Low-floor bus development The invention of special kerbs for low-floor buses is connected with the introduction of
low-floor buses and modern
low-floor trams in the late 20th century. The German
NEOPLAN Bus GmbH had designed the first bus with a "low-entry section" in 1976 but it was not accepted well in the market. Since the 1980s, the
Association of German Transport Companies invested into the design for a new standard bus, the "", with the second-generation
Neoplan N 416 from 1982 to find wider acceptance. Shortly later, MAN's competitor Daimler was designing the
Mercedes-Benz O405 in 1984 to fit with the new Standard-Bus requirements, and this model spread quickly in the market in the late 1980s. Based on the Standard-Bus model, a number of variants were developed by their respective manufacturers – here, it was the
Kässbohrer Setra S 300 NC to show the first a low-floor version in 1987 that was sold since 1989. Daimler began to derive the low-floor version of its successful model in its
Mercedes-Benz O 405 N, that was produced since late 1989, and which proved to be of a robust design in the following years, leading into rising production numbers. Consequently, Neoplan again developed low-floor versions of their Standard-Buses, named
Neoplan N4014, N4015, N4016 NF with production starting in 1990.
Accessibility concepts With more low-floor buses being introduced to public transport in Germany in the late 1980s, it sparked ideas to optimize accessibility. The introduction of low-floor buses had reduced the number of steps from two or three to one, but the remaining step was a barrier to wheelchairs. A simple elevation of the bus platform is not enough, as there is often a gap too wide for wheels to traverse. The parallel introduction of low-floor trams showed, that with proper horizontal alignment, the gap can be small enough to be barrier-free. After the first low floor trams in Geneva of 1987, the city of Bremen asked MAN to develop a low floor tram. The resulting prototypes of
ADtranz GT6N were delivered in 1990 and mass production started in 1992 with the first batches entering service in Berlin, Bremen and Munich in the following years. The experiences with that first generation sparked interest to take further advantage of the low floor designs. The introduction of
barrier-free concepts into bus transport systems in the 1990s was successful up to the point, that the German transport companies stopped ordering high-floor designs by 1998 and eventually MAN and Daimler stopped producing high-floor city buses in Europe by 2001—public (city) transport companies no longer wanted such designs. While the first special bus stop kerbs were using the Kassel Sonderbord, other kerb manufacturers followed the model by offering kerbs that optimize vertical and horizontal alignment for low-floor buses. == Kassel Sonderbord ==