Portal:Shared Use Mobility/Selected article/3

From TransitWiki
Revision as of 17:16, 11 April 2018 by Jmatute (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Portal:Shared Use Mobility/Selected article/Layout |image=Passenger boarding.jpg |caption=The Emery Go-Round provides local transit connections to fill in the gap from t...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The Emery Go-Round provides local transit connections to fill in the gap from the nearest BART station.

The "Last mile" or "first and last-mile" connection describes the beginning or end of an individual trip made primarily by public transportation. In many cases, people will walk to transit if it is close enough. However, on either end of a public transit trip, the origin or destination may be difficult or impossible to access by a short walk. This gap from public transit to destination is termed a last mile connection.

Intercity rail is a common example: a traveler reaches their local train station, but after getting off the train has no way to access the final destination. The traveler might have driven to the train station at the start, or perhaps they took a local bus or walked. The train carries them a long distance to another city where the final destination is too far to walk to from the station. Without some form of connection in the destination city, travelers become effectively stranded near the end. This example can be applied to any mode of transit.