Categorized | Event

The Gautrain makes its public debut

Posted on 08 June 2010

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Today I felt like I participated in a little bit of history in the making. I joined a couple of hundred others on the first couple of trains open to the public on the Gautrain.

I’m not going to gush positivity all over my experience as Ivo Vegter implies everyone has done and blindly so but I am going to try and be balanced in my positive experience.

Yes, there were problems very early in the morning. While entering the parking lot it seems as though someone forgot to put tickets in to the parking machine, so no one entering was able to receive their parking tickets. This was swiftly sorted out by a Gautrain employee standing at the boom and swiping for every car. So on the plus side, parking was free today.

Of the five pay-points to purchase your Gautrain Gold Launch Edition travel card probably two worked consistently, but at random within the five. Point #1 would work, then stop, then #2 and #5 would work and stop working. So that was a challenge. It took us probably 45 minutes to get our Gautrain Gold cards. This is definitely something that needs to be worked on. The most frustrating thing however was the lack of support staff there to fix the problems and assist customers. Of the staff that were present most looked like Executives and many were blurting out French praise at one another instead of trying to assist people. The remainder of the staff were selling, out of a red bag, R300 pre-loaded travel cards, not trying to fix the pay-point systems that sold them to us. I saw a lot of cash changing hands instead of going in to pay-points.

Going down deep in to the heart of Sandton. Way down.

That’s the bad, and let me say, that was all the bad, right there in a single paragraph.

For the rest of it i was overwhelmed, moved and extremely proud to have participated in such a momentous occasion for Gauteng, South Africa and Africa. Sorry Ivo, but I gushed didn’t I? Let me just make a quick comment on Ivo’s column over at the Daily Maverick, here’s a little excerpt from his column:

On another occasion, I was driven around Johannesburg and Pretoria by a lady who waited at various locations for me to complete my business. I paid for that convenience; a rental car may have been cheaper. It would have been a right pain, however, to have been dependent on public transport.

So, am I a masochist? No, I’m not, and my reasons for preferring a private taxi go way beyond mere sympathy for a hard-working man or woman who earns an honest living without relying on government handouts.

It sounds to me that Ivo is neither a masochist nor a pessimist. I think Ivo is a little bit of a travel elitist and somewhat lazy when it comes to his travels. He would rather be chauffeured around town in a private car (often a Mercedes) costing who knows how much, than travel with the masses, drive a car, park and go to meetings while directing himself around town. Sorry Ivo, it sounds to me like the Gautrain was just not built for people like yourself.

Back to the story. We arrived at the Marlboro station and were told by a very polite staff member that we would be at the station for exactly 28 seconds to allow passengers on and off at the station. We left exactly 28 seconds later. Exactly. In under ten minutes we arrived at the airport. Done.

I stopped in to the Mugg & Bean with my friends, had a quick coffee and bite to eat and hopped on the next train in (which arrive approximately every 12 minutes). Ten minutes later we were back in the Sandton station, in our cars and leaving for home.

Some say that the cost – R10 travel card, R100 one way – is a bit extreme. Well I think I’m a little bit of a travel elitist too because I would rather pay R100 to get to the airport in under 15 minutes guaranteed than leave 3 hours before a flight in fear of the traffic and parking situations ruining my flight.

That, as they say, is that. My experience was not without its flaws but I do believe that there is potential for the Gautrain to become invaluable to travels both frequent and infrequent.

Do yourself a favour and give it a whirl when you next need to be at the airport or fetch someone. You wont regret seeing your city in a way you’ve never seen it before; from the seat of a very sexy train hurtling across town at 160km/hour.

Nic chilling comfortably on the Gautrain back in to Sandton


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This post was written by:

Nic Haralambous

Nic Haralambous - who has written 999 posts on SA Rocks.

I am the editor, owner and founder of SA Rocks. This project is close to my heart and keeps me sane and grounded in a country filled with diversity, enthusiasm, confusion, frustration but above all, hope.

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16 Comments For This Post

  1. Gravatar JBagley Says:

    Your experience Nic sounds very first world like. Awesome to finally have some decent public transport! Can’t wait to use the Gautrain next time I’m up in JHB.

  2. Gravatar Paul Bedford Says:

    The ticketing was a bit of a nightmare despite the system being stress tested prior to launch. I managed to make it onto the first train which left as advertised at 05h24. On the way back we had about a 10 minute delay at Rhodesfield as one of the train doors decided not to close. Good to meet the CEO at Sandton station as well.

  3. Gravatar jacki janse van rensburg (@scrappintimes) Says:

    i have been on the gautrain twice, but not yet today. i am sorry to hear there were some issues today, but i am sure they will be sorted out soon.

    all i have been reading everywhere about the train, is the steep cost of R100 Sandton – OR Tambo. but this is only one of eventually many legs. Rhodesfield – Sandton is a mere R21.

    the gautrain is not for everyone, all the time. but it is an extra option for us to choose from. and i for one am excited, and will most certainly be using it.

  4. Gravatar Derek Says:

    This is very cool – I am looking fwd to the JHB-PTA option.

    Re the cost. A similar system in Sweden, from town to airport, costs Kr 240 (one way, adult – cheaper options for others) or about R230. So, I think this is comparable.

  5. Gravatar Nick Says:

    But Sweden people earn more money. Plus Sweden is a first world. Your Train is soon going to be taken over by the masses. Or are yiu keeping it expensive as another racist statement?

  6. Gravatar Nic Haralambous Says:

    Your ignorance just grows and grows with every comment you leave on SA Rocks Nick. Thanks for sharing and showing us that SA is most definitely better without people like you bringing it down.

    And, how about you get your facts straight before you make a comment. Do you know what an LSM is? Well the average SA family sits in LSM 6. Do your research (Use that new website I keep hearing about, Google) and figure our what you can make of that.

    Ignorance is not a solution, it’s just ignorance.

  7. Gravatar Mike Says:

    Dear Nic,

    Reading your post and the comments, I must say we South Africans undersell yourselves everytime. Yes, we have issues, crime, unemployment, lack of infrastructure to name a few, but with that there is opportunity and with opportunity comes a reward or return (and obviously risk).

    If you have been to London or to some bigger City in Europe, they have the same problems, but more importantly they have structural problems (age distribution of population, bankrupt finance markets and banks, etc.), which we don’t have.

    So, head up chest out and be proud of what we have achieved and show the world what a great place South Africa is.

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1 Trackbacks For This Post

  1. The Gautrain Wind Advert | South Africa Rocks Says:

    [...] light of my experiences yesterday I thought it relevant to post the Gautrain advert, which seems to focus on the speed of the train [...]

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