Commuter rail, or suburban rail, is a passenger rail transport service that primarily operates within a metropolitan area, connecting commuters to a central city from adjacent suburbs or commuter towns. Commuter rail systems are considered heavy rail, using electrified or diesel trains. Distance charges or zone pricing may be used.

The term can refer to systems with a wide variety of different features and service frequencies, but is often used in contrast to rapid transit or light rail.

Some services share similarities with both commuter rail and high-frequency rapid transit, examples being the German S-Bahn in some cities, the Réseau Express Régional (RER) in Paris, the S Lines in Milan, many Japanese commuter systems, the East Rail line in Hong Kong and some Australasian suburban networks, such as Sydney Trains. Some services, like British commuter rail, share tracks with other passenger services and freight.

In North America, commuter rail sometimes refers only to systems that primarily operate during peak periods and offer little to no service for the rest of the day, with regional rail being used to refer to systems that offer all-day service

Most commuter (or suburban) trains are built to main line rail standards, differing from light rail or rapid transit (metro rail) systems by:

  • being larger
  • providing more seating and less standing room, owing to the longer distances involved
  • having (in most cases) a lower frequency of service
  • having scheduled services (i.e. trains run at specific times rather than at specific intervals)
  • serving lower-density suburban areas, typically connecting suburbs to the city center
  • sharing track or right-of-way with intercity and/or freight trains
  • not fully grade separated (containing at-grade crossings with crossing gates)
  • being able to skip certain stations as an express service due to normally being driver controlled

Compared to rapid transit (or metro rail), commuter/suburban rail often has lower frequency, following a schedule rather than fixed intervals, and fewer stations spaced further apart. They primarily serve lower density suburban areas (non inner-city), generally only having one or two stops in a city's central business district, and often share right-of-way with intercity or freight trains.

Track

Their ability to coexist with freight or intercity services in the same right-of-way can drastically reduce system construction costs. However, frequently they are built with dedicated tracks within that right-of-way to prevent delays, especially where service densities have converged in the inner parts of the network.

Most such trains run on the local standard gauge track. Some systems may run on a narrower or broader gauge. Examples of narrow gauge systems are found in Japan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Taiwan, Switzerland.

Some of the Commuter rail systems around the world

In Japan, commuter rail systems have extensive network and frequent service and are heavily used. In many cases, Japanese commuter rail is operationally more like a typical metro system (frequent trains, an emphasis on standing passengers, short station spacings) than it is like commuter rail in other countries. Japanese commuter rail commonly interline with city center subway lines, with commuter rail trains continuing into the subway network, and then out onto different commuter rail systems on the other side of the city.

Commuter rail systems have been inaugurated in several cities in China such as Beijing, Shanghai, Zhengzhou, Wuhan, Changsha and the Pearl River Delta. With plans for large systems in northeastern Zhejiang, Jingjinji, and Yangtze River Delta areas. The level of service varies considerably from line to line ranging high to near high speeds. More developed and established lines such as the Guangshen Railway have more frequent metro-like service.

The two MTR lines which are owned and formerly operated by the Kowloon-Canton Railway Corporation, and MTR's own Tung Chung line connect the new towns in New Territories and the city centre Kowloon together with frequent intervals, and some New Territories-bound trains terminate at intermediate stations, providing more frequent services in Kowloon and the towns closer to Kowloon. Most of the sections of these four lines are overground and some sections of the East Rail Line share tracks with intercity trains to mainland China.

In South Korea, the Seoul Metropolitan Subway includes a total of 22 lines, and some of its lines are suburban lines. This is especially the case for lines operated by Korail, such as the Gyeongui-Jungang Line, the Gyeongchun Line, the Suin-Bundang Line, or the Gyeonggang Line.

In Indonesia, the KRL Commuterline is the largest commuter rail system in the country, serving the Greater Jakarta. It connects the Jakarta city center with surrounding cities and sub-urbans in Banten and West Java. In July 2015, KA Commuter Jabodetabek served more than 850,000 passengers per day, which is almost triple of the 2011 figures, but still less than 3.5% of all Jabodetabek commutes.

In the United States, Canada, Costa Rica, El Salvador and Mexico regional passenger rail services are provided by governmental or quasi-governmental agencies, with the busiest and most expansive rail networks located in the Northeastern US, California, and Eastern Canada. Most North American commuter railways utilize diesel locomotive propulsion, with the exception of services in New York City, Philadelphia, Chicago, Denver, and Mexico City; New York's commuter rail lines use a combination of third rail and overhead wire power generation, while Chicago only has two out of twelve services that are electrified.

The five major cities in Australia have suburban railway systems in their metropolitan areas. These networks have frequent services, with frequencies varying from every 10 to every 30 minutes on most suburban lines, and up to 3–5 minutes in peak on bundled underground lines in the city centres of Sydney, Brisbane, Perth and Melbourne. The networks in each state developed from mainline railways and have never been completely operationally separate from long distance and freight traffic, unlike metro systems. The suburban networks are almost completely electrified.

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  • Huldra [they/them, it/its]
    ·
    1 year ago

    I fucking hate when fantasy worldbuilding is like "Oh this race is defined by and thinks all of this stuff ontologically and universally."

    Sucks ass, worldbuilding immediately becomes like 100x better if you apply the slightest bit of materialism to it and extrapolating the behavior and characteristics of a group by all the basic world shit you've set up.

    Like one thing I realized in particular really irks me is this trope about Dwarfs that all of them no matter what grow beards and value beard length because length = age and age = respect.

    Dogshit. Literally a second of thinking about it should lead to the conclusion that beards actually should denote class. If you're a proletarian dwarf working in the fucking smeltery around molten metal and open fires all day, you should not be having a long ass beard.

    You can do all sorts of characterization with it now, social climbers try and prepare for their expected journey up the classes by keeping just the very limits of practical facial hair, you can differentiate between merely long beards and styled beards with all kinds of elven oils or whatever, nouveau riche dont know how to maintain their beards or whatever, working class union dwarfs shave their face clean and run campaigns about it or something, punks go even further and shave their heads too and get tattoos over their chins and skulls etc.

    But no, long beard good, no beard universal dwarven shame, great.

    • AlkaliMarxist
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      I really like this idea, obviously it's because of romanticism, but so much of fantasy just takes for granted that societies would just be harmonious, static and rigidly defined. No conflict or change that doesn't involve personal conflicts between members of the ruling class or evil supernatural influences.

      E: Also magic as means of production was always an idea I thought should be explored more. Is magic labour? Does it require limited resources? Can it be commodified?

        • AlkaliMarxist
          ·
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Cool! Could you @ me when you do?

          (E: If you don't just put it in a reply obviously)

    • Huldra [they/them, it/its]
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      I dont have as many ideas with other fantasy races or whatever but anytime you add class into the worldbuilding mix its 9 times out of 10 gonna make it better, unless its just bad anti-worker stereotypes or something.

      Edit: Actually one more broad thought, any race that as a whole rejects magic for being sissy or whatever, fucking stupid worldbuilding.

      Its literally magic, as long as someone in this society has a way to use it, train with it, and proliferate its use, its gonna be used. Some layers of society might reject or disdain it, but not a whole society. Thats just lazy ass writing because the writer/designer decided Orcs are the warrior race and warriors don't use magic, or magic requires your phrenology stats to lean towards biologically more intelligent and it would be "op" if Orcs were both strong and smart.

    • CarmineCatboy [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      probably the reason i found the bajorans interesting at all in star trek is because the show lingered there not for one episode at a time, but had to interact with that society for entire seasons at a time. it was the first time they managed at least the illusion of an alien society that isn't monocultural.

      • Huldra [they/them, it/its]
        ·
        1 year ago

        Monocultural societies with 1 single defector whos a negation of that monoculture is such a plague on worldbuilding.

    • Grownbravy [they/them]
      ·
      1 year ago

      I will give many of the craftsdwarfs in my story severe ADHD. It’s not WHY they’re smiths and whatever, but it is an interesting pattern to make.

    • GorbinOutOverHere [comrade/them]
      ·
      1 year ago

      I hate the push back against race essentialism in dnd and shit because I think it's okay to want to just have some fantasy schlock where there's an easy Bad Guy. Why are they bad? An evil wizard did it, sorry dawg. Also I think it's okay for not everything to have a 1:1 real world parallel where every bit of every creative work is inherent social commentary

      But whatever, boo and hiss at me Hexbear, I'll just keep being me fuck you haters :shrug-outta-hecks:

      Literally a second of thinking about it should lead to the conclusion that beards actually should denote class. If you’re a proletarian dwarf working in the fucking smeltery around molten metal and open fires all day, you should not be having a long ass beard.

      REALISM IN MY FANTASY RACES

      Like this like. This is good, don't get me wrong, I explicitly like this and would read and love a work written this way. I do enjoy fleshed out world building that is grounded and realistic and not just "a wizard did it" level narration.

      But sometimes it's fine to want to turn your brain off and enjoy fantasy shit. I don't think dwarf beards not being realistic makes it actively bad. Okay, it wouldn't work for humans, but these are dwarves. Maybe their hair isn't as easily burnt by molten shit. Maybe they Get Good, you know, being magically attuned blacksmiths, and can somehow handle shit without accidents humans would have. I don't know dawg they're dwarves, a wizard did it

      • Huldra [they/them, it/its]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        I mean theres a difference between having simplistic bad guys and having designated bad guy races and groups.

        You can make an evil wizard and hes just evil for whatever reason, thats fine. But not if its like, oh hes the evil wizard race that is marked down as "normally always evil" in the spreadsheets.

        And its not inherently social commentary either to put in the most miniscule bit of thinking when setting up a society, idk why you would want to work extra hard to make things one dimensional instead of multidimensional, not even as a "wow deep postmodern storytelling" shit just like, Dwarfs are different depending on various factors.

        I just genuinely dont get what the appeal is in making Dwarfs have fireproof beards so that all of them can have long beards no matter what, rather than having beards be indicative of their character beyond just a Dwarf.

        Thats literally just good design and storytelling, fucking "bluuugh show dont tell is CIA" or whatever but if you can read a description of a Dwarf and intuitively gain some understanding of them by something like how their beard looks, that seems to me like activating your brain less than having to read an extra sentence about how this one is a miner or a smelter or all of that shit.

        • GorbinOutOverHere [comrade/them]
          ·
          1 year ago

          If you have an evil race of orcs you don't have to have the reader or player or whatever think and process the implications of every potential goblin or bugbear orphan left behind through conflict but I guess some people won't be happy until the story is about that entirely 😔

          If dwarf no beard then they're just a short person 😔😔😔😔

      • SaniFlush [any, any]
        ·
        1 year ago

        I don’t want to turn my brain off and fight dumb monsters just because they’re there though, I have video games for that. The rise of artsy farty tabletop games is in part because a computer can’t meaningfully improvise a conversation with a character or really react to players making weird requests at all. The fiction is all we got left after the rules are memorized.

        • GorbinOutOverHere [comrade/them]
          ·
          1 year ago

          it doesn't have to be one or the other though, like you just said "we have videogames for that" are you going to go GOD this game SUCKS because the dwarves have BEARDS! My REALISM!

      • AlkaliMarxist
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        every bit of every creative work is inherent social commentary

        :astronaut-1:

        Seriously though, there's still going to be tons of classic high fantasy stuff around, I want to see more variety in settings. I also dislike race essentialism and don't really enjoy seeing it.

  • Ho_Chi_Chungus [she/her]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Millions of American chuds sitting on an entire army's worth of small arms: :frothingfash: "I HATE JOE BIDEN AND THE EVIL DEMONCRATS SO MUCH I WANT TO KILL THEM ALL" (proceeds to do nothing)

    Some Japanese guy with a $50 Home Depot gift card and a dream: :the-doohickey:

  • thelastaxolotl [he/him]
    hexagon
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    New Megathread Nerds!!! :train-shining: :brazil-cool:

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    Remember nerds, no current struggle session discussion here on the general megathread, i will ban you from the comm and remove your comment, have a good day/night :meow-coffee:

  • MaybeNickCage [she/her,they/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Wouldn't it be funny if I resurrected my day-1 account just to post once and never do it again, but as like a bit?

  • Huldra [they/them, it/its]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Guy who thinks the "China bureau" in the Wikileaks cables regarding Tiananmen square is a Chinese state entity and not a US bureau dealing with China.

    Its a real guy I saw him today, arguing that the internal cables are literally China sending memos to the US with false information.

    • Huldra [they/them, it/its]
      ·
      1 year ago

      At least this guy is a funny guy though.

      The horde of guys who say "the massacre was documented on film! thousands of students being killed!" are just fucking obnoxious.

      Like no it wasnt, it literally just wasnt, if it was you would have posted it and I would have already seen it!

  • PorkrollPosadist [he/him, they/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Reddit mods going on strike: https://www.reddit.com/r/ModCoord/comments/1401qw5/incomplete_and_growing_list_of_participating/

    :squidward-nochill:

  • Comp4 [comrade/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    The woke mob doesnt want you to know this but you can just kill billionaires. I killed 1.5034 billionaires and stored them in my attic and im gonna kill more.

  • GVAGUY3 [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Putting down my cat on the 13th. He has been with my family since I was like 9 years old 17ish years ago. Gonna be rough. Will probably post some pics after it happens.

      • GVAGUY3 [he/him]
        ·
        1 year ago

        Thanks comrade. He is a kind old soul, just doesn't have much juice left in him and is clearly in pain and pain meds won't last much longer

  • GVAGUY3 [he/him]
    ·
    1 year ago

    I remember seeing some chud saying they will drink :pbr: now because of Bud Lite being gay, which I'm gonna say, this guy has never talked to any gay people before because :pbr: is the real gay beer.