The Star Late Edition

No traffic blues on Gautrain, but M1 slightly faster

- ANNA COX AND BOTHO MOLOSANKWE

OW THAT the Gautrain officially links Joburg and Pretoria thanks to today’s opening of the Park Station link, is it quicker to travel the route by car or train?

This morning The Star pitted the two modes of transport against each other, travelling from The Star’s offices in the Joburg CBD to the Pretoria News offices in Vermeulen Street in peak-hour traffic.

Surprising­ly, the car turned out to be slightly quicker than the bullet train.

It was however by default because journalist Botho

NMolosankw­e, who travelled by train, got lost along the way and experience­d some minor delays purchasing tickets and finding her way around the stations and bus routes. Molosankwe and colleague Anna Cox both left The Star building in Sauer Street at 7.30am. Molosankwe boarded a bus in Sauer Street at 7.37am and arrived at Park Station at 7.44am.

She bought her ticket for R49 at 7.46am and boarded at 7.48am. The train left one minute later.

By 8.08am Cox was in Midrand on the highway, while Molosankwe’s train was leaving the Midrand station.

A few minutes later the Gautrain arrived in Centurion at 8.16am, four minutes ahead of Cox.

Cox pulled up at her final destinatio­n – the Pretoria News – at 8.31am. Meanwhile Molosankwe arrived at the Pretoria station at 8.22am.

At 8.25am Molosankwe had to load money onto her Gautrain card for her bus trip – adding a few extra minutes to her time. She then had to find out informatio­n regarding which bus to catch from where, and eventually boarded the correct bus which departed at 8.31am.

She unfortunat­ely got off at the wrong stop – adding even more time to her journey with an unnecessar­y 15-minute walk – arriving at 8.51am, 20 minutes behind Cox.

However, had Molosankwe been more familiar with the route and avoided the delays she experience­d getting lost, such as asking for directions and informatio­n on tickets, and loading extra money, it is possible that she would have done the trip in the same time or possibly quicker than Cox did in a car.

The trip along the M1 highway, although at peak hour, was free-flowing this morning with only minor hiccups at the Grayston Drive and Jean Road off-ramps where traffic slowed to stop and start.

Molosankwe, however, found the Gautrain procedures extremely easy, even for a firsttimer. She encountere­d wellinform­ed security guards all over to assist. The train ride was smooth but a little noisy.

“If I could, I would use the Gautrain all the time because it’s fast, there’s no stopping at traffic lights, no hooting and no road rage and no having to look out for other road users and pedestrian­s stepping in front of you. I felt safe everywhere – in the station and on the train,” she said.

“There were very serious people on the train who all looked like profession­als,” she said.

The public announceme­nts on the train ensure that commuters get off at the right station and at the right time.

At Park Station there were few commuters as it was the first day of operations, but as the train moved through Rosebank and Sandton, it quickly filled up.

Molosankwe observed that the newly opened Park Station was “like a different world”.

“Everything was so clean and neat and elegant.

“No noise and fumes from taxis and buses.

“I felt like I was in Europe, everything was so different,” she said.

 ?? PICTURES: ANTOINE
RAS ?? TRAVELLING LIGHT: The Star reporter Botho Molosankwe arrives at the Pretoria News offices after a Gautrain trip from Park Station. DE
PICTURES: ANTOINE RAS TRAVELLING LIGHT: The Star reporter Botho Molosankwe arrives at the Pretoria News offices after a Gautrain trip from Park Station. DE
 ??  ?? GOING NORTH: A trip by car from the Joburg CBD to Pretoria took our journalist Anna Cox slightly less time than a Gautrain journey taken by another Star staff member.
GOING NORTH: A trip by car from the Joburg CBD to Pretoria took our journalist Anna Cox slightly less time than a Gautrain journey taken by another Star staff member.

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