Wednesday, 2 April 2025

Public Transport in Vientiane, Laos (2) Urban Travel

Buses

Vientiane has a reasonable city bus network which is centered on a combined local bus and long distance coach station.  However, as the Vientiane bus network has evolved over the last couple of years so there seems to be quite a lot of out of date information on the 'net. Indeed there are some sites from only a few years ago that state there is no public transport system in the city including oe such site from 2017 linked fro the Wikipedia page for Vientiane.  This is probably the most up to date on-line map of the Vientiane bus network and also shows real time location of buses. The ThaiEst site looks like it has the latest timetables and fares for each route. 

Bus station

Bus station

Route network poster

Timetables on display at the bus station.  The lack of consistent format is frustrating!

Isuzu city bus mainly used on the route to the Friendship Bridge (Thai border crossing) and Budd Park, route 14.  Tickets for this route can be purchased in advance from the ticket office - indeed signage asks that you do so. However there is also a conductor on board not lease because of customers boarding at any other location.  Bodyside branding suggests these were a gift from Japan.

Mitsubishi minibus used on most city buses.  Branding on these also suggests they were a gift from Japan to aid Laos' economic and social development.

A JMMC (JingMa Motor Conpany) Co-Star minibus are also used.  The branding on these suggests they were bought for transport to an ASEAN conference in 2014 before entering the local bus fleet.

Typical bus stop although some are more grandiose affairs with shelters, and some attempt at information.

A very low capacity version of the Co-Star is used on airport route 33.  This is also be far the most expensive service at 40,000KIP (about £1.50) one-way

A cheaper way to/from the airport would be route 8 which passes the road entrance but does not go in to the terminal. 

Coaches

The coach services from Vientiane bus station primarily serve cross-border traffic to Udon Thani in Thailand.  Unlike the chaos of Udon Thani coach station, Vientiane is relatively calm and organised, not least because it comes with a proper ticket office and waiting area.  There are a variety of coach types in service, some with air conditioning and some without, and whilst I didn't check I am sure there is a fare differential to reflect this. The vehicles are all on the Laos register.

Ticket office: separate windows for each coach route as well as the local bus 14 mentioned above.





Songatheaw

Vientiane appears to have a small songtheaw network.  Any more information has been hard to come by - it's definitely a case of "if you know, you know, and if you don't know it's not for you!".  Here's one I saw.

Tuk Tuk

As stated in part 1, Vientiane uses tuk tuks as designed, as taxis.  Whilst they will attempt to overcharge around tourist attractions that's no different to taxis the world over.  Here's some tuk tuks on rank in central Vientiane.


Bus Rapid Transit

BRT is a popular means of enhancing urban transport in developing cities, most famously in cities such as Curitiba and Bogota and latterly in central Africa and Asia.  A three route BRT system is planned to open in mid-2025 in Vientiane, although I learnt about it when the letters 'BRT' caught my eye on some site boards!

There is this mildly amusing video from Laos TV news reporting on the delivery of the BRT buses from Chery & Wanda Guizhou Co of China (incidentally, order a double deck city bus from them and its only a 60-day lead time to delivery!).

To my very untrained eye it did appear that construction had halted on those parts of the BRT that I could see, but I did not explore all 30km+ of the network so it may well just be that construction phasing did not necessitate any work on the parts I could see.




Vientiane Sustainable Urban Transport is the project name of which BRT is one part,

Partially constructed BRT stop.






Sunday, 30 March 2025

Public Transport in Vientiane, Laos (1) Taking the Train from Thailand

 I am now two months in to a career break, which has naturally taken me on many buses and metros, not all out of necessity!  It is therefore about time I wrote about some of them, and having a day 'at home' is finally an opportunity to do that.  So here are some photos and observations from a couple of days in Vientiane, the capital of Laos, in early 2025.

Part 1 Rail

Vientiane has two large, modern railway stations both opened in the last few years.  Both are located some distance from the centre of Vientiane.   The new Vientiane station is some 10 miles out of the city centre and has rail links to the north (to Luang Prabang in Laos and Mohen, Yunnan Province, China) which have been built/modernised by the Chinese 'Belt & Road' initiative.  On-line photos suggest some fancy looking rolling stock is employed by the Chinese.

However I arrived from Udon Thani in to Khamsavath station, a mere five miles from central Vientiane.  There are two trains a day through from Bangkok taking many hours, and two more 'short trips' from 'UD'.  I travelled on the 16:00 departure, which was formed of a Thai Alsthom-built locomotive and five carriages, a mix of second class with air conditioning and third class without. The second class carriages are former JR-West (Japan) carriages. Whilst ticket checks seemed numerous and excessive, starting with security guards in the UD station, this was probably to get over the language barrier and ensure everyone, such as the three westerners in my carriage, were on the right train. Despite five carriages the loading on the train barely reached double figures: the train staff motioned me and other customers out of their reserved seats in to seats that were not directly in the sun and this was very welcome!  

The train waiting at UD.

Departure board at UD station.

Second class interior.  The seats swivel 180 degrees to face the other way, if desired!

Border Crossing

Trains from Thailand to Laos cross the border at Nong Khai: domestic passengers can alight the international trains here, and there is also a more frequent service from Udon Thani operated by diesel multiple units.  It seems the majority of passengers on our train did indeed alight and as far as I can tell only six passengers were on the train for the border crossing, three westerners and three locals.  International passengers also needed to alight and formally exit Thailand: unlike at Bangkok's airports they stamp passports here.

After alighting the train and walking towards immigration the train shunts forward to collect its international load.

Immigration is at the chest height windows on the right,  no queue is always welcome!


Crossing the Friendship Bridge over the Mekong River, where the rail line and road are one so vehicular traffic is suspended to allow the train to run over.

Mid-1980s vintage Japanese DMU operating local services to the border town of Nong Khai.

The new economic order is very much on display in Laos with the majority of rail freight wagons and containers displaying Chinese ownership.

Arrival at Laos

The new station at Khamsaveth is little more than a year old, but has been built with traditional platforms only a few inches high, so no concept of level access or disability awareness here. It is at Khamsaveth that immigration in to Laos is performed.  Despite having an e-visa I still had to complete arrival forms which provide all the same information as in my e-visa application.  As an aside, the e-visa costs USD10 more than the visa on arrival (USD 50 vs USD 40) for no obvious benefit.  As a further aside, having a printed copy of my Thai Railways e-ticket and Laos e-visa appeared to speed things up! A final aside is that immigration likes crisp US dollar notes for their fee; e-visa is a little easier as you pay on-line. At least with only three westerners on the train immigration was fairly quick: there are six immigration counters in a style that will be familiar to anyone who's ever arrived in to a foreign country, but here they chose to use a small side window, again at stomach/chest height!  

Khamsaveth station is massive, and empty.  At 7pm there is no foreign exchange, no ATMs and for those so inclined no Laos SIM card retailer.  Another poor understanding of the role of an international railway station.  There did seem to be about a hundred people waiting post immigration for the retain train to Thailand, which would go overnight to Bangkok.  There was one waiting tuk tuk outside (in Udon and Vientiane tuk tuks are used as a regular taxi rather than the tourist traps they are in Bangkok).  I suspect I paid twice the 'locals' rate for the ride to my hotel: the other two westerners used a local app to hail a taxi.  The dust and fumes on road mean this is probably a preferable option.

Walking from the train to immigration

Passengers awaiting the return to Udon Thani and Bangkok

Local SIM card retailers missing the point!  

Ticker desks for both the China and Thailand trains.

Bank and the only currency exchange also not particularly useful for tourists,

My ride from Khamsaveth station to the hotel.

These are not motorbike adaptions, they are purpose built.  That's a manual gear box level by the driver's left knee!

The road from the station was nominally tarmac'd but seemed to have been cut up very badly to the point where was piles of dirt for vehicles to navigate around,  It got better once closer in to the urban area.

It's sad that demand for the train is so low: there are many cross-border coaches and minibuses operating (see part 2...).  The low demand results in Vientiane's Khamsaveth station having very poor facilities for arriving visitors - no bank, money changers or ATMs for example.  Cash can help get around other issues, lack of local SIM card, WiFi or taxi rank, for example. I do wonder how long the trains from Udon Thani will operate with such low demand, whether the link can be maintained by just the through trains from Bangkok, or whether the local trains to Nong Khai could be extended.