Houston Chronicle

How I tried— and failed— tomove around Houston by public transporta­tion

- By Marina Kormbaki

I was warned. “Houston is a car city,” the guidebook I purchased to help prepare me for my visit to Texas stated. “You’ll definitely have to drive there,” my U.S.-experience­d German friends stressed. For the Americans around me the question was not if I would drive but what: “Is it going to be a SUV?”

But as someone who has never owned a car, succeeds in getting to work every day even with Berlin’s not-too-trustworth­y public system and who enjoys exploring foreign cities by buses and trains, I decided to give it a try. I would move around Houston by public transport.

The city’s Metro website encouraged me: Shiny pictures show a whole fleet of buses — some of them even carrying bikes on front racks. I was about to discover Houston’s hidden eco-conscious side.

My very first ride took me from the George Bush Interconti­nental Airport to my place in Westchase. A bus, the Metro rail and another bus were involved. The timing was impressive: I did not have to wait much for each of them to arrive. But when I got off the last bus, almost two hours had passed since I had left the airport. And I still had to walk for another 20 minutes —

in a mostly sidewalk-free neighborho­od— until I finally reached my apartment. I learned my first lesson: It takes time to get around Houston. A lot of time.

Never mind, I told myself, every bus ride resembles a little journey around the world. I passed by the foodie plazas of Chinatown, continued south to black majority neighborho­ods, tasted some Mexican flavor while rumbling through East End and wondered what the opulent homes in River Oaks look like from the inside. What could be a more comfortabl­e way of finding out about the diversity Houston praises itself for than from a window seat on a bus?

Yet, this diversity was not reflected on the bus. My fellow passengers were brown and

black people. I hardly ever saw a white man or woman entering the bus.

Sometimes I was the only passenger. I wondered why in this populous city so many local buses were driving around without any or just a few customers — even those scheduled every 30 minutes.

I met Houston’s chief sustainabi­lity officer at an environmen­tal summit and asked her about it. Lara Cottingham’s answer sounded familiar: “Houston is a car city.”

An elderly woman sitting next to me at the meeting had another explanatio­n: “People are scared of using public transport. They fear for their safety.”

This astounded me. To me, the bus appeared to be a remarkably peaceful place. One day, I was offered spiritual blessings by another rider, the other day I was offered chips. Actually, the buses in Houston are a good mood on wheels. That’s mainly because of the bus drivers.

As I headed to work they greeted me with a cheerful “Good morning! How are you?” One refused to take the second dollar when I didn’t have the required exact change of $1.25 for a ticket. And they did not let me disembark without kindly telling me to “Have a good one.”

I have never experience­d such an abundance of friendline­ss in Berlin. In Germany’s capital, grouchines­s seems to be a recruitmen­t criterion for bus driv

ers. One they are proud of.

But to be honest, it was not only the bus drivers’ kindness that made me feel true joy every time I entered the bus. It was also because I was relieved to finally start or continue the ride after a long walk and wait in the sun. It took me one and a half hours to get from my place in Westchase to the Houston Chronicle’s offices. Google Maps suggests a 12-minute ride. By car.

I got assignment­s in parts of the city without any bus routes. So I traveled via Uber. Which is comfortabl­e but also pricey in the long run. That was when I admitted to myself that I might need a car. My attempt to get around in Houston by public transporta­tion was about to fail.

I asked the — likewise friendly — Uber drivers about the driving behavior of Houston’s residents. “Aggressive,” said a native Houstonian with a degree in psychology. “Impatient,” replied a student from New York. While sitting on the back seat, entering freeways and exiting interstate­s, I listened to their horror stories about the struggle to survive driving on the streets of Houston. But I also came to understand that Houston would only reveal its appeal and its attraction­s to me if I would finally take the seat behind the wheel.

A week after I arrived in Houston, I rented a car. No more long walks, no more sunburn while waiting for the bus to arrive, no more wasted time. I feel like a part of car city now. I do miss the bus drivers, though, and their cool and kind way of saying: “Have a good one.”

Kormbaki is an exchange journalist from Berlin, Germany, where she is a political and immigratio­n reporter for RND. She is in Houston as an Arthur F. Burns Fellow of the Internatio­nal Center for Journalist­s.

“To me, the bus appeared to be a remarkably peaceful place. One day, I was offered spiritual blessings by another rider, the other day I was offered chips.”

 ?? Thomas Imo / photothek.net ?? Marina Kormbaki, a visiting journalist from Germany, tried to manuever Houston by public transit for a week.
Thomas Imo / photothek.net Marina Kormbaki, a visiting journalist from Germany, tried to manuever Houston by public transit for a week.
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