    @gusb7664 Год назад +2

    Great Video! reminds me of Jay Foreman's Unfinished London series, in a good way!

  • @shubdotclub
    @shubdotclub Год назад +2

    Lovely video! Looking forward to more 😃. My favorite thing was learning what that tunnel next to the Castro was for.
    Also Geary subway when!!!!

  • @dwc1964
    @dwc1964 Год назад +1

    I saw the J-Church cut-out in the thumbnail, had to click. That's my ride downtown!

  • @ninyaninjabrifsanovichthes45
    @ninyaninjabrifsanovichthes45 Год назад +3

    The E branch of the Boston Green Line going from Heath Street to Symphony still runs as a streetcar, even though the rest is light rail/subway nowadays.

  • @toyotaprius79
    @toyotaprius79 Год назад +2

    Awesome, someone who takes history without eyes or head clouded

  • @bryanCJC2105
    @bryanCJC2105 Год назад +10

    Excellent video! I did know that the streetcar line letters came from the old Muni streetcars but I didn't know that the bus line numbers came from the Market St RR. That's pretty cool. I do love how you weaved SF history into the story. The City is a treasure trove of interesting history. It's too bad that the Central Subway took precedence over a Geary subway because, unless that Central Subway goes on to The Marina, it won't relieve the 30 Stockton bus and will have little use as just a Chinatown line. Between the time it takes to get from the Powell MUNI Station to the Union Sq Station and then the wait for a T streetcar, you can probably walk to Chinatown in about the same amount of time. It's only a 10 min walk. Now, a Geary subway probably won't happen for at least a generation or two.
    And yes, those MUNI platforms under Market St are very long for what MUNI uses them for. Back in the day (the 90s) when MUNI used to couple cars from several lines together in the tunnel, like a K, L and M train together, to be split up at West Portal, or a J and N train to be split up at Duboce, it seemed to make sense.
    As a frequent rider of the 38 Geary and 1 California buses, too bad they didn't construct a tunnel under Nob Hill and Lafayette Park along Sacramento St. for streetcars. Maybe that would have necessitated keeping a streetcar line into The Richmond. What could have been!!! Anyways, really good video both the commentary and the video scenes. You are very thorough and made sure to visualize everything you were talking about. I need to look for the gravestones in Buena Vista Park. I did not know about that!!

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 9 месяцев назад

      And even with the Central Subway the 8,30 and 45 on Stockton are STILL overcrowded.

    • @bryanCJC2105
      @bryanCJC2105 9 месяцев назад

      @@janettemcclelland2959 Exactly, that's because it isn't worth getting on the Central Subway just to have to get off in 5 min to get on the bus anyways. Might as well just get on the bus from the beginning and stay on it.

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 9 месяцев назад

      @@bryanCJC2105 True. Especially if I'm going to get off the 8,30 or 45 at Market & Stockton.

  • @charlesnichols7682
    @charlesnichols7682 Год назад +1

    As a kid back in the mid 50s I loved the ride on the " J " car. :-)

  • @CityKid415
    @CityKid415 Год назад +1

    Born and raised in San Francisco. Very interesting video. Look forward to seeing more videos

  • @lorrainealbert7336
    @lorrainealbert7336 Год назад +2

    Love this! I learned so much!

  • @jlbraswell5961
    @jlbraswell5961 Год назад +1

    Excellent video. I really enjoyed it. Great job! I hope you upload more videos to this channel. Yes, I agree there should be a subway built underneath Geary Boulevard for BART or MUNI.

  • @sashamoore9691
    @sashamoore9691 Год назад +1

    I love San Francisco. Something so special about it

  • @carton525
    @carton525 Год назад +7

    Great video. I like riding to the inner sunset on the N, and enjoy being above ground so I can see the city. I don’t go to the outer by train, walk or bike only.

  • @theohtml
    @theohtml Год назад +2

    I cant believe this is your only video on your channel. Definitely subscribing!

  • @daddyspooge1
    @daddyspooge1 Год назад +1

    this in a nice piece of SF history, I'm looking forward to what other history videos you create.

  • @moofun1000
    @moofun1000 Год назад +2

    great footage and explanations - thank you!

  • @aliancemd
    @aliancemd Год назад +1

    I actually like the hybrid, reduces costs significantly. In France they built metro lines under areas where it’s not possible to expand the road and have it go to a separated fast lane on the surface, where there is enough space. They don’t use any cables on the surface - inside the metro it’s attached to the lines and outside it has special charging pads, at the station, on the ground, to which it is attaching while stationed for fast charging. During tourist season or school months, they just add a few more tramway wagons at the end to deal with the influx of people - great for costs and for traffic.

  • @lpetrich
    @lpetrich Год назад +4

    Tunnels and private rights-of-way also saved some other old trolley systems, like those of Boston and Philadelphia. Street running was the real trolley killer. It must be significant that most of the light-rail construction of the last half-century, in the US and Canada at least, tries to avoid street running as much as possible.

  • @Brendan945
    @Brendan945 Год назад +1

    What a great video right out of the gate. Looking forward to more!

  • @thenewlevi
    @thenewlevi Год назад +1

    Love this video!! Can’t wait for some more San Francisco vids from you

  • @rpvitiello
    @rpvitiello Год назад +3

    In Jersey City we built a modern street car/light rail that’s very similar to the San Francisco system. They mostly run in a dedicated track space in the middle of streets downtown, and then a separate right of way as you get farther out where it runs at much higher speed. It also turns into a subway to deal with steep hills and connect farther out neighborhoods.

  • @THE_BATLORD
    @THE_BATLORD Год назад +7

    Its telling that bart's inital design document included a geary street subway that went down 19th st. Hopefully the city and BART can reexamine and make it a reality.

  • @christophereadgbe2976
    @christophereadgbe2976 Год назад +1

    Thanks, I’m not far away but there is so little that I know. I hope you have more to tell, really looking forward to your next story.

  • @polkadotsideplates
    @polkadotsideplates Год назад +2

    I knew all of this stuff already because I too am fascinated by SF's streetcars, but the video is great nonetheless!

  • @yorkmanlowe8009
    @yorkmanlowe8009 Год назад +2

    On the N line, the abandoned station was named Eureka St, not Eureka Valley. I photographed its sidewalk entrance portals in 1970 but lost the photos. Fascinating video and history!

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe Год назад +1

      Wait, isn't the Eureka station right near Castro and the Twin Peaks tunnel (JKM), and not the N line?

    • @yorkmanlowe8009
      @yorkmanlowe8009 Год назад +1

      My error, the Eureka St station was in the Twin Peaks tunnel (K,L,M lines).

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 9 месяцев назад

      Eureka station was just west of Castro on the K/L/M.

  • @robotx9285
    @robotx9285 Год назад +1

    San Francisco got some nice looking Streetcars

  • @stevenedwards3754
    @stevenedwards3754 Год назад +3

    Well done! And thank you for your comments about the need for a subway or some sort of grade separated rail on Geary. There's your subject for another excellent video.

  • @indigoinarritu6096
    @indigoinarritu6096 Год назад +2

    Very informative. Thanks for your hard work on this video.

  • @phlatlander
    @phlatlander Год назад +1

    Wow awesome video! Really interesting history!

  • @DanielinLaTuna
    @DanielinLaTuna Год назад +1

    Please make more videos like this! Thanks for sharing

  • @wafford11
    @wafford11 Год назад +1

    Loved the detail explanation, thanks for this!

  • @lohphat
    @lohphat Год назад +2

    Muni used to be a 3 car train with the old Boeing cars. The overweight Breda cars introduced in the 1990s forces two car operation. Now the new Siemens cars are light enough to restore 3 car ops if demand calls for it.
    The stairways at Forest Hills was used to mimic a NYC subway station for the movie "Milk" in the scene where Harvey met his partner.
    I lived in West Portal (actually between WP and FH) and lived through two Twin Peak Tunnel shutdowns which lasted each about a year each. That lack of planning forcing people back into their cars or slow buses was one of the reasons I left SF after 16 years for NYC.

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 9 месяцев назад

      Weren't those shutdowns when they were building the subway connection to the Twin Peaks tunnel? IIRC they had to create an elevated entrance and exit for the KLM before Castro so they could still operate.

    • @lohphat
      @lohphat 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@janettemcclelland2959 No there were recent shutdowns. The Twin Peaks tunnel work to go underground happened in the early 1970s with the construction of the BART tunnel under Market. The FH and WP stations have been able to handle KLM trains for decades.

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 9 месяцев назад

      @@lohphat As in Fix-It Week? And it never gets fixed! They're always trying to fix the overhead between Castro and West Portal. It's always had dead spots where the power goes on and off for as long as I can remember(since the early 60's). And other things. And let's not forget when the entire train system was shut down during the pandemic.

    • @lohphat
      @lohphat 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@janettemcclelland2959 The first year shutdown was to replace the tracks. Then 2-3 after it reopened they closed it AGAIN to replace the overhead catenary.
      They couldn't have done both at the same time? 🙄

    • @janettemcclelland2959
      @janettemcclelland2959 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@lohphat I know right? Muni being Muni.