- Hail and ride
Hail and Ride, sometimes shortened to Hail & Ride, is a concept in
public transport in theUnited Kingdom . Generally, it refers to boarding or alighting a mode of public transport by signalling the driver or conductor that you wish to board/alight, rather than the more conventional system of using a designated stop. The concept is used primarily inbus transport. The act of requesting ahackney cab to stop is also termed 'hailing'.Under the specific usage of the term in bus transport, hail and ride refers to the presence of sections of a route which may or may not have regular
bus stop s, but you can request to board or alight the bus anywhere that it is safe to do so. This is different from thetransit bus practice employed in some areas, whereby although a stop may exist, it may be arequest stop where the bus is not required to stop unless the passenger indicates they wish to catch the bus, or presses an internal 'stop' bell, inside the bus to alight.Hail and Ride is usually employed in rural areas, or in non-main roads such as housing estates. This usually involves routes using smaller
minibus ormidibus based vehicles which can navigate these roads easily, although some commuter coach routes may also operate on a hail and ride basis at the residential end of their route.As well as allowing the use of smaller roads less accessible to larger buses, a hail and ride scheme gives the advantage of not having to build bus stop infrastructure in order to introduce or vary a route. To take advantage of some
housing estate road layouts, hail and ride may be used at the estate end of a route where the bus traverses the estate in a circular route and returning the other way, rather than ending at a specific terminus stop.Sometimes a hail and ride section will be augmented with 'official stops', which are merely posts with a route flag and timetable box, to inform passengers of the existence of the service, rather than a purpose built shelter or lay-by.
The Hail and Ride concept has been extended and forms a part of
demand responsive transport schemes.
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