Saturday, August 7, 2010
London taxis ranked world’s best, New York and Paris the rudest
File photo of a taxi during rush hour traffic in London.
London taxis, with their friendly drivers who actually know where they are going, are ranked best in the world, according to an annual taxi poll.
The survey by travel website hotels.com found London taxis, despite being the most expensive, beat rivals across the globe to head the list for the third consecutive years, scoring a total of 59 per cent in votes on several categories by travellers.
London taxi drivers were voted both friendliest and most knowledgeable. Drivers in the English capital must pass a rigorous examination called The Knowledge to earn their taxi licence.
New York’s yellow taxis came second in the list, scoring 27 per cent which was up 10 percentage points from last year even though Manhattan’s cab drivers tied with Parisian taxi drivers as the rudest.
Travellers said New York had the most available taxis.
Cabbies in Rome were voted the worst drivers in the world with almost one in 10 travellers thinking the Italian capital had the world’s worst taxi drivers when it came to the quality of driving.
“Travelling by taxi is one of the first experiences that many travellers have upon arrival in a new city. In fact, the research found that cabs are by far the most popular method of travelling from the airport to their hotel,” a spokesman for hotels.com said in a statement.
The global poll scored city based taxis for their levels of cleanliness, value, quality of driving, knowledge of the area, friendliness, safety and availability.
Rounding out the top five were Tokyo with a total score of 26 per cent, Berlin with 17 per cent, and Bangkok famed for its tuk-tuks scoring 14 per cent.
Madrid’s taxis were ranked sixth in the poll, followed by Copenhagen and Dublin with 11 per cent and Frankfurt and Paris with 10 per cent.
Taxis in Sydney fell short of the top 10, scoring badly in the areas of value for money, availability and knowledge of the area.
The survey for hotels.com, part of the Expedia group, was conducted among over 1,900 travellers between May 11-28 this year.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment