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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums110 year old monorail still working in Germany
Removing Billions Of Vehicle Miles With Cost-Effective Electric Monorails
By: David Russell Schilling | May 17th, 2013
The worlds oldest operating transportation monorail (schwebebahan in German) built in 1901 in Wuppertal, Germany, stretches 8.3 miles (13.3 km), has 20 stations, a top speed of 34 mph (56 kph) and still carries 82,000 passengers a day. Engineers used a double-track system and the original monorail cars were the first all-steel transit vehicles in history.
The Japanese built a dual track dual platform monorail system in Tokyo for the 1964 Summer Olympic Games because the Ministry of transportation wanted to avoid the cost of land acquisition. Hitachi was called upon to develop a high-capacity transit system in the air because airspace was free and without congestion. To date the Tokyo monorail has transported 1.5 billion people to Haneda airport.
Monorail Elberfeld Mitte Wuppertal Germany (Oldest Monorail in the World Image Courest http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/)
The Technology
Monorails are now a proven technology carrying hundreds of thousands of passengers each day in many of the urban centers of the world and have a safe track record whether the technology is straddle beam or suspended. Derailing is virtually unheard of with this technology and most monorail systems are electrically powered making them nonpolluting and environmentally friendly. It is estimated that the Las Vegas Monorail removes 4.2 million vehicle miles from Nevadas roadways and reduces emissions by 75 tons of carbon monoxide and other pollutants each year.
Monorails are also cost-effective. The Tokyo to Haneda monorail has been operating since 1964 and makes money every year. For these reasons monorails are being looked at by transit planners worldwide from Seattle to Houston to Kuala Lumpur, Okinawa, India, China and elsewhere.
Los Angeles Traffic Jam (Image Courtesy www.latimes.com)
Bad Monorail Decision in Los Angeles
Much of the history of monorails is populated with projects that could have been but never got off the drawing board. One infamous example was the 1963 proposal from the Alweg Monorail Company of Germany that pioneered the single track monorail and was eventually adopted in Japan. At a cost of $105 million the LA monorail would have had a very large footprint in Los Angeles and saved the US and California taxpayers billions of dollars that eventually went into freeways. At the time of the decision not to build the project excitement among politicians and planners was quickly snuffed out when Standard Oil executives got involved.
http://www.industrytap.com/removing-billions-of-vehicle-miles-with-cost-effective-electric-monorails/2904
Bluenorthwest
(45,319 posts)What a thing it is.