The Niagara Falls Review

Can Tokyo’s rail system handle Olympics?

Railways to be packed with 800,000 added passengers daily

- ALEX BARREIRA

TOKYO — First, Tokyo Olympic fans will have to find scarce tickets and pay the price. Then there’s the quandary of landing a hotel room with rates that are being inflated due to unpreceden­ted demand. And the summer heat and humidity will be offputting for some.

Then there’s one more hurdle: getting around, or even finding a tiny space to stand on Tokyo’s famously efficient but overstress­ed rail system.

Japanese professor Azuma Taguchi at Chuo University has researched Tokyo’s system for years and says it’s already running at double its capacity and the Olympic crunch could push it to the breaking point.

“When peak capacity is twice or three times above normal, it’s possible some people could be killed,” Taguchi told The Associated Press.

His computer simulation predicts that the biggest wave of Olympic spectators will collide with work commuters at popular transfer stations during the morning rush hour, while small stations closest to venues will be overwhelme­d.

Add to the mix, newcomers carrying luggage aboard subway cars and struggling to manoeuver off the train and through crowded stations.

Tokyo transport officials characteri­ze train cars at 200 per cent capacity as giving passengers just enough space to read a magazine.

This probably represents a normal commuting weekday in Tokyo.

At 250 per cent, they “cannot even move a hand.”

Taguchi’s study predicts 15 stations will experience greater than 200 per cent capacity, with several reaching nearly 400 per cent at their peak.

Since Tokyo last hosted the Summer Olympics in 1964, railways have designated special oshiya, or “pushers,” to pack commuters into rush hour cars — often wearing white gloves. Locals are accustomed to the treatment, but visitors may not be.

Tokyo’s Olympic organizing committee question Taguchi’s dire prediction­s.

They acknowledg­e the railways will be packed with 800,000 added passengers daily. They also anticipate that Tokyo expressway congestion will double.

Hoping to head off the crowding, the committee wants to launch a smartphone app, boost multilingu­al signage, and use boats and robot-assisted technology to help fans and commuters get around.

As with all Olympics, authoritie­s are testing special highway lanes and altering the city’s transit flow.

Concerns about transporta­tion are nothing new at the Olympics, and crowds are often overestima­ted and subsequent­ly managed, as was the case in London in 2012. Potential tourists sometimes stay away, knowing it’s a bad time to visit with prices soaring.

That happened in 2008 in Beijing and again three years ago in Rio de Janeiro.

“Living in Tokyo we experience this 100 per cent, 150 per cent, 180 per cent crowding every day. We know how to navigate the stations at these times,” said Katsuhisa Saito, the head of transport strategy for Tokyo’s organizers.

“The main concern is when foreigners attend these events and use the stations. They might not know how to deal with this.”

Organizers hope to bring the level of congestion in subway cars down to between 150-180 per cent, a fairly pleasant day for Tokyo commuters. Also, perhaps, a lofty goal.

Taguchi and organizers agree on one thing: keeping Japanese workers at home during the Olympics could go a long way toward solving the problems.

Organizers are asking companies in Tokyo to encourage their employees to work from home during the Olympics, which open on July 24, 2020, and close on Aug. 9. They say more than 2,000 companies have agreed to participat­e.

Tokyo University professor Katsuhiro Nishinari is working with the organizing committee, an expert in what he calls “jamology” — the study of crowd behaviour.

“We’re used to having one game per day at the stadium, but at the Olympics we have a tight schedule and we have three to four games in one day,” he said.

“We have to exchange the audience two or three times. That’s where we don’t have experience.”

Another major challenge will be convincing a famously industriou­s workforce to avoid the commute — or the office altogether — for two weeks next summer.

 ?? JAE C. HONG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A study predicts 15 stations will experience greater than 200 per cent capacity, with several reaching nearly 400 per cent at their peak, during the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.
JAE C. HONG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A study predicts 15 stations will experience greater than 200 per cent capacity, with several reaching nearly 400 per cent at their peak, during the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.
 ?? JAE C. HONG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tokyo has one of the most advanced public transport systems in the world. Many wonder how it will fare under an Olympic strain.
JAE C. HONG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tokyo has one of the most advanced public transport systems in the world. Many wonder how it will fare under an Olympic strain.

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