
 Originally Posted by 
Lotz-A-Landies
					
				 
				Actually Melbourne's city loop was only built in the 1970s.
Building a grid pattern road system with radial public transport arteries is relatively easy when the region is relatively flat and there is a will to pay for it.  It is not so easy when the city is located on four flooded river valleys, like Sydney.
BTW: On Ron's trailer bus, wasnt that "Trailer Tours" since merged into Bosnjacks which is now Veolia (sounds like a company that should have mafia connections 

 )
 
			
		 
	 
 Yes, the big advantage Melbourne has over either Sydney or Brisbane is that is on flat ground and was laid out on a rectangular grid, slightly modified by the bay and the Yarra. Sydney not only had to fit round the harbour, Botany Bay and Port Hacking, and the rivers feeding into them, but much of the metropolitan area is very hilly, due to the effects of these incised valleys and their tributaries in the cliff-forming Hawkesbury Sandstone. Further, town planning was not introduced into Sydney until around the time Melbourne was founded, after sixty years of development, including most of the major roads in what is now the metropolitan area.
Adelaide and Perth have had similar advantages to Melbourne - relatively flat, and planned from the outset.
Trailer tours was an offshoot of the Ryde Bus company to use their trailer bus after it stopped being used for scheduled services. I suspect the reason it stopped being used was that a conductor was essential, making its larger capacity uneconomic compared to smaller driver only buses. I might comment on this subject, that I think I was probably in my late teens before I had ever travelled on a bus with a conductor, despite travelling to school by bus from the age of five. (And these were regular buses - no school buses in that time and place)
John
				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
				
			
			
				John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
			
			
		 
	
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