Runcorn Busway


The Runcorn Busway is a bus rapid transit system in Runcorn, England. Opened in 1971, it was the first BRT system in the world.

History

First conceived in the Runcorn New Town Masterplan in 1966, it opened for services in October 1971 and all were operational by 1980. It was the first BRT system in the world. Arthur Ling, Runcorn Development Corporation's master planner, said that he had invented the concept while sketching on the back of an envelope. The masterplan considered a variety of transport systems, including a monorail, but a busway was judged to be more economical. The town was designed around the transport system, with most residents no more than five minutes' walking distance, or, from the busway.
The busway was designed to cross the town in a figure of 8. It was created exclusively for buses, excluding both pedestrians and private vehicles, and where the route crossed general roads and didn't go over a bridge or underneath, buses were given priority at the traffic lights. The central station is at Runcorn Shopping City where buses arrive on dedicated raised busways to two enclosed stations.
Initially, the bus operator on the busway was Crosville. The National Bus Company commissioned an electrical conversion of a Leyland National in the 1970s by removing the diesel engine and adding a 7 tonne battery trailer. The length of the vehicle meant that it needed special permission to operate on the highway, and this was only granted on the Runcorn Busway where it operated sporadically, with its range of 60 to 80 miles on an 8 hour charge too short for use all day.

Technical details

The Busway has a design speed of and a maximum gradient of 4 per cent. Bus stops are at intervals of approximately.