my parents are train operators i actually got to see this view when it was bring you children to work day and it genuinely sparked my love for public transit so happy i get to see it again
@@edwardlugo-lopez8890dont know about now, but in the early 2000's, you'd hear about it once every year. And definitely couldn't miss the last minute notification you'd get from the radio
As someone else said, this is indeed a love letter to BART. I live in the East Bay and worked in downtown San Francisco and couldn't have done it without BART. For 25 years I commuted on BART. I'm a great advocate of public transportation, and believe BART is an exceptional system. People in the Bay Area are so fortunate to have it and too often take it for granted.. Thank you Vincent Woo, for your remarkable film.
This! And if we don't start riding our rail systems and advocating for public funding then we'll just lose it all again like we did with the Key System.
The point of my edit to your comment @elizabeth, was to open a discussion on how multitude bus fleets need improvement. Stations need better bus transfers, better buses. Merely converting OLD bus chassis/suspension to EV is FAR from Ideal. Yellow School Bus & Paratransit Lift-vans likewise do NOT convert to EV very well at all at twice the price. Anyone else like to pick up on the bad idea of retaining unsafe poor handling buses I'd be obliged.
"As someone else said, this is indeed a love letter to BART. I live in East Bay and work in downtown San Francisco and couldn't have without BART. For 25 years I commute on BART. I'm an advocate for public transit and believe BART is an exceptional system. People in the Bay Area are fortunate to have it but too often take it for granted.
My reply to @elizabeth goes for any reader to consider WHY standard municipal bus chassis/suspension do NOT convert to EV adequately. Nor do Yellow School Bus and Paratransit lift-vans which should be easy boarding low-floor cabs that seniors, disabled, school kids and all transit patrons need. Writing my essay "The Walking Communities of 2040" - a series in 4 Parts, each part 500 words or so - the essay suggests: "Painted Dark Blue the standard yellow school bus make a good rig for prisoner transport and road crews. So, if these buses are good enough for criminals, they're good enough for school kids?
This is absolutely extraordinary. I've never seen a cab ride done documentary style. This should be shown in an IMAX, or at least as an exhibit in a transit museum. Well done.
Timestamps for voiceover sections: 0:00 - Intro 5:11 - The birth of BART 10:39 - Interview with Michael C. Healy (spokesperson for BART for over three decades) 23:48 - Drug-dealing anecdote and black market counterfeit tickets 27:45 - Platform text-to-speech 33:35 - The Transbay Tube 40:22 - Continual funding gaps 44:12 - Interview with Senator Scott Wiener 1:01:53 - Interview with a BART train operator (Dewayne Deams) 1:12:36 - LBJ 1:18:31 - Interview with Dewayne Deams (cont.) I absolutely freaking love this :)
I HELPED BUILD THE FIRST BART CARS. As the Systems Engineering Tech for the manufacturer in San Diego, later renamed United Technologies, I got to design and build the Anti-BART that we used to test all the electrical circuits. Because of that I became the first person to sit in the first seat of the first car.
I work for BART and I’m a transit junkie . It would normally be my job to stop you from touching our trains, step behind the yellow line.. but this is amazing work. Having worked almost all these stations seeing them from these views is cool. Thank you . (And please be careful😊 )
True I might videotape you years back myself via , My GoPro or Video Shoot camera ‘ I’m surprised no one gets caught . All good ‘ I have been yelled at with larger cameras on Sty stem . As long As i dont sell the image its up to those seek good stories not Faul or bad News , But i agree Be Safe ‘ Bart event April 20th tomorrow ; Fr Last legacy fleet ‘ i agree ms, operator 😅
Sometimes we take some extraordinary things for granted in the Bay Area. The cool fog in summer, the redwoods growing so close to the skyscrapers, the promise of great food around any corner, the views from a zillion hilltops, water water everywhere… and of course, BART. Almost impossible to imagine this place without it. Thanks for filming such a visually-splendid reminder!
@@wta1518 Right? I live in SF. It barely got to 60° today. I am wearing a wool cap and a sweater. If I wanted to bask in the 70s, I could've hopped on BART and been in Oakland in 15 minutes. If I wanted the 80s, another 15 minutes on BART would get me to Walnut Creek. Another great reason to live in the Bay Area...
@@wta1518 Hey dude, just hop on the Capitol Corridor and come hang out in SF or Oakland! The Capitol Corridor is a genuinely nice train run by passionate people who love trains. It's also hurting right now, so it could use your kind fare/donation. We have a lot of great rail transit in the Greater Bay Area and in NorCal in general. We need to start using it on principle if we don't want it to all die off.
My son is on the Autism Spectrum and he has profound intellectual disabilities. On weekend mornings, when it's not too crowded we get on BART and go for a few stops. He's entranced by the experience. We put this on. He locked in. Typically he can absorb a video for :30 - :90. He was focused on this for 20 minutes.
As a public transit nerd and Bay Area native, this is literally the stuff of my dreams. I was flooded by so many different emotions while watching this. I laughed, cried, grinned like an idiot, and clapped. Your editing style and attention to detail are second to none and the interviews are so wonderful. I LOVE how even though it looks like you attached your camera to an old A car, you recorded the ride audio from inside a "fleet of the future" unit (?), presumably for the station announcements. What an amazing video, please don't ever stop practicing your craft.
Good ear - what happened was simply that I didn't record myself attaching the camera for the run that made it into the final cut and had to make do with b-roll from a previous attempt.
@@VincentWoo ahhhh that makes so much more sense! So cool how you were able to get that audio. The end part talking to the operator was amazing. Thanks for the reply!
The minute following 37:00 is just a masterpiece. The music peaking as you emerge out of the bay tunnel, the other train passing by at the same time. It just could not be any better.
as a nyc transit creator, you’ve just inspired me to do something (somewhat) similar to this. hearing the history of the bay area’s struggle for transit while literally being whisked away on one of the longest lines in the system truly struck a chord with me. i cried several times watching this out of pure awe. i would only dream of doing something like this for the NYC subway, but you give me hope
As a born and raised kid from the city you've made me weep. Whenever I'm homesick I watch this video. It's the perfect ride from the end of the trip I used to take down to my friend's house every friday in middle school to play D&D out to the stop by where my sister lives and where I first saw my baby neice in my sister's car picking me up from the station. I need you to know you've made something truly special that tugs at every memory I credit for making me the man I am today... I cannot wait to show my future grandkids BART someday...
I was born, raised, and currently live in LA, but I went to college in the Bay. The couple years I lived in the Bay were the best years of my life and BART was a huge part of that. Because of BART I got to see so many new places and meet so many new people, and moving back to LA made me realize how spoiled I was. BART made all of the Bay feel like a community where everyone and everything was only a few minutes away, while LA feels like an alienating gigantic expanse of space where living across the city feels like you live across the country. LA is making steps to strengthen its public transit system, but it is still far, far away from being as robust as BART. To everyone in the Bay, PLEASE PROTECT BART AT ALL COSTS!
I was in the first seat, of the first train, on the first BART accident back on Oct 2nd, 1972, in what was called The Fremont Flyer. I watched the Train Operator pound the palm of his hand on the STOP button multiple times before he grabbed his hands on the sides of the console and hung on for his Free Frequent Flyer Miles! It was a great train ride and a great air ride, all at the same time! That was followed by a free ambulance ride to the local hospital (Washington Township -- right across the street from the station).
I'll never forget taking my cousins from Albuquerque NM on BART who had never been in a subway before. My cousin said after we boarded, "it's nice!" and "it's fast". I think that's the mentality we should have towards rapid transit in this country moving forward. Us jaded residents in the bay area see the problems too often that we forget that what we have is effin NICE
The problem is that we have elected a BART Board that is good at coming up with nice slogans. But they are completely incompetent at running a clean, safe, and fast rail system. BART has become a stepping stone toward statewide political office. Our BART electeds simply don't care about making the system nice to use and useful. And let's not mice words, this is _our_ fault. We elected these bozos and they're killing BART.
In the first few minutes, I didn't think I would be able to sit through 90 minutes of this, but the interviews were so fascinating. I'm glad you stuck the encounter at the end where you were questioned about what you were doing. Great job!
It's almost like the ending of a docu-drama (or a documentary) where the narrator asked the audience what did you learn about the film. To you, the film director, I say, "Having lived in New York City all my life and have been to most of the transit systems in the United States, I have an even bigger appreciation for the Bay Area Rapid Transit and hope to one day visit and ride on the BART." And like a really good movie, I stayed for the closing credits. 🎉😂
The style of this video is unlike anything I've ever seen before. The storytelling and pacing are so relaxed yet engaging. This is far too high quality to just be on TH-cam.
As a bay area native I must say this is pretty awesome. I have always wondered what it looks like through the tunnel bores, they are much cleaner than I expected.
The BART announcement voices at 29:00 was such a treat! I'm sure those old voice will disappear soon but so fun to hear. The voiceovers and tidbits and music as you ride along was just so good! Also, the cartoon network show we bear bears live in SF and they ride bart on few episodes and it's fun to see media references to BART!
One side benefit of modal transit filming is it allows visitors unfamiliar with the area to preview exactly what their journey will look like. I've benefitted from this around the world and am grateful for those that share their passion.
Beautiful! Queued for my next break for a trancey relaxation. After watching: Great tone and a must-watch for locals and those who see the need for strong infrastructure and unity. The intentional selection of time of day, music, interviews, and voiceovers give it a unique color. Hearing the words of a giant like LBJ was particularly moving. Well conducted interviews and urban artistry. I feel strongly for its historical and cultural relevance apt for museums or film festivals. I hope BART evolves to suit all riders around the clock as safe and reliable transport; maybe wishful, but it'd be amazing to see something like Japan here in the Bay!
For everyone complaining about "the cost" of supporting BART must completely be in denial of the hundreds of billions of tax dollars lost to maintaining our road infrastructure. Gas taxes DO NOT cover the costs. Why don't all the roads need to be "profitable"? @CityNerd just did a piece on how subsidized US fuel prices skew reality and priorities. This is why integrated transit in Japan and Western Europe aren't bankrupting municipalities there -- they're not blowing money on inefficient roads.
Well in Western Europe we still are, just not to the same extent as the US. Plus car nerds here like to complain about high taxes on car and gas and claim that its actually so high its fully funding the road system and more, and that transit therefore shouldnt be subsidised at all to level the playing field. Of course thats BS and they never acknowledge the differences, like often only citing the national investments which dont include municipal roads or municipal parking. Or the cost for business or homeowners/renters to meet parking minimum requirements for their home or business, and so on. Sincerely, a guy from Greater Copenhagen, Denmark. We actually have a very similar train system to BART here, the S-train. However the S-train is fully profitable. Though thats moreso because fares here are outrageously expensive to the point people are actually avoiding transit for cost reasons.
It’s not necessarily the cost of maintaining bart that’s an issue. It’s more that bart doesn’t understand the concepts of supply and demand. Increasing fare prices discourages low income riders which is usually a majority of ridership in other countries. These are the people who don’t have or can’t afford a car. And they choose rail bc it’s cheaper than driving. However, in the Bay Area everyone already has a car and based on gas prices it is currently about the same price to drive all the way to sfo from the east bay than it is to take Bart. When Bart raises prices people stop coming and the group of rich people who they’re hoping will pay for bart opt to drive their cars instead. If they decrease cost and create a safer environment people will return to bart. They will have more quantity/ridership allowing the cost per ticket to be lower. Currently the biggest problem to Bart is cited as safety which has not been taken care of, instead they raised prices and purchased new trains avoiding the main issue. Instead of buying new trains people would prefer constant policing and action on Bart. I was on Bart a couple weeks ago and a dude was smoking weed on the train. I reported it and the cops said let us know if he’s still doing it in 20 minutes. If anything they should’ve had police at each station ready to hop on when they receive reports. Or what would be better is they had 2 to 3 cops patrolling the trains constantly. Bart is filled with theft, people on drugs, pan handling, side shows, and those without homes, etc.
I just recently moved to the bay area, and am consistently startled by just how useful BART is, especially when driving would put you through a tollbooth. This is an INCREDIBLE look into what makes this subway so unique. Beautiful footage, well-spoken interviews, honestly worth a watch even if you're not a huge fan of subways and trains
Thanks for the remembrance of the Concord groundbreaking. My 14 year old self, along with a couple of friends, rode our bikes there to see the chopper landing and hear the President speak. It was a pivotal moment in Bay Area history. As an adult I worked on the system as a contractor for several years.
This is about the best "driver's eye view" train videos I have ever seen, and I have watched many of them over the years. What made it so good was what you did in post with the music, the voiceovers, and the interviews. It also had that extra touch of professional polish that is rare in the kind of TH-cam video. Thank you for that.
I was born and raised in San Francisco, and still work in the City, but live in the East Bay. I take the BART multiple times every week. I know the trains are often dirty and lots of people think they're unsafe - they definitely can be! - but I appreciate this public transportation system for what it is and what it has been for decades. My earliest memory of BART was taking it with younger brother from San Francisco to Oakland to visit a family friend who is around our ages. Our parents were busy working, so we just hopped onto BART on our own, even though we weren't even 10 years old yet!
We need to all remember that BART was relatively clean and safe until only about a decade ago. The system leadership was taken over by crazies who care about everything in the world but running trains properly. We need to demand that BART return to its normal self. This is getting ridiculous.
BART is one of the several things i love about the Bay Area. Sure, it has its issues, but ive used it my whole life, its a big part of it. I love my home, the Bay Area, and I wont ever abandon it.
I’m thrilled to have been able to catch a showing of this at the Roxie theater in SF. This is really immaculately put together - the scoring and sound work, visual presentation, the stylish minimap, and the spirit and dedication to create a piece of documentary art like this. Bravo.
just to throw in another voice: *this is a film worth a festival or two!!* if you think about it - it’s a documentary from a cabin (i’m 99% sure it’s one of a kind stylistically in that regards) + so tastefully chosen soundtrack + even the wide lens footage is so precisely on point. i don’t want to sound overdramatic or anything, but this is practically quite a high-ass art, it would really make sense to bring it to a wider audience to enjoy. _justsayin_
Thank you so much for this, Vincent. I was transfixed for the whole ride. The rolling hills between North Concord/Martinez and Pittsburg/Bay Point in the late afternoon are absolutely stunning. Thanks for providing the views that so many of us have craned our necks through the back of the operator's cab to catch a glimpse of :) And thanks for blending it in with such cool lived experiences of many people on the system, discussing its history, operations, and challenges going into the future. Truly, truly beautiful.
Stations: 1:40 - San Francisco International Airport (SFO) 4:28 - San Bruno 7:46 - South San Francisco 10:59 - Colma 14:28 - Daly City 18:32 - Balboa Park 20:49 - Glen Park 23:34 - 24th St Mission 25:36 - 16th St Mission 27:42 - Civic Center/UN Plaza 29:10 - Powell St 30:39 - Montgomery St 32:00 - Embarcadero 38:45 - West Oakland 42:26 - 12th St/Oakland City Center 44:10 - 19th St/Oakland 49:10 - MacArthur 52:14 - Rockridge 57:18 - Orinda 1:02:08 - Lafayette 1:06:36 - Walnut Creek 1:09:26 - Pleasant Hill/Contra Costa Centre 1:14:37 - Concord 1:17:55 - North Concord/Martinez 1:24:18 - Pittsburg/Bay Point 1:26:52 - Pittsburg Transfer Platform
BART was the first automated rapid transit system ever built. It cost about $1.6 billion which today is what Muni's T line cost to build about a mile and a half of tunnel , stations and assorted infrastructure. It cost $4.5 billion to build about 1 1/2 miles of subway under 2nd Ave in NYC (Q line extension to 96th St). There are a number of similarities between getting BART built and California High Speed Rail. Naysayers and lawsuits were/are numerous. But today BART has proven to be an incredible bargain. Cal HSR will be a bargain too 50 years after it gets built. Thanks for filming this Vincent.
@@dantem4119 That's exactly my point, there's no reason these rail lines should not be inter connected and allow standard rolling stock on each others line. Instead BART is going to bore 100+ ft deep below both Dridiron and Santa Clara station - absolute bonkers. Guess when you enjoy an entrenched monopoly you're free to protect your territory, with an astronomical budget at that.
I was on the Citizen's Committe to extend BART through San Mateo County. We could have had an aerial line through the county with a station under the garage at SFO for $400 million. We were never allowed to vote on it. Lobbyists convinced the Board of Supervisors to take us out of the district. This was a bargain compared to what the CalTrain improvements has cost. This left Santa Clara County isolated. The Marin County and Golden Gate Bridge directors story is an even sadder tale.
@@whyno713 BART does not run on standard gauge tracks so it cannot share tracks with Caltrain / CAHSR. However, CAHSR trains will use Caltrain tracks to get into central SFC
I work in the Bay Area now and have been a public transit and train enthusiast since the ripe old age of 11, when I took my first train ride from the Coliseum Station to Montgomery Street. Just like the author, riding BART as a teenager afforded me unimaginable freedom and not having to depend on having an adult driver. As I grew up and learned about other transit systems around the world I came to realize how remarkable it is to have a system like BART available to us. I marveled at the pre-pandemic crowds braving BART during rush hours in downtown SF stations and it made it all the more exciting. I still ride BART on a regular basis in 2023 but it saddens me that a doomsday scenario for BART keeps being floated.
I grew up in the bay area riding bart, loved it. Last time I rode it was a year and half ago because safety seemed to be not so strong anymore... has it improved?
@@videosuperhero100 when I started riding as a kid in the 90s the feeling on BART was very similar to today. There were good times and there were bad times. I think now any little incident can usually go viral and we’re just bombarded by it through various means of media. It just doesn’t feel that the safety is better or worse now but rather we’re just hyper-aware because of all the media we consume so it feels worse.
I'm Bay Area born/raised and have been riding BART my entire life until I moved out of state four months ago. I was feeling homesick and watching your film, I didn't know I was going to have so many emotions about a transit system that has taken to almost all the end points of the system. Thank you for sharing your amazing talents! Watching this answered all my questions of what exactly does the BART operator sees. Pure Magic indeed. I will be revisiting this often when I wanting some Bay Love.
That BART is pretty symbolic in my life and I didn't even realize it. I went on my first solo international trip into California after the peak of C19. Still a stressful time to travel, and I went from a place tiny enough that there's no trains at all for hours, into such a large airport and having to figure out the BART after 14 hours of flying and at night 😂. Dealt with being around sketchy characters, the train being out of service leaving my stranded on a random platform for 30 minutes, and the shakiest ride along a highway of my life - apparently the route I was on was having track issues. Still, taking all that on while coming from a place where taking a bus out of town is considered "scary and sketchy", I felt extremely proud of myself. Not only did I gain my independence after spending my "welcome to independence" years in lockdown, I ended up becoming a pretty big transit nerd and public transportation advocate afterwards. There's my personal rant. Absolutely beautiful video.
What a beautiful love letter to a California staple, I love just watching it on mute or low volume to relax. 40:40 BART’s cost is due to its congenital flaw, it’s non-standard rail gauge which will always require custom solutions to already solved problems.
This film is absolutely beautiful. The video itself is gorgeous and captures the character of every environment that BART runs through from subway tunnels to the rolling East Bay hills. All of the interviews, anecdotes, and facts about BART were fascinating and added so much depth to a system that most people don't think twice about once they've arrived at their destination. Just phenomenal!
So well put! With all the anxiety about if, how and when the Bay Area will recover after the pandemic, there couldn't be a more hypnotically compelling testimony to how lucky we are here to have BART.
BART really is an extraordinary system. We need to relearn to love and venerate it the way we used to when it was first built. It was and still is a marvel of engineering. And the fact that it was built at all with such insane coverage is just amazing. We did well, now we just need to do better. This video is an instant Bay Area classic! Love you all all! Love the Bay! Now let's do more an better! That's what we do!
As a lifelong Bay brat who just had to leave the region again unexpectedly this year: I am so delighted that this video found its way into my recommended. Sending this to my dad. He just moved out of the state for the first time in his 60+ years and I know he has as much fondness for BART as I do having been around to see them build it as a child. This is INCREDIBLE, Vincent. Thank you for making this!!!!
I've ridden BART for years and although I've peeked through the front car window before (mostly just to see how fast we were going), I never thought the forward view could be so cool. It looks so much faster than it feels! Thank you for the video, it's a real treat! Fun fact: If you ever watched THX 1138 (George Lucas, 1971), you were able to see the transbay tube before it had any tracks in it; a foot chase scene was filmed there.
this is inspiring incredibly sentimental feelings in me about public transit. like how people develop emotional attachments to their cars, except if cars are your parents then bart is like mother gaia, who gives us our freedom by transporting us through her magical earth tubes
My fave Bart driver POV landscapes: 1) emerging from the tube in West Oakland and shooting up onto the elevated guideway. It's like the train is taking off into the air. 2) going through the big Grove Shafter interchange before MacArthur (580/980/24 freeways) 3) coming out of the tunnel before Orinda. You're in a bunch of trees.
Never would I have thought someone would take something as nerdy as “slow TV” and real time train journeys and make into a cinematic experience. This is more than an operator filming his route. This feels different. Bravo!
I moved to the Bay Area from the Chicago suburbs last September. I love BART. I never learned how to drive so my option for getting to and from my college campus was the yellow line. The trip would take an hour and a half, which may sound like a long time compared to driving, but I always preferred spending that time on the train getting assignments done and listening to podcasts. I felt like the system definitely gets taken for granted, because I don't know what I'd do if it didn't exist. It's simultaneously one of the most underappreciated and greatest transit systems in North America.
Yep, this! We've forgotten how exceptional and unlikely BART is. I have been travelling extensively and always viewed BART as somewhat of a cosmic anomaly. The fact that it even exists in this country, in this state is an incredible miracle. I hope more people understand and appreciate BART!
Didn't expect that San Francisco, an American city, had such an advanced metro network. Coming from Athens, which is renowned for having an advanced metro network, kudos!
Oh, this is just the tip of the iceberg. SF was built on rail. Every two blocks there was a rail line throughout the entire city. Cable cars were invented in SF and spread throughout the entire world. We had the first public city-owned rail system in the world. A lot of that was torn down but a lot has survived and we've brought back a ton that didn't. BART itself was the first fully automated metro system in the world and reaches speeds of up to 80 mph (128 km/h) in regular service. If you're ever visiting SF, make sure to check out the SF Cable cars (the oldest in the world), the historic electric streetcars (rolling museum with historic trams from all over the world), the Muni Metro (modern light metro), BART, and Caltrain (urban commuter rail that will be able to reach 110 mph or 177 km/h)
This is fantastic! I don't know why BART hasn't considered doing something like this for each of the lines. The Interviews, music, everything works. And it's on a legacy Train at that? I'm a Bay Area born native living in Indiana now, but BART has been a huge part of my life since inception in 1972. Thanks to TH-cam and creators like yourself, I stay in touch with my roots.
My ears popped when the transbay tube footage started ... just like my ears used to do back when I took BART back in the early 1980's before leaving the bay area for the Midwest. 42:15 animal in tunnel run over alert.
This documentary film is so very well done, and is an informative and hypnotic train ride across the San Francisco Bay Area on the Bay Area Regional Transit system. For those of us who live around the SF Bay Area and have taken a ride or two on BART, watch this film from beginning to end. You get to see the view from the very front of the train the same way the BART train operators see things. You will see a lot of the behind the scenes travel through numerous tunnels underground and under the San Francisco Bay through the Trans Bay Tunnel. The included interviews with folks such as Michael C. Healy the former BART Director of Media, Scott Weiner California State Senator, and Dewayne Deams Train Operator sharing their perspectives and experiences on the BART system along with Albert Alexander performing as Lyndon B. Johnson when the BART system began operations back in 1971. This film’s music soundtrack is ideal for setting the mode for this film and does add to the surreal journey on BART, especially while traveling through the numerous tunnels. Recorded, edited and produced by Vincent Woo using a GoPro camera fastened to the front of a BART train traveling from San Francisco International Airport (SFO) south of San Francisco on the west side of the bay - to all the way out to the the eastern end of the line in Pittsburg Center.
Once thing I love about the transbay tube is the pieces were constructed locally in San Fransisco at the now closed Bethlehem Steel shipyard. Perhaps another reason the cost would be so much high, we no longer can build the parts here :/
Glad the driver didn't hassle you more than he did about the cam retrieval in the end. I was thinking exactly how he is going to get the cam now when it pulled into that Antioch transfer train station. I'm sure you had it all worked out in your head, but then the driver had to hassle you. Thanks for the effort in making the video to share, and also the various interviews.
Thank you for this wonderful movie! As a young boy in the seventies, I was enchanted by Bart. As an adult, I've lived throughout the Bay Area, and every ride was a thrill. Always been a dream to see the view from the front of the train. Thank you again!
Like the author of this video, I was a teenager in San Jose who loved tried "escaping" on BART whenever I could. The BART trip, the bus ride to Fremont - these were the symbols of my independence, my ticket to adventure.
Mr. Woo. Thank you for sharing this on TH-cam. I could not make the Roxie showing. Over 50 years ago, I remember Market Street all dug up for the new District rail system: BARTD. Now with most of the Bay Area connected, BART as a dream is almost complete.
Love this documentary of BART, I was born and raised in the East Bay Area and my family was actually forced to relocate due to the construction of the underpass which was constructed on Ashland st in San Lorenzo The construction of the underpass was done to allow traffic on Ashland to go underneath the Bart tracks that would be overhead, there were several houses and some apartments that met the wrecking ball to accommodate BART including my families residence. My family eventually moved to Medford Ave in North Hayward, and our house on Medford was less than a block away from BART elevated tracks, I can still remember the test trains that were very crudely, and simple in design traveling back and forth along the BART track for what seemed a couple of years prior to BART going operational and available to the public I have always had an affinity for BART as a child watching it be built in my city, to cutting school in JR High to go with several classmates to go ride BART on the day it opened to the public, and the many ventures taken over the years. All these years later I feel that BART has definitely been, and remains an asset to the Bay Area today I’ve also lived in Portland Oregon which has a light rail system The MAX Train, which in the 30+ years I lived there I witnessed the MAX be expanded across the Portland Metro Area and become what today is a Light Rail System that is definitely a benefit to the Portland Metro Area residents, as well as visitors to the Area Today as I’m writing this I am now residing in Atlanta Georgia, and here we have MARTA rail system, which for a Metro Area the size of Atlanta is by no means sufficient, and has a long way to go before it will ever resemble anything remotely close to BART
Watched your interview on KTVU the other morning which got me interested in your documentary. I’ve been riding BART since the late 80s and this is the first time I’ve ever seen a head on view of the ride. I’ve seen many other train videos with head on views though. Glad you took the risk to make this because it’s so cool.
Thank you Vincent! Bart operators get to experience the Stargate from 2001 every day going through the Transbay Tube. I will never take another trip on BART without thinking about your 'movie'!
Just echoing what everyone else has said - this was absolutely beautiful and I enjoyed every single minute of it. The footage, the music, the interviews, the map, the story - everything. Hats off to you!
This was very cool! It took me from SFO airport, with which I am very familiar, having been born and raised in The City; all the way (almost) to where I now live. Not sure when you filmed this, but the upload date says "2 months ago" as of Oct. 3, '23. Perhaps the new Antioch station, the current end of that line, was not yet open when you filmed. I enjoyed seeing the front seat view, and I'm assuming, due to the length of the video, that this was all filmed in real time, with no fast-forward effects applied. But at times it seemed like it, as those trains sure seem to be coming into the stations awfully fast! 🙂 I've ridden BART numerous times, but not regularly by any means, and certainly not from 'end to end' of any route. It was interesting to see the operator's view, and the scenery through the East Bay, where it sometimes parallels the freeways, and sometimes is out of sight of them. Thanks for making a fascinating movie!
The movie was shot in May, but the BART yellow line ends at the eBART transfer station (to get to the "true" end of line, you have to transfer where the movie ends). Thank you for your kind words.
I’ve always been very public-transit-pilled. Recently moved to SF from a very hostile public transit environment (TX), and this video really encapsulates my appreciation for BART in such a beautiful way. Learned a lot about the miraculous beginnings of BART. Thanks for the video.
I knew a fellow who worked on building BART. He said that the lights in side the tunnels were a psychedelic light show. He was right. I'm so grateful I get to finally see what he was ecstatically talking about. Thank you!
I wish that BART were sufficiently self-aware and media-savvy to use that image as a publicity piece. It really looks amazing and no one has ever seen it outside of a tiny group of people! Many other systems would have that pattern on every other piece of media and printed on the trains. Meanwhile, our elected BART Board is busy wasting $500k to not help a single homeless person find housing. The incompetence with them is just ridiculous.
Great video! I recently retired from 20 years as an engineer at BART and this brings back lots of memories. Often I would be talking on the radio helping with testing during the graveyard shift. I was really proud to be a part of the BART team, and to work on the low level hardware and software that directly helps the public. I still love riding BART and the train plus a bicycle is my favorite way of getting around the Bay Area.
30:12 just realizing how cool the evolution of the look of the stations is. They morph in a way that reflects the neighborhood of the station. They all look really cool.
Love this, even as a NYer. (Well, I did live in SF for three years, but only occasionally took BART because Civic Center was closer than 5th and King, and I often had to take Caltrain to Palo Alto where my corporate HQ was). Really annoyed me that BART and Caltrain didn't synchronize trains at Millbrae. Bay Area could absolutely work better to coordinate services between its systems.
I agree. If Caltrain went into downtown SF where BART has its most intense frequency, and if Caltrain electrified so it could run as frequently as BART, the whole Bay Area would feel so much easier to navigate. Riding from Berkeley to Palo Alto, Redwood City to Richmond, Hayward to Hillsdale could be as effortless as going from Balboa Park to Bayfair today. It's maddening/exhilarating. Caltrain's electrification and extension to the Salesforce Transit Center seem so close...but then again they're still 6 or 7 long years away.
@@GregCostikyan-t1u Exactly. I remember the days when I had to get off BART at Colma and transfer to a bus that finished to last few miles on the crowded freeway to get to SFO. I thought it would be a game-changer when BART finally went into SFO. And it has been, it's a connection I never take for granted. It reminds me that some progress might feel like small steps, but other times it feels like the huge leap forward we needed.
Thank you for cluing me into this Vincent and I appreciate our many chats, even the super technical heavy ones! I look forward to helping you secure footage of future rides. This was an amazing film!
6 years ago I spent the summer in the Bay Area. Shared a place with 4 other persons, but had the best time of my life. Almost every weekend I would make sure to travel somewhere in the city center and just explore, but there was one rare day when all of us visited the touristy places together. We rode BART on the way back, and the sunshine was just like what's in this video. Thank you for bringing that memory back.
This is a W moment for all of us who really wanted to see what it was like at the front of the bart train when we were younger. going through the subway tunnels, and seeing what cool things might be inside, but now a question pops up for me, i wonder what people were thinking when they saw a camera mounted onto the front of this bart.
Back in 1998 I worked for the company that wired up all the Bart tunnels with commercial grade dark fiber for this new thing called the "Information Superhighway". Most of it ran between the Oakland airport, Lake Merrit, and the Montgomery st. station in downtown SF. If you life in SF or Oakland chances are you are using an Internet connection that I helped install!
I actually had the same idea a few years ago when I got my new GoPro camera, to do this along with filming the BART with my drone. But never managed to actually to get the proper authorization, to go and do it. So, well done indeed ! And great work putting everything together nicely, along with the BART's map.
@@derek20la someone sees it, knows it's unauthorized, jumps on the train to remove it and the operator doesn't hit the emergency brake in time, person falls in front of the train. This other one probably won't happen, but the GoPro falls off and shorts out the train or if on an elevated section, falls on someone's head. Many bullets get shot into the air, all it takes is the lucky winner to find out.
Great job Vincent! I rode BART many years and the bayarea was home for more than 20 years. It drives me to tears to ride the bart again with you, from sfo to Pittsburgh bay point, sitting in my Hawaii backyard.
Hey, don't worry, Honolulu is building a trains that is basically just modernized BART. The HART planners literally said that they wanted to build something like BART and they did! So at least now you'll have something extremely similar to a modern BART right there in Hawaii!
I visited UC Berkley for a 4 day weekend and used the BART every day! I loved every minute of it and the cars which were newer, really classed up my ride. We need an equivalent in LA cuz the metro is so much worse.
This is the problem Miami is facing now. We have a few systems, but we have not expanded them in many years. And it's come to the point where we can no longer live without it.
This is really cool. I just spent two weeks in San Francisco and fell in love with the city and both the BART and MUNI systems played a big role in that. Great film and interviews. Thanks for sharing!
I had completely blocked out the memory of guys in big jackets approaching me and trying to sell me a $10 ticket for $5 at Powell street while I used the ticket machine as a 13 or 14 year old. This revived a lot of childhood memories for me. Thank you
I'm from SoCal and have ridden BART a couple of times. This journey was SOOOO amazing. Was it the narration? The Video? But it's a view that no-one, except the conductor, ever sees. Thank you for this "vacation"!!!
Unauthorized? Well this may be, but BART must really award you for promoting the beauty of the system, the importance of rapid transit and how fundamental it is for countries and cities to invest in heavy rail. I am a foreigner but I have heard that BART is facing some financial difficulties because of the continuous low ridership. Despite the fact that we have exited the pandemic's restrictions, it seems that people still choose to work from home. BART is an amazing system, with its flaws, but I cannot stop loving the beautiful architecture of stations like e.g. Balboa Park and Glen Park and how it has helped S.F. to grow. Exceptional one of a kind video. Who knows, maybe BART will be inspired by you and follow the CTA's example and film full videos of its own lines/routes.
my parents are train operators i actually got to see this view when it was bring you children to work day and it genuinely sparked my love for public transit so happy i get to see it again
As a kid I got to go up front for a moment to see the view. So cool to see it again.
They have that? Bring your kid to work day? How often?
@@edwardlugo-lopez8890dont know about now, but in the early 2000's, you'd hear about it once every year. And definitely couldn't miss the last minute notification you'd get from the radio
As someone else said, this is indeed a love letter to BART. I live in the East Bay and worked in downtown San Francisco and couldn't have done it without BART. For 25 years I commuted on BART. I'm a great advocate of public transportation, and believe BART is an exceptional system. People in the Bay Area are so fortunate to have it and too often take it for granted.. Thank you Vincent Woo, for your remarkable film.
This! And if we don't start riding our rail systems and advocating for public funding then we'll just lose it all again like we did with the Key System.
@@TohaBgood2 BART & MUNI trolleybus streetcar are still most advanced idea application, expecting all of our wonderful world to see.
The point of my edit to your comment @elizabeth, was to open a discussion on how multitude bus fleets need improvement. Stations need better bus transfers, better buses. Merely converting OLD bus chassis/suspension to EV is FAR from Ideal. Yellow School Bus & Paratransit Lift-vans likewise do NOT convert to EV very well at all at twice the price. Anyone else like to pick up on the bad idea of retaining unsafe poor handling buses I'd be obliged.
"As someone else said, this is indeed a love letter to BART. I live in East Bay and work in downtown San Francisco and couldn't have without BART. For 25 years I commute on BART. I'm an advocate for public transit and believe BART is an exceptional system. People in the Bay Area are fortunate to have it but too often take it for granted.
My reply to @elizabeth goes for any reader to consider WHY standard municipal bus chassis/suspension do NOT convert to EV adequately. Nor do Yellow School Bus and Paratransit lift-vans which should be easy boarding low-floor cabs that seniors, disabled, school kids and all transit patrons need.
Writing my essay "The Walking Communities of 2040" - a series in 4 Parts, each part 500 words or so - the essay suggests: "Painted Dark Blue the standard yellow school bus make a good rig for prisoner transport and road crews. So, if these buses are good enough for criminals, they're good enough for school kids?
This is absolutely extraordinary. I've never seen a cab ride done documentary style. This should be shown in an IMAX, or at least as an exhibit in a transit museum. Well done.
i can even see this in the moma. simply spectacular
Fancy meeting you here!
@@laeihbvaljefhbvalejfhbv 100%
@@GeekFilter Hey, this isn't a dead mall video! 😆🖖
it's actually quite common. companies like video125 have made a business out of it
Timestamps for voiceover sections:
0:00 - Intro
5:11 - The birth of BART
10:39 - Interview with Michael C. Healy (spokesperson for BART for over three decades)
23:48 - Drug-dealing anecdote and black market counterfeit tickets
27:45 - Platform text-to-speech
33:35 - The Transbay Tube
40:22 - Continual funding gaps
44:12 - Interview with Senator Scott Wiener
1:01:53 - Interview with a BART train operator (Dewayne Deams)
1:12:36 - LBJ
1:18:31 - Interview with Dewayne Deams (cont.)
I absolutely freaking love this :)
Thank you for this.
Thank you!
@vincentwoo If you copy this into the description, YT will make chapter breaks for you.
@@lohphat that's not a bad idea. I worry a little bit about ruining the suspense for someone who's just watching straight through
The text-to-speech part had me rolling on the floor while being informed.
I HELPED BUILD THE FIRST BART CARS.
As the Systems Engineering Tech for the manufacturer in San Diego, later renamed United Technologies, I got to design and build the Anti-BART that we used to test all the electrical circuits.
Because of that I became the first person to sit in the first seat of the first car.
I work for BART and I’m a transit junkie . It would normally be my job to stop you from touching our trains, step behind the yellow line.. but this is amazing work. Having worked almost all these stations seeing them from these views is cool. Thank you . (And please be careful😊 )
how did the train operator and or other staff not catch this? would it even be allowed
Someone at BART needs to learn what positive PR videos like this would be.
I too worked at Bart. And the fact that he got always with the camera was the first thing I thought of😂😂
True I might videotape you years back myself via , My GoPro or Video Shoot camera ‘ I’m surprised no one gets caught . All good ‘ I have been yelled at with larger cameras on Sty stem . As long As i dont sell the image its up to those seek good stories not Faul or bad News , But i agree Be Safe ‘ Bart event April 20th tomorrow ; Fr Last legacy fleet ‘ i agree ms, operator 😅
Sometimes we take some extraordinary things for granted in the Bay Area. The cool fog in summer, the redwoods growing so close to the skyscrapers, the promise of great food around any corner, the views from a zillion hilltops, water water everywhere… and of course, BART. Almost impossible to imagine this place without it. Thanks for filming such a visually-splendid reminder!
Also you don't get 105° days.
@@wta1518 Right? I live in SF. It barely got to 60° today. I am wearing a wool cap and a sweater. If I wanted to bask in the 70s, I could've hopped on BART and been in Oakland in 15 minutes. If I wanted the 80s, another 15 minutes on BART would get me to Walnut Creek. Another great reason to live in the Bay Area...
@@peteralbert1485 Meanwhile I'm here in Sacramento trying not to die in the 108° heat.
@@wta1518 Hey dude, just hop on the Capitol Corridor and come hang out in SF or Oakland! The Capitol Corridor is a genuinely nice train run by passionate people who love trains. It's also hurting right now, so it could use your kind fare/donation. We have a lot of great rail transit in the Greater Bay Area and in NorCal in general. We need to start using it on principle if we don't want it to all die off.
@@TohaBgood2 but the capitol corridor's expensive :(
This is the kind of incredible work that should be playing in transit museums.
It should have a home at the SFMOMA for a while.
My son is on the Autism Spectrum and he has profound intellectual disabilities. On weekend mornings, when it's not too crowded we get on BART and go for a few stops. He's entranced by the experience. We put this on. He locked in. Typically he can absorb a video for :30 - :90. He was focused on this for 20 minutes.
thats very sweet to hear I'm glad the two of you enjoyed
As a public transit nerd and Bay Area native, this is literally the stuff of my dreams. I was flooded by so many different emotions while watching this. I laughed, cried, grinned like an idiot, and clapped. Your editing style and attention to detail are second to none and the interviews are so wonderful. I LOVE how even though it looks like you attached your camera to an old A car, you recorded the ride audio from inside a "fleet of the future" unit (?), presumably for the station announcements. What an amazing video, please don't ever stop practicing your craft.
Good ear - what happened was simply that I didn't record myself attaching the camera for the run that made it into the final cut and had to make do with b-roll from a previous attempt.
@@VincentWoo ahhhh that makes so much more sense! So cool how you were able to get that audio. The end part talking to the operator was amazing. Thanks for the reply!
Was just about to comment about how the shot showed an older unit-but the announcements were from a fleet of future unit.
The minute following 37:00 is just a masterpiece. The music peaking as you emerge out of the bay tunnel, the other train passing by at the same time. It just could not be any better.
That’s so awesome ❤
as a nyc transit creator, you’ve just inspired me to do something (somewhat) similar to this. hearing the history of the bay area’s struggle for transit while literally being whisked away on one of the longest lines in the system truly struck a chord with me. i cried several times watching this out of pure awe. i would only dream of doing something like this for the NYC subway, but you give me hope
Dude. You need to submit this to some film festivals. This is outstanding work
didn't know u were a bart guy
oh hey
@@TanielCoolGuy I'm pro transit all around 😎
EXACTLY! ❤
Oh... hi bit.
As a born and raised kid from the city you've made me weep. Whenever I'm homesick I watch this video.
It's the perfect ride from the end of the trip I used to take down to my friend's house every friday in middle school to play D&D out to the stop by where my sister lives and where I first saw my baby neice in my sister's car picking me up from the station.
I need you to know you've made something truly special that tugs at every memory I credit for making me the man I am today...
I cannot wait to show my future grandkids BART someday...
thank you, very beautiful note
I was born, raised, and currently live in LA, but I went to college in the Bay. The couple years I lived in the Bay were the best years of my life and BART was a huge part of that. Because of BART I got to see so many new places and meet so many new people, and moving back to LA made me realize how spoiled I was. BART made all of the Bay feel like a community where everyone and everything was only a few minutes away, while LA feels like an alienating gigantic expanse of space where living across the city feels like you live across the country. LA is making steps to strengthen its public transit system, but it is still far, far away from being as robust as BART. To everyone in the Bay, PLEASE PROTECT BART AT ALL COSTS!
Came here to see a train, stayed here to experience an incredibly wholesome documentary.
The way you colour graded this and added the minimap is exquisite. Well done!
I was in the first seat, of the first train, on the first BART accident back on Oct 2nd, 1972, in what was called The Fremont Flyer. I watched the Train Operator pound the palm of his hand on the STOP button multiple times before he grabbed his hands on the sides of the console and hung on for his Free Frequent Flyer Miles! It was a great train ride and a great air ride, all at the same time! That was followed by a free ambulance ride to the local hospital (Washington Township -- right across the street from the station).
wow, thanks for sharing your story!
I'll never forget taking my cousins from Albuquerque NM on BART who had never been in a subway before. My cousin said after we boarded, "it's nice!" and "it's fast". I think that's the mentality we should have towards rapid transit in this country moving forward. Us jaded residents in the bay area see the problems too often that we forget that what we have is effin NICE
Like come on, LA still hasn't figured rapid transit out, even though it has the potential to make that city like London
The problem is that we have elected a BART Board that is good at coming up with nice slogans. But they are completely incompetent at running a clean, safe, and fast rail system. BART has become a stepping stone toward statewide political office. Our BART electeds simply don't care about making the system nice to use and useful. And let's not mice words, this is _our_ fault. We elected these bozos and they're killing BART.
In the first few minutes, I didn't think I would be able to sit through 90 minutes of this, but the interviews were so fascinating. I'm glad you stuck the encounter at the end where you were questioned about what you were doing. Great job!
It's almost like the ending of a docu-drama (or a documentary) where the narrator asked the audience what did you learn about the film. To you, the film director, I say, "Having lived in New York City all my life and have been to most of the transit systems in the United States, I have an even bigger appreciation for the Bay Area Rapid Transit and hope to one day visit and ride on the BART."
And like a really good movie, I stayed for the closing credits. 🎉😂
This is the love letter to BART we didn’t know we needed. Bravo 👏
The style of this video is unlike anything I've ever seen before. The storytelling and pacing are so relaxed yet engaging. This is far too high quality to just be on TH-cam.
As a bay area native I must say this is pretty awesome. I have always wondered what it looks like through the tunnel bores, they are much cleaner than I expected.
Right!!!! They do look like they need maintenance, but even still!
To see the forward view is a great perspective, the 60 MPH side view left me wanting more...I too was surprised of the clean areas under the bay...
The BART announcement voices at 29:00 was such a treat! I'm sure those old voice will disappear soon but so fun to hear. The voiceovers and tidbits and music as you ride along was just so good!
Also, the cartoon network show we bear bears live in SF and they ride bart on few episodes and it's fun to see media references to BART!
One side benefit of modal transit filming is it allows visitors unfamiliar with the area to preview exactly what their journey will look like. I've benefitted from this around the world and am grateful for those that share their passion.
Beautiful! Queued for my next break for a trancey relaxation.
After watching: Great tone and a must-watch for locals and those who see the need for strong infrastructure and unity. The intentional selection of time of day, music, interviews, and voiceovers give it a unique color. Hearing the words of a giant like LBJ was particularly moving. Well conducted interviews and urban artistry. I feel strongly for its historical and cultural relevance apt for museums or film festivals. I hope BART evolves to suit all riders around the clock as safe and reliable transport; maybe wishful, but it'd be amazing to see something like Japan here in the Bay!
For everyone complaining about "the cost" of supporting BART must completely be in denial of the hundreds of billions of tax dollars lost to maintaining our road infrastructure. Gas taxes DO NOT cover the costs. Why don't all the roads need to be "profitable"?
@CityNerd just did a piece on how subsidized US fuel prices skew reality and priorities.
This is why integrated transit in Japan and Western Europe aren't bankrupting municipalities there -- they're not blowing money on inefficient roads.
Well in Western Europe we still are, just not to the same extent as the US. Plus car nerds here like to complain about high taxes on car and gas and claim that its actually so high its fully funding the road system and more, and that transit therefore shouldnt be subsidised at all to level the playing field. Of course thats BS and they never acknowledge the differences, like often only citing the national investments which dont include municipal roads or municipal parking. Or the cost for business or homeowners/renters to meet parking minimum requirements for their home or business, and so on.
Sincerely, a guy from Greater Copenhagen, Denmark. We actually have a very similar train system to BART here, the S-train. However the S-train is fully profitable. Though thats moreso because fares here are outrageously expensive to the point people are actually avoiding transit for cost reasons.
It’s not necessarily the cost of maintaining bart that’s an issue. It’s more that bart doesn’t understand the concepts of supply and demand. Increasing fare prices discourages low income riders which is usually a majority of ridership in other countries. These are the people who don’t have or can’t afford a car. And they choose rail bc it’s cheaper than driving. However, in the Bay Area everyone already has a car and based on gas prices it is currently about the same price to drive all the way to sfo from the east bay than it is to take Bart. When Bart raises prices people stop coming and the group of rich people who they’re hoping will pay for bart opt to drive their cars instead. If they decrease cost and create a safer environment people will return to bart. They will have more quantity/ridership allowing the cost per ticket to be lower. Currently the biggest problem to Bart is cited as safety which has not been taken care of, instead they raised prices and purchased new trains avoiding the main issue. Instead of buying new trains people would prefer constant policing and action on Bart. I was on Bart a couple weeks ago and a dude was smoking weed on the train. I reported it and the cops said let us know if he’s still doing it in 20 minutes. If anything they should’ve had police at each station ready to hop on when they receive reports. Or what would be better is they had 2 to 3 cops patrolling the trains constantly. Bart is filled with theft, people on drugs, pan handling, side shows, and those without homes, etc.
watching this while high is a spiritual experience
I just recently moved to the bay area, and am consistently startled by just how useful BART is, especially when driving would put you through a tollbooth. This is an INCREDIBLE look into what makes this subway so unique. Beautiful footage, well-spoken interviews, honestly worth a watch even if you're not a huge fan of subways and trains
Thanks for the remembrance of the Concord groundbreaking. My 14 year old self, along with a couple of friends, rode our bikes there to see the chopper landing and hear the President speak. It was a pivotal moment in Bay Area history. As an adult I worked on the system as a contractor for several years.
Where in concord was that?
At the site that would later become the Concord maintenance yard.@@lincolnlopez7563
This is about the best "driver's eye view" train videos I have ever seen, and I have watched many of them over the years. What made it so good was what you did in post with the music, the voiceovers, and the interviews. It also had that extra touch of professional polish that is rare in the kind of TH-cam video. Thank you for that.
I was born and raised in San Francisco, and still work in the City, but live in the East Bay. I take the BART multiple times every week. I know the trains are often dirty and lots of people think they're unsafe - they definitely can be! - but I appreciate this public transportation system for what it is and what it has been for decades.
My earliest memory of BART was taking it with younger brother from San Francisco to Oakland to visit a family friend who is around our ages. Our parents were busy working, so we just hopped onto BART on our own, even though we weren't even 10 years old yet!
We need to all remember that BART was relatively clean and safe until only about a decade ago. The system leadership was taken over by crazies who care about everything in the world but running trains properly. We need to demand that BART return to its normal self. This is getting ridiculous.
BART is one of the several things i love about the Bay Area. Sure, it has its issues, but ive used it my whole life, its a big part of it.
I love my home, the Bay Area, and I wont ever abandon it.
I’m thrilled to have been able to catch a showing of this at the Roxie theater in SF. This is really immaculately put together - the scoring and sound work, visual presentation, the stylish minimap, and the spirit and dedication to create a piece of documentary art like this. Bravo.
just to throw in another voice: *this is a film worth a festival or two!!* if you think about it - it’s a documentary from a cabin (i’m 99% sure it’s one of a kind stylistically in that regards) + so tastefully chosen soundtrack + even the wide lens footage is so precisely on point.
i don’t want to sound overdramatic or anything, but this is practically quite a high-ass art, it would really make sense to bring it to a wider audience to enjoy. _justsayin_
Thank you so much for this, Vincent. I was transfixed for the whole ride. The rolling hills between North Concord/Martinez and Pittsburg/Bay Point in the late afternoon are absolutely stunning. Thanks for providing the views that so many of us have craned our necks through the back of the operator's cab to catch a glimpse of :) And thanks for blending it in with such cool lived experiences of many people on the system, discussing its history, operations, and challenges going into the future. Truly, truly beautiful.
Stations:
1:40 - San Francisco International Airport (SFO)
4:28 - San Bruno
7:46 - South San Francisco
10:59 - Colma
14:28 - Daly City
18:32 - Balboa Park
20:49 - Glen Park
23:34 - 24th St Mission
25:36 - 16th St Mission
27:42 - Civic Center/UN Plaza
29:10 - Powell St
30:39 - Montgomery St
32:00 - Embarcadero
38:45 - West Oakland
42:26 - 12th St/Oakland City Center
44:10 - 19th St/Oakland
49:10 - MacArthur
52:14 - Rockridge
57:18 - Orinda
1:02:08 - Lafayette
1:06:36 - Walnut Creek
1:09:26 - Pleasant Hill/Contra Costa Centre
1:14:37 - Concord
1:17:55 - North Concord/Martinez
1:24:18 - Pittsburg/Bay Point
1:26:52 - Pittsburg Transfer Platform
BART was the first automated rapid transit system ever built. It cost about $1.6 billion which today is what Muni's T line cost to build about a mile and a half of tunnel , stations and assorted infrastructure. It cost $4.5 billion to build about 1 1/2 miles of subway under 2nd Ave in NYC (Q line extension to 96th St). There are a number of similarities between getting BART built and California High Speed Rail. Naysayers and lawsuits were/are numerous. But today BART has proven to be an incredible bargain. Cal HSR will be a bargain too 50 years after it gets built. Thanks for filming this Vincent.
and they want $12+billion for 4.7 miles to terminate 100 ft. underground in San Jose - not connecting to any other rail. Incredible bargain.
@@whyno713 Except it will directly interface with Caltrain at the Santa Clara terminus.
@@dantem4119 That's exactly my point, there's no reason these rail lines should not be inter connected and allow standard rolling stock on each others line. Instead BART is going to bore 100+ ft deep below both Dridiron and Santa Clara station - absolute bonkers.
Guess when you enjoy an entrenched monopoly you're free to protect your territory, with an astronomical budget at that.
I was on the Citizen's Committe to extend BART through San Mateo County. We could have had an aerial line through the county with a station under the garage at SFO for $400 million. We were never allowed to vote on it. Lobbyists convinced the Board of Supervisors to take us out of the district. This was a bargain compared to what the CalTrain improvements has cost. This left Santa Clara County isolated. The Marin County and Golden Gate Bridge directors story is an even sadder tale.
@@whyno713 BART does not run on standard gauge tracks so it cannot share tracks with Caltrain / CAHSR. However, CAHSR trains will use Caltrain tracks to get into central SFC
I work in the Bay Area now and have been a public transit and train enthusiast since the ripe old age of 11, when I took my first train ride from the Coliseum Station to Montgomery Street. Just like the author, riding BART as a teenager afforded me unimaginable freedom and not having to depend on having an adult driver. As I grew up and learned about other transit systems around the world I came to realize how remarkable it is to have a system like BART available to us. I marveled at the pre-pandemic crowds braving BART during rush hours in downtown SF stations and it made it all the more exciting. I still ride BART on a regular basis in 2023 but it saddens me that a doomsday scenario for BART keeps being floated.
I grew up in the bay area riding bart, loved it. Last time I rode it was a year and half ago because safety seemed to be not so strong anymore... has it improved?
@@videosuperhero100 when I started riding as a kid in the 90s the feeling on BART was very similar to today. There were good times and there were bad times. I think now any little incident can usually go viral and we’re just bombarded by it through various means of media. It just doesn’t feel that the safety is better or worse now but rather we’re just hyper-aware because of all the media we consume so it feels worse.
I'm Bay Area born/raised and have been riding BART my entire life until I moved out of state four months ago. I was feeling homesick and watching your film, I didn't know I was going to have so many emotions about a transit system that has taken to almost all the end points of the system. Thank you for sharing your amazing talents! Watching this answered all my questions of what exactly does the BART operator sees. Pure Magic indeed. I will be revisiting this often when I wanting some Bay Love.
That BART is pretty symbolic in my life and I didn't even realize it. I went on my first solo international trip into California after the peak of C19. Still a stressful time to travel, and I went from a place tiny enough that there's no trains at all for hours, into such a large airport and having to figure out the BART after 14 hours of flying and at night 😂. Dealt with being around sketchy characters, the train being out of service leaving my stranded on a random platform for 30 minutes, and the shakiest ride along a highway of my life - apparently the route I was on was having track issues. Still, taking all that on while coming from a place where taking a bus out of town is considered "scary and sketchy", I felt extremely proud of myself. Not only did I gain my independence after spending my "welcome to independence" years in lockdown, I ended up becoming a pretty big transit nerd and public transportation advocate afterwards.
There's my personal rant. Absolutely beautiful video.
What a beautiful love letter to a California staple, I love just watching it on mute or low volume to relax.
40:40 BART’s cost is due to its congenital flaw, it’s non-standard rail gauge which will always require custom solutions to already solved problems.
This film is absolutely beautiful. The video itself is gorgeous and captures the character of every environment that BART runs through from subway tunnels to the rolling East Bay hills. All of the interviews, anecdotes, and facts about BART were fascinating and added so much depth to a system that most people don't think twice about once they've arrived at their destination. Just phenomenal!
So well put! With all the anxiety about if, how and when the Bay Area will recover after the pandemic, there couldn't be a more hypnotically compelling testimony to how lucky we are here to have BART.
Please release a zen version with no dialogue as well. Thanks!
The mysterious blinking incandescent lights have finally been revealed. Excellent creation and execution.
BART really is an extraordinary system. We need to relearn to love and venerate it the way we used to when it was first built. It was and still is a marvel of engineering. And the fact that it was built at all with such insane coverage is just amazing. We did well, now we just need to do better.
This video is an instant Bay Area classic! Love you all all! Love the Bay! Now let's do more an better! That's what we do!
As a lifelong Bay brat who just had to leave the region again unexpectedly this year: I am so delighted that this video found its way into my recommended. Sending this to my dad. He just moved out of the state for the first time in his 60+ years and I know he has as much fondness for BART as I do having been around to see them build it as a child. This is INCREDIBLE, Vincent. Thank you for making this!!!!
I've ridden BART for years and although I've peeked through the front car window before (mostly just to see how fast we were going), I never thought the forward view could be so cool. It looks so much faster than it feels! Thank you for the video, it's a real treat! Fun fact: If you ever watched THX 1138 (George Lucas, 1971), you were able to see the transbay tube before it had any tracks in it; a foot chase scene was filmed there.
I am rewatching this while waiting for my BART train
this is inspiring incredibly sentimental feelings in me about public transit. like how people develop emotional attachments to their cars, except if cars are your parents then bart is like mother gaia, who gives us our freedom by transporting us through her magical earth tubes
Incredible film footage. 🔥🔥
My fave Bart driver POV landscapes: 1) emerging from the tube in West Oakland and shooting up onto the elevated guideway. It's like the train is taking off into the air. 2) going through the big Grove Shafter interchange before MacArthur (580/980/24 freeways) 3) coming out of the tunnel before Orinda. You're in a bunch of trees.
The soundscape you create in this is amazing, from music to interviews to train announcements.
Never would I have thought someone would take something as nerdy as “slow TV” and real time train journeys and make into a cinematic experience. This is more than an operator filming his route. This feels different. Bravo!
I moved to the Bay Area from the Chicago suburbs last September. I love BART.
I never learned how to drive so my option for getting to and from my college campus was the yellow line.
The trip would take an hour and a half, which may sound like a long time compared to driving, but I always preferred spending that time on the train getting assignments done and listening to podcasts. I felt like the system definitely gets taken for granted, because I don't know what I'd do if it didn't exist. It's simultaneously one of the most underappreciated and greatest transit systems in North America.
Yep, this! We've forgotten how exceptional and unlikely BART is. I have been travelling extensively and always viewed BART as somewhat of a cosmic anomaly. The fact that it even exists in this country, in this state is an incredible miracle. I hope more people understand and appreciate BART!
Didn't expect that San Francisco, an American city, had such an advanced metro network. Coming from Athens, which is renowned for having an advanced metro network, kudos!
Oh, this is just the tip of the iceberg. SF was built on rail. Every two blocks there was a rail line throughout the entire city. Cable cars were invented in SF and spread throughout the entire world. We had the first public city-owned rail system in the world. A lot of that was torn down but a lot has survived and we've brought back a ton that didn't. BART itself was the first fully automated metro system in the world and reaches speeds of up to 80 mph (128 km/h) in regular service.
If you're ever visiting SF, make sure to check out the SF Cable cars (the oldest in the world), the historic electric streetcars (rolling museum with historic trams from all over the world), the Muni Metro (modern light metro), BART, and Caltrain (urban commuter rail that will be able to reach 110 mph or 177 km/h)
This is fantastic! I don't know why BART hasn't considered doing something like this for each of the lines. The Interviews, music, everything works. And it's on a legacy Train at that?
I'm a Bay Area born native living in Indiana now, but BART has been a huge part of my life since inception in 1972. Thanks to TH-cam and creators like yourself, I stay in touch with my roots.
This is fantastic
Extremely well produced. The style is so unique! Keep up the good work.
saving this to my weed playlist so i can watch it while astronomically high
My ears popped when the transbay tube footage started ... just like my ears used to do back when I took BART back in the early 1980's before leaving the bay area for the Midwest. 42:15 animal in tunnel run over alert.
This documentary film is so very well done, and is an informative and hypnotic train ride across the San Francisco Bay Area on the Bay Area Regional Transit system.
For those of us who live around the SF Bay Area and have taken a ride or two on BART, watch this film from beginning to end. You get to see the view from the very front of the train the same way the BART train operators see things. You will see a lot of the behind the scenes travel through numerous tunnels underground and under the San Francisco Bay through the Trans Bay Tunnel.
The included interviews with folks such as Michael C. Healy the former BART Director of Media, Scott Weiner California State Senator, and Dewayne Deams Train Operator sharing their perspectives and experiences on the BART system along with Albert Alexander performing as Lyndon B. Johnson when the BART system began operations back in 1971.
This film’s music soundtrack is ideal for setting the mode for this film and does add to the surreal journey on BART, especially while traveling through the numerous tunnels.
Recorded, edited and produced by Vincent Woo using a GoPro camera fastened to the front of a BART train traveling from San Francisco International Airport (SFO) south of San Francisco on the west side of the bay - to all the way out to the the eastern end of the line in Pittsburg Center.
Well done!
Once thing I love about the transbay tube is the pieces were constructed locally in San Fransisco at the now closed Bethlehem Steel shipyard. Perhaps another reason the cost would be so much high, we no longer can build the parts here :/
Glad the driver didn't hassle you more than he did about the cam retrieval in the end. I was thinking exactly how he is going to get the cam now when it pulled into that Antioch transfer train station. I'm sure you had it all worked out in your head, but then the driver had to hassle you. Thanks for the effort in making the video to share, and also the various interviews.
Thank you for this wonderful movie! As a young boy in the seventies, I was enchanted by Bart. As an adult, I've lived throughout the Bay Area, and every ride was a thrill. Always been a dream to see the view from the front of the train. Thank you again!
Like the author of this video, I was a teenager in San Jose who loved tried "escaping" on BART whenever I could. The BART trip, the bus ride to Fremont - these were the symbols of my independence, my ticket to adventure.
Brilliant!!
Mr. Woo. Thank you for sharing this on TH-cam. I could not make the Roxie showing. Over 50 years ago, I remember Market Street all dug up for the new District rail system: BARTD. Now with most of the Bay Area connected, BART as a dream is almost complete.
Love this documentary of BART, I was born and raised in the East Bay Area and my family was actually forced to relocate due to the construction of the underpass which was constructed on Ashland st in San Lorenzo
The construction of the underpass was done to allow traffic on Ashland to go underneath the Bart tracks that would be overhead, there were several houses and some apartments that met the wrecking ball to accommodate BART including my families residence.
My family eventually moved to Medford Ave in North Hayward, and our house on Medford was less than a block away from BART elevated tracks, I can still remember the test trains that were very crudely, and simple in design traveling back and forth along the BART track for what seemed a couple of years prior to BART going operational and available to the public
I have always had an affinity for BART as a child watching it be built in my city, to cutting school in JR High to go with several classmates to go ride BART on the day it opened to the public, and the many ventures taken over the years.
All these years later I feel that BART has definitely been, and remains an asset to the Bay Area today
I’ve also lived in Portland Oregon which has a light rail system The MAX Train, which in the 30+ years I lived there I witnessed the MAX be expanded across the Portland Metro Area and become what today is a Light Rail System that is definitely a benefit to the Portland Metro Area residents, as well as visitors to the Area
Today as I’m writing this I am now residing in Atlanta Georgia, and here we have MARTA rail system, which for a Metro Area the size of Atlanta is by no means sufficient, and has a long way to go before it will ever resemble anything remotely close to BART
Watched your interview on KTVU the other morning which got me interested in your documentary. I’ve been riding BART since the late 80s and this is the first time I’ve ever seen a head on view of the ride. I’ve seen many other train videos with head on views though. Glad you took the risk to make this because it’s so cool.
Thank you Vincent! Bart operators get to experience the Stargate from 2001 every day going through the Transbay Tube. I will never take another trip on BART without thinking about your 'movie'!
Amazing documentary and I love the music. Thank you TH-cam for recommending
Just echoing what everyone else has said - this was absolutely beautiful and I enjoyed every single minute of it. The footage, the music, the interviews, the map, the story - everything. Hats off to you!
This was very cool! It took me from SFO airport, with which I am very familiar, having been born and raised in The City; all the way (almost) to where I now live. Not sure when you filmed this, but the upload date says "2 months ago" as of Oct. 3, '23. Perhaps the new Antioch station, the current end of that line, was not yet open when you filmed.
I enjoyed seeing the front seat view, and I'm assuming, due to the length of the video, that this was all filmed in real time, with no fast-forward effects applied. But at times it seemed like it, as those trains sure seem to be coming into the stations awfully fast! 🙂
I've ridden BART numerous times, but not regularly by any means, and certainly not from 'end to end' of any route. It was interesting to see the operator's view, and the scenery through the East Bay, where it sometimes parallels the freeways, and sometimes is out of sight of them. Thanks for making a fascinating movie!
The movie was shot in May, but the BART yellow line ends at the eBART transfer station (to get to the "true" end of line, you have to transfer where the movie ends). Thank you for your kind words.
Wow, I used that route back in 1993 and then 2016 to get to work in San Francisco and to see it from this angle was amazing. Thanks.
I’ve always been very public-transit-pilled. Recently moved to SF from a very hostile public transit environment (TX), and this video really encapsulates my appreciation for BART in such a beautiful way. Learned a lot about the miraculous beginnings of BART. Thanks for the video.
BART is a god send
I knew a fellow who worked on building BART. He said that the lights in side the tunnels were a psychedelic light show. He was right. I'm so grateful I get to finally see what he was ecstatically talking about. Thank you!
I wish that BART were sufficiently self-aware and media-savvy to use that image as a publicity piece. It really looks amazing and no one has ever seen it outside of a tiny group of people! Many other systems would have that pattern on every other piece of media and printed on the trains.
Meanwhile, our elected BART Board is busy wasting $500k to not help a single homeless person find housing. The incompetence with them is just ridiculous.
what's the timestamp for the psychedelic light show?
Great video!
I recently retired from 20 years as an engineer at BART and this brings back lots of memories. Often I would be talking on the radio helping with testing during the graveyard shift. I was really proud to be a part of the BART team, and to work on the low level hardware and software that directly helps the public.
I still love riding BART and the train plus a bicycle is my favorite way of getting around the Bay Area.
Phenomenal BART documentary. Clever filming concept, fleshed out & brought to life with insightful commentaries & interviews. Bravo Mr. Woo!
30:12 just realizing how cool the evolution of the look of the stations is. They morph in a way that reflects the neighborhood of the station. They all look really cool.
Love this, even as a NYer. (Well, I did live in SF for three years, but only occasionally took BART because Civic Center was closer than 5th and King, and I often had to take Caltrain to Palo Alto where my corporate HQ was). Really annoyed me that BART and Caltrain didn't synchronize trains at Millbrae. Bay Area could absolutely work better to coordinate services between its systems.
I agree. If Caltrain went into downtown SF where BART has its most intense frequency, and if Caltrain electrified so it could run as frequently as BART, the whole Bay Area would feel so much easier to navigate. Riding from Berkeley to Palo Alto, Redwood City to Richmond, Hayward to Hillsdale could be as effortless as going from Balboa Park to Bayfair today. It's maddening/exhilarating. Caltrain's electrification and extension to the Salesforce Transit Center seem so close...but then again they're still 6 or 7 long years away.
@@peteralbert1485 Well, electrification is a thing, so that's something.
@@GregCostikyan-t1u Exactly. I remember the days when I had to get off BART at Colma and transfer to a bus that finished to last few miles on the crowded freeway to get to SFO. I thought it would be a game-changer when BART finally went into SFO. And it has been, it's a connection I never take for granted. It reminds me that some progress might feel like small steps, but other times it feels like the huge leap forward we needed.
Brilliantly done. I have a greater appreciation for BART and it’s employees. Thank you for this.
Thank you for cluing me into this Vincent and I appreciate our many chats, even the super technical heavy ones! I look forward to helping you secure footage of future rides. This was an amazing film!
As a transit enthusiast myself from the SF Bay Area, I truly love BART and this is a wonderful ride video!
6 years ago I spent the summer in the Bay Area. Shared a place with 4 other persons, but had the best time of my life. Almost every weekend I would make sure to travel somewhere in the city center and just explore, but there was one rare day when all of us visited the touristy places together. We rode BART on the way back, and the sunshine was just like what's in this video. Thank you for bringing that memory back.
This is a W moment for all of us who really wanted to see what it was like at the front of the bart train when we were younger. going through the subway tunnels, and seeing what cool things might be inside, but now a question pops up for me, i wonder what people were thinking when they saw a camera mounted onto the front of this bart.
Back in 1998 I worked for the company that wired up all the Bart tunnels with commercial grade dark fiber for this new thing called the "Information Superhighway". Most of it ran between the Oakland airport, Lake Merrit, and the Montgomery st. station in downtown SF. If you life in SF or Oakland chances are you are using an Internet connection that I helped install!
I actually had the same idea a few years ago when I got my new GoPro camera, to do this along with filming the BART with my drone. But never managed to actually to get the proper authorization, to go and do it. So, well done indeed ! And great work putting everything together nicely, along with the BART's map.
Sometimes it's easier to ask for forgiveness than to ask for permission.
@@derek20la yep, especially if your flamboyance causes an accident. Big brainzzzzzz.
@@z00h Name even 2 reasons how putting a GoPro on the front of a BART train could cause an accident. I'll wait...
@@derek20la someone sees it, knows it's unauthorized, jumps on the train to remove it and the operator doesn't hit the emergency brake in time, person falls in front of the train. This other one probably won't happen, but the GoPro falls off and shorts out the train or if on an elevated section, falls on someone's head. Many bullets get shot into the air, all it takes is the lucky winner to find out.
Great job Vincent! I rode BART many years and the bayarea was home for more than 20 years. It drives me to tears to ride the bart again with you, from sfo to Pittsburgh bay point, sitting in my Hawaii backyard.
Hey, don't worry, Honolulu is building a trains that is basically just modernized BART. The HART planners literally said that they wanted to build something like BART and they did! So at least now you'll have something extremely similar to a modern BART right there in Hawaii!
I visited UC Berkley for a 4 day weekend and used the BART every day! I loved every minute of it and the cars which were newer, really classed up my ride. We need an equivalent in LA cuz the metro is so much worse.
This is beautiful-I'm only 3 minutes in but I really like the short of Caltrain speeding ahead from Millbrae
was matching the sound design to the blinking light around 43:20 intentional???
I also really like that I caught Caltrain. That particular light was not synced to the audio, but other stuff is.
This is the problem Miami is facing now. We have a few systems, but we have not expanded them in many years. And it's come to the point where we can no longer live without it.
This is really cool. I just spent two weeks in San Francisco and fell in love with the city and both the BART and MUNI systems played a big role in that. Great film and interviews. Thanks for sharing!
Public transportation gets a bad rap, but Muni is seriously underrated
I had completely blocked out the memory of guys in big jackets approaching me and trying to sell me a $10 ticket for $5 at Powell street while I used the ticket machine as a 13 or 14 year old. This revived a lot of childhood memories for me. Thank you
I'm from SoCal and have ridden BART a couple of times. This journey was SOOOO amazing. Was it the narration? The Video? But it's a view that no-one, except the conductor, ever sees. Thank you for this "vacation"!!!
BART was always there when I needed it. I miss so much about the Bay. Best times in my life
This has to be one of the coolest videos I've seen about BART! I have thoroughly enjoyed watching this!
Unauthorized? Well this may be, but BART must really award you for promoting the beauty of the system, the importance of rapid transit and how fundamental it is for countries and cities to invest in heavy rail. I am a foreigner but I have heard that BART is facing some financial difficulties because of the continuous low ridership. Despite the fact that we have exited the pandemic's restrictions, it seems that people still choose to work from home.
BART is an amazing system, with its flaws, but I cannot stop loving the beautiful architecture of stations like e.g. Balboa Park and Glen Park and how it has helped S.F. to grow.
Exceptional one of a kind video. Who knows, maybe BART will be inspired by you and follow the CTA's example and film full videos of its own lines/routes.