Amsterdam braces itself for new OV-chipkaart
Posted: Thu 27th Aug 2009 05:31 am
Amsterdam braces itself for new OV-chipkaart
26/08/2009
In an editorial, de Telegraaf writes Thursday will be a crucial day for the Amsterdam metro and its passengers who will no longer be allowed to use the strippenkaart. Passengers will be required to use the new ov-chipkaart to check in and out.
Amsterdam’s public transport company (GVB) will have hundreds of assistants on hand to help passengers with the new system.
“It is questionable if this will be enough to avoid chaos. The experiences with the smart card have not been that positive… For instance, half of the 120 ticket machines in the capital have been suffering from breakdowns and other glitches every day,” writes the paper.
De Telegraaf writes the reason for the failure of the machines could be due to the GVB trying to save cost by ordering the ticket machines and the disposable cardboard smart cards from different companies.
Two percent of the expensive throw-away cards do not work, which means that 600 clients are duped every day.
De Telegraaf points out Rotterdam had a lot of problems when it introduced the chipkaart and that Amsterdam metro passengers can "only hold their breath".
Source
26/08/2009
In an editorial, de Telegraaf writes Thursday will be a crucial day for the Amsterdam metro and its passengers who will no longer be allowed to use the strippenkaart. Passengers will be required to use the new ov-chipkaart to check in and out.
Amsterdam’s public transport company (GVB) will have hundreds of assistants on hand to help passengers with the new system.
“It is questionable if this will be enough to avoid chaos. The experiences with the smart card have not been that positive… For instance, half of the 120 ticket machines in the capital have been suffering from breakdowns and other glitches every day,” writes the paper.
De Telegraaf writes the reason for the failure of the machines could be due to the GVB trying to save cost by ordering the ticket machines and the disposable cardboard smart cards from different companies.
Two percent of the expensive throw-away cards do not work, which means that 600 clients are duped every day.
De Telegraaf points out Rotterdam had a lot of problems when it introduced the chipkaart and that Amsterdam metro passengers can "only hold their breath".
Source