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passengers boarding a MAXX Regional Transport Northern Express service operated by Ritchies Coachlines on the Northern Busway, Auckland, New Zealand
A low-floor bus is a bus that has no steps between one or more entrances and part or all of the passenger cabin. Being low floor improves the accessibility of the bus for the public, particularly the elderly or infirm, or those with push chairs, and increasingly, those in wheelchairs. In the modern context, "low floor bus" refers to a bus that is accessible from a certain minimum height of step from ground level, to distinguish it from some historical bus designs that did feature a level interior floor throughout but with a relatively high floor height.
ConfigurationMany low floor buses are only low floor over a part of the bus, with the rear section raised to accommodate equipment. Van Hool has a series of "side-engine rear-drive" buses that puts the engine off to one-side of the cabin longitudinally to maximize cabin usable space. Most bus manufacturer achieve a low floor height by making rear-engined rear-wheel-drive buses with independent front wheels so that no axle is needed to pass under the cabin. For smaller buses like midibuses, the low floor capability is achieved by placing the front wheels ahead of the entrance. One of the last types of buses to gain low floor accessibility as standard was the minibus, where a similar front wheel arrangement allows around 12 seats and a wheelchair space to be accommodated in very small low floor minibuses, such as the Optare Alero and Hino Poncho. Accessibility was previously achieved in paratransit type applications which use small vehicles with the fitment of special lifts. The inception of small low floor buses has allowed the development of several accessible demand responsive transport schemes using standard 'off the shelf' buses. Low floor buses usually include an area without seating (or seating that folds up) next to at least one of the doors where wheelchairs and perambulators can be parked. This is sometimes not the only purpose of this are though, as many operators employ larger standee areas for use on high occupancy of peak time usage. Despite the space existing, operators may also insist that only one or two wheelchairs or push chairs can be accommodated unfolded, due to space/safety concerns. Low floors can be complemented by a hydraulic or pneumatic 'kneeling device', which can be used when the bus is not in motion, tilting it or lowering at the front axle it even further towards the surface level of the road, often low enough to match the height of a normal curb. Though such technology has been available and in use on high-floor buses since the 1970s, it is only of significant utility on low floor vehicles where it enables less-mobile passengers to board and leave the vehicle without help from others. Many vehicles are also equipped with wheel-chair lifts or ramps which can provide when combined with a low floor a near flat entry ramp. AlternativesMany bus rapid transit systems employ a level boarding by using high-floor buses stopping at "station" style bus stops. Specially raised sections of kerb may also be used to achieve accessibility with lesser low flor models, although this is more expensive for the operator and only attractive for regular busy scheduled routes. For infrequent routes or routes with hail and ride sections, or demand responsive transport, raised kerbs would only be feasible in terminuses. Some transit agencies refuse to order low-floor buses altogether, such as New Jersey Transit and (until recently) MUNI owing to terrain conditions in the service area or MTA Long Island Bus or DART out of preferences of high-floor vehicles. Although New York City Transit runs some 40 foot low-floors, it refuses to order D60LF buses from New Flyer, opting for D60HF's (high floors), and is currently in a dispute with New Flyer regarding this.citation needed United KingdomIn the UK, because of the colloquialism of "buggy" for push chairs, low floor buses are often called buggy buses. The Dennis Dart SLF (Super Low Floor) marked the wholesale introduction of single deck low floor buses in the United Kingdom in 1995, after many small scale demonstrator usages. Low floor buses were rapidly introduced on high profile routes, notably becoming a requirement for London Buses contracts. The Optare Solo introduced in 1997 marked another step change with inroads into smaller usages traditionally served by minibuses. The final phase came with low floor double deckers the Dennis Trident 2 and Volvo B7TL entering the mass market, even though they were introduced after the Optare Spectra. Due to the deregulated nature of the public transport system in the UK, adoption of the higher cost low floor buses was usually in conjunction with some sort of grant or quality partnership with a local authority, as the profitability of many routes was not high enough to justify conversion based purely on increased revenue. It has been reported however that adoption of so called Easy Access buses does have a positive effect of ridership and revenue levels. Under the Transport Act 1985 the Disabled Persons Transport Advisory Committee (DPTAC) (or commonly DiPTAC) was established to provide independent consultation on accessibility issues [1]. In the same year the first low floor bus specification was drafted by DPTAC. The Disability Discrimination Act 1995 provided for the completion of the Public Service Vehicles Accessibility Regulations 2000[2], which specified that all new public service vehicles over 22 seats should be low floor from 31 December 2000, with smaller vehicles mandated from 1 January 2005. The 2000 regulations do not require retro-fitting of pre-existing vehicles or the enforced sale of non compliant existing vehicles, allowing operators to retain a high floor vehicle until the "the end of their economic life". In reality, as the prevalence of low floor buses spreads, combined with grants/incentives, it is likely that the prevalence of high floor vehicles in the national fleet will markedly reduce before many of the last high floor buses reach their feasible end of life, of a 2000 registered bus. In the past, in times of reduced economic investment, it was not uncommon for service buses to be used for 15 to 20 years. While some coaches have been produced with a small front low floor section at the driver's level, most coaches in the UK are being made accessible through the use of wheelchair lifts, with the 2005 Caetano Levante being one of the largest introductions [3]. While another widely stated benefit of low floor buses is quicker boarding for able-bodied passengers due to the lack of steps, studies have found the opposite effect in the UK. This is apparently due to the prevailing system of operation where passengers enter and exit through one single front door. It has been suggested that the previous 1980s/90s high floor step entrance buses which featured a center rail, encouraged a bi-directional flow of entering and exiting passengers simultaneously. The removal of the pole to allow wheelchair/buggy access created the situation where the quintessentially polite British bus passenger would wait for all passengers to alight before boarding, leading to an increase in dwell times. List of low-floor buses
Low floor bus in São Paulo.
References
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