iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Hisham Wyne

Hisham Wyne

Posted: October 18, 2010 07:15 PM

The importance of public transport for urban development cannot be overstated.

There are obvious benefits; commuters do not waste productive hours stuck in traffic, ecological footprints shrink from their vapid enormity, and snarls of honking cars subside to slowly moving streams. It's instructive to take Dubai as a case study, for The Metro has recently been introduced, and still has not wormed its way to omnipresence within public consciousness Neither has popular culture solidified around it.

However, the opening day of GITEX at the Dubai International Convention and Exhibition Centre saw common agreement among visitors that the metro was by far the best way of access, with a station yards away from the exhibition halls. This alternative reduced the usual interminable taxi queues, and traffic on the periphery was far more manageable than previous iterations. Other benefits of the Dubai Metro are not as algebraic, but still noticeable, because mass transit ingrains itself into a city's collective cultural psyche. For instance, the London Underground is quintessentially woven into the city's narrative. Jokes and disdain abound for non-performing lines, and Tube delays play a regular role in the daily hustle. The New York Subway has been immortalized countless times in stories and films. It has been the imaginary venue for countless shootings, love affairs, chance encounters, and plot twists. If France had a public transport system a few hundred years ago, one could almost imagine the confrontation between Les Miserables' noble fugitive Jean Valjean and authoritarian policeman Javert happen in the second class cabin of a tram.

Public transport offers a collision of ideas and narratives by bringing strangers, acquaintances and sometimes closes friends into unexpected proximity. It generates ideas and stories - of which only some are picked up by the febrile minds of scriptwriters and storytellers. But do not for one minute assume that public transport is always a hub of communication and felicity. Londoners almost pride themselves on their surly aloofness on the Tube. Passengers on the Dubai Metro are, by comparison, genuinely gregarious.

Neither are public transport journeys celebrations of excitement. Most are safe, mundane and rather on time. Nothing very much out of the ordinary most of the time, save for a few merciful advertisements deviating from the norm of crusty non-creativity.

Nevertheless, public transport offers inclusive, egalitarian shared space invaluable to observers and storytellers. Despite some class and gender distinctions on the Dubai Metro, for the most part anyone with Dh4 (USD 1 approx.) on a plastic card can access it. This differentiates it from Dubai's other, more tightly controlled, communal areas. The Dubai Metro is also a means to an end: it offers transit from point A to B, which imparts a sense of urgency and purpose different to that from a leisurely stroll on a public beach. Shadowing the main traffic arteries of the city, it is a dynamic and mobile interpretation of communal space where boarding passengers reflect areas' cultural mix and demographics.

The next time you can, take the Metro, or whatever mode of mass transit available in your city. If not for the sake of reducing traffic, or, in the case of Dubai, slowly moving away from an automobile centric culture, then simply for the epiphany of realising it gets you to your destination while giving you a stuttering film-reel look at urban centres' idiosyncratic diversity. In particular, for a city as insular and preoccupied with itself as Dubai, the Metro is not just a logistical salve for traffic logjams; it is a crucible of criss-crossing stories and a cauldron of accidental, incidental, interaction. It humanises us, and through us, almost humanises itself.

A version of this article appeared in the Khaleej Times here.

 

Follow Hisham Wyne on Twitter: www.twitter.com/hishamwyne

 
 
  • Comments
  • 5
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
02:21 PM on 10/22/2010
What is going on in my mind at that minute is HOW MUCH I HATE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION, I cant wait to get a job outside the city where I can go back to the peace and quiet and privacy of my auto and not have to spend time in filthy disgusting smelly public vehicles with people I don't know right up in my face listening to their screaming brats and their rude cellphone conversations, and I wont have to have my schedule depend on when and if a train or bus shows up or spend the ridiculous amount of money for lousy service, unsafe vehicles, and generally rude and stupid employees, or people who pull guns on passengers because their phone conversation is annoying - happened here this week
02:55 AM on 10/25/2010
intelliwoman. What about the people outside your car? For everyone else your several ton personal privacy bubble might seem like a smelly, polluting, public vehicle. People who don't know you have their movements and their privacy impacted by your driving.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Hisham Wyne
Columnist, sometimes radio guy and copywriter
05:45 PM on 12/02/2010
Ouch! Bit of a rant. I would nominally agree with some bits, but my aim was never to posit that public transport is ever the epitome of comfort or convenience. That it is interesting, and in many ways conscientious, is difficult to argue with.
05:39 PM on 10/20/2010
Well written. When I get on a subway car, I look around at the others I am sharing that space with. What is going on in thier mind at that moment? That moment will never be the same again after the next stop.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Hisham Wyne
Columnist, sometimes radio guy and copywriter
05:43 PM on 12/02/2010
I really do agree. The moment is not the same after. This is particularly relevant for a place like Dubai, where shared spaces are not as common as one would like