Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Technology

New Thoughts in Public Transportation 576

Matthew Shaylor writes "The BBC has the following article about an ultramodern public transport system to be tested in Cardif. Unlike conventional public transport, this consists of small cars that running on tracks can automatically take themselves to the correct destination. This allows there to be a mesh of tracks and stations thoughout a city, as opposed to traditional transport which tends to run along corridor routes to a city center. An interesting paper is available. Future versions may have dual control to allow people to drive the cars from the nearest station off the track to their homes. A true replacement for the car!"
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

New Thoughts in Public Transportation

Comments Filter:
  • this isn't a new "concept", but I find it interesting that something that always seemed (to me) to be one of those sci-fi concepts that was, while not impossible, very very improbable due the the immense infrastructure required - to see this now actually being discussed as a possibility. it's actually quite interesting.
  • Cargo capacity? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by InfinityWpi ( 175421 )
    If I ride a Sewgay, can I fit it onto one of these cars to that I don't run the battery down if I'm going across town?
  • Bikes (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hogsback ( 548721 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:41PM (#2854976) Homepage

    I'm v.pleased to see from the photo that they will allow bikes to be taken aboard.

    The combination of bike and public transport is perfect for me and many others.
    • Wow.. an intelligent response regarding public transportation. You must not be one of my fellow Americans. Go ahead and mod me down, but the American attitude towards public transportation is appaling. People feel so threatened if an alternative to their 3 ton gas-guzzling SUVs are offered.

      Why is not having to lug yourselves around in 6000 pounds of metal so unappealing?
      • People feel so threatened if an alternative to their 3 ton gas-guzzling SUVs are offered.

        {flame on}

        Ah... what a nice load of steaming crap that sentance is.

        How does (the assumption of) not using something mean we're "threatend" by it? Is a vegatarian "threatened" by beef if she or he doesn't eat it? Am I "threatened" by Paulie Shore movies because I refuse to watch them.

        Don't confuse not using something with malice.

        Why is not having to lug yourselves around in 6000 pounds of metal so unappealing?

        Why to you is it? Uh, maybe because its different stokes for different folks. It may seem unfathomable to you but maybe some people like driving around in tanks (I don't, but that's just me). Since when did the world revolve around what satsujin thinks?

        {Flame off}
        • Why is not having to lug yourselves around in 6000 pounds of metal so unappealing?

          Why to you is it?

          {begin rant} Simple (at least for me) -- SUVs excessively threaten me as the driver of a normal vehicle.

          How?:

          1. excessive weight and energy -- my car is 3000 lbs gross, while a suburban is 8600 lbs (http://www.chevrolet.com/suburban/engine_sub/8100 .htm). So, the suburban is carrying more than double the energy in a collision.

          2. high bumpers, which conveniently miss most of the crumple zone of my vehicle, magnifying the hazard of the excess weight of the SUV.

          3. poor handling relative to a normal vehicle, which increases the chance of a collision.

          4. SUV drivers with no clue as to how to handle these limitations.

          5. the fat, tall, and opaque behind of an SUV blocks my view of potential trouble ahead.

          6. I observe that SUV drivers are more prone to poor driving -- Left Lane Banditry (failing to keep right except to pass), and wandering all over the road whilst Driving While Yakking/shaving/reading/disciplining their rug rats.

          I would mitigate these hazards as follows:

          1. SUV speed limit is 80% of the posted limit (limit 70 mph -> SUV limit of 56), which reduces the crash energy by 36% (one half m v squared.) Ban SUVs from the passing and HOV lanes.

          2. tax SUV owners on a per mile driven and per pound basis, to compensate for the increased wear on the road. Heck, tax all drivers this way.

          3. SUV owners pay $2000/year/SUV into a SUV victims fund.

          4. remove the business tax preferences to SUVs.

          {end rant}

          Ok, so I'm dreaming. Sue me.

  • Larger cities have no way of building such infrastructure and already have subways which can carry far more people than this system. It is a good replacement for light rails suitable for the sprawling suburbs, but since taking one means you won't have access to your car it probably will never take off.

    The best solution is really robotic cars. We should enact legislation so that all new roads built have some sort of simple radio emitters in them to help guide the robotic cars. Then we can all read slashdot on our wireless neighboor LANs while we ride to work every day.
    • The only problem with this solution (robotic cars) is that it does absolutly nothing for the environment. I realize, this is a side goal of mass transit systems, but it is a valid goal none the less. So I hope the robotic cars idea doesn' t get popular before we have much more efficient automobiles.
      • robotic cars would go a long way to reducing congestion synonymous with rush hour. congestion is basically brought on by a) consistently bad high-latency decision making and b) aggressive me-only thinking. reducing congestion would reduce travel times (thus emissions) and high emissions produced during constant braking/acceleration cycles.
        • because I hit submit a little too quickly...

          robotic cars, at a minimum, would produce better fuel efficiencies the same way that cruise control does.

          try it some time on a long trip. cruise control is better at maintaining constant speeds and gives better gas mileage. humans have a tendency to speed up or slow down without noticing (we're highly distractable) then brake suddenly or accelerate to compensate. we make crappy pilots for mundane/repeatable/non-creative tasks which is where machines excel.

          other "environmental" benefits would be reduced loss of life. maybe not environmental in the classical definition... that benefit alone is worth the price of admission. no more drunk driving deaths.
    • I definately agree with the robotic cars. Although I'd rather see differential GPS systems installed around the city for use by such vehicles. I'd also like to see them designed such that the cars signal between themselves to keep track of traffic conditions so they can adjust speed and course automaticly to keep traffic flowing. By taking human drivers out of the equation, traffic flow on the highways would be drasticly improved.
    • I don't know of a lot of cities in my area that would want one of these things. I don't think the cost is covering stuff like weather maintenance--such as clearing the tracks for snow & ice during winter months (obviously where it snows).
      Plus how many communities want a huge track like this in there neighborhood? People complain about Cellphone towers being an eye sore now. I think people will complain about the tracks for this device being an eye sore.
      Then there are the scams. The only thing a scam artist would have to do is place a false keyboard on top of the regular one and combine it with a small device to read the magnetic strip and then the criminal would have all your card information. More than likely the payment will be done with a credit card to use current info structures.
      I don't think this will take off. I think it is a great idea, but I honestly don't think it will take off.
  • by fractalus ( 322043 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:42PM (#2854984) Homepage
    So... you swipe a card, punch in a destination, and suddenly they have a very neat record of where you've gone using public transportation. Nice.

    Aside from that, it's an interesting idea; you don't necessarily have the hassle of figuring out bus schedules. And you don't have to deal with a cab driver who barely speaks English and is quite willing to drive you around New York for two hours because you don't know that your destination is really only a fifteen-minute drive from the airport. So in that sense, it's nice.

    I especially appreciated the photo that shows a bike will easily fit into these vehicles... good call! Heck, that means fitting a Segway in there would be pretty easy...
  • by PorcelainLabrador ( 321065 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:43PM (#2854993) Homepage

    .. is that the people constructing these tracks don't have a large enough supply of "curved" sections of track, and always have plenty of "straight" sections of track. Thus, they keep having to go back to Toys R Us to buy more "curvy" tracks...
  • feasible? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by bje2 ( 533276 )
    this doesn't seem very feasible to integrate into big existing cities like New York, LA, etc...this might be nice if you were building a city from scratch..but other then that...

    on a side note, doesn't the picture of the ULTra on the elevated track remind you of the Monorail [tvtome.com] epsiode of the simpsons?

    • NY and LA are old cities, whereas Cardiff is being built from scratch.

      Right.

    • Err Cardiff has been there quite a bit longer than either NewYork or LA. Of course it can be done if the city wants it to be done.

      The Underground in London probably got a similar response when they first built it. Then they built one in Paris and the rest is history.

      Cardiff isn't a new town, which is why it has problems, it was started a long long time before cars and hence it needs new solutions as its not been built for cars ala NewYork and LA.
  • Self Driving Cars (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Liquid(TJ) ( 318258 ) <austgenNO@SPAMo2tent.com> on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:44PM (#2855006) Homepage
    This is really the self driving cars question, taken from the oppisite approach.

    I still think that the best way to tackle this would be a solution that relies as little as possible on things built into the ground. It's 2002, and we have fast computers and fairly accurate GPS guidance. I don't see any reason why the earth part of the system should be more than stipes of whatever color reflective paint on the ground. It's easy and cheap, and it won't ever need upgrading. Then car computer guides itself with the paint lines, but uses GPS to ditermine it's location and to make decisions about turning and stuff. Maybe some kind of WAP based thing where cars close to each other share location and velocity information. Of course, this all comes in a box under the hood with a couple cables sticking out. The WAP could accept software upgrades, and if new hardware is neccessary than you just have to take all the cars to the shop rather than dig in half your roads.

    • I don't see any reason why the earth part of the system should be more than stipes of whatever color reflective paint on the ground. It's easy and cheap, and it won't ever need upgrading. Then car computer guides itself with the paint lines, but uses GPS to ditermine it's location and to make decisions about turning and stuff.


      Sounds like someone who has never lived in an area of the country where stuff on the ground gets covered up by snow, gravel, spills from who knows what. Maintinance on this would be a pain as well. It is already hard enough maintaining the lines that are already on the road...

  • by gnurd ( 455798 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:44PM (#2855007) Homepage
    beats circut switched traffic any day. now i see why this is on /.
  • Sounds familiar... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Equuleus42 ( 723 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:46PM (#2855015) Homepage
    Back in my freshman year in college, I proposed and worked on a very similar transportation system, called HSTS (High Speed Transit System). Other engineering students collaborated with it as well. We even had a student code a Java applet that simulated the whole thing. The biggest problem we found was what would happen if the cars were going really fast, and the power suddenly went off... We used the term "Mass Death". :^)
    • Fail-safing (Score:5, Funny)

      by Spamalamadingdong ( 323207 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @01:01PM (#2855174) Homepage Journal
      The biggest problem we found was what would happen if the cars were going really fast, and the power suddenly went off... We used the term "Mass Death". :^)
      I don't suppose it occurred to your crew to have batteries on board the vehicles to take them to the next stop, or just use regenerative braking to power the vehicle systems while the de-powered part of the network came to a stop and shut down gracefully? (I really hate contrived disaster scenarios.)
  • Roads (Score:2, Funny)

    by daidojiuji ( 183833 )
    Didn't we used to call "tracks" small cars would take directly to their intended destination something else? I could swear they were called "roads"...
  • Sounds kind of like the Tomorrowland Transit Authority [go.com] (formerly the WEDWay) at Disney World...

  • by Mr. Fred Smoothie ( 302446 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:47PM (#2855033)
    There has been so much talk here about pie-in-the-sky stuff like High Speed Mag-lev for years, while all actual public funding has gone into taxpayer-funded construction of multiple new stadiums and commissioning multipe, potentially fraudulent or mismanaged property tax reassesments -- while absolutely nothing concrete has been done to fix the transportation problems in what's probably the home of the WORST transportation infrastructure in the country. Many smart people have pointed out the huge negative impact the transportation infrastructure has on the potential growth of Western PA's economy.

    Instead of installing some corrider-constrained, incredibly expensive Mag-Lev system of dubious value which does nothing to address the nightmare of getting from neighborhood to neighborhood in this tangle of hills, gullies and twisty streets they call a City, they could use existing arterials (supplimented perhaps with a couple of new ones) to *greatly* expand the reach of public transportion and make it practical to ditch the now-mandatory two-car-per-family lifestyle.

    Phew, feels good to get that off my chest...

    • Yes, but there are several major problems in implementing something like this in Pittsburgh (in particular) or in other places in general.

      First, Pittsburgh is very spread out geographically (and economically), while the places people want to go are generally concentrated. How do you balance the load to guarantee availability of thes small cars in the sparse areas that people are living, and not have an overload at the destinations?

      Second, Pittsburgh's culture supports individuality. The current HOV lanes are a joke because nobody uses them! A useful solution to the HOV lane debaucle would be to convert the existing space into a monorail/subway system extending into the North Hills.

      Third, the infrastructure cost would be beyond prohibitive. Look at how crappy the current belt system is, with a maze of poorly maintained roads through BFE. If you think that the Mag-Lev train will cost a lot, this track mesh would take much new construction that would cause the local taxpayer base to revolt!

      Fourth, if these little electric cars are supposed to provide inner city transportation, can they handle the hills in Pittsburgh? The whole reason the infrastructure in the inner city sucks is because the hills are outrageously steep and the streets are poorly laid out.

      Finally, I doubt that it could be economically implemented anywhere on earth, as buses and trains are cheaper because they use economically feasible infrastructures (existing roads and tracks) , and many more specially designed small cars would have to be designed and built from scratch. This system would need near 100% utilization to even come close to being economically feasible.

      --Len

  • I hate to say it, but I for one, would not want this. I live in Atlanta, a very large city with huge traffic problems. Well, my thoughts are this: I deal with the traffic here everyday (worst in America 5 years running btw) and there is a simple reason I do it. MARTA (Metro Atlanta Rail Transit Authority--I think) is not safe. Sure, these cars seem nice, but I don't think it will ever catch on here in the US. I wish it would, we throw enough smog and pollution in the air as it, but for my money, and safety, I will stick to my car. I have never been to Cardif, so I cannot speak for there, but I will speak of what I know.

    I am not trolling, but you will probably mod me as such since my opinion doesn't jive with the new tech is good slant of the article.

    Yehaa, let the flames begin :)
  • by LazyGun ( 138083 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:48PM (#2855043)
    also check out RUF [www.ruf.dk]



    RUF combines the best of cars with the best of trains


    The RUF system is a system where all vehicles can drive in 2 ways (Dual-Mode). They can either use the normal roads or they can "ride" on top of a triangular monorail.


    The RUF vehicles can both be cars (ruf) and busses (maxi-ruf). The rail (guideway) is a very slender triangular monorail made from 20 m long modules and carried by masts.


    When the vehicles "rides" on top of the monorail, the center of gravity is placed below the top of the rail, so the stability is very high. Derailment is impossible. It is possible to squeeze the top of the rail in order to make an emergency braking. This way it is possible under all circumstances to brake in a very short time. Short safety distances means large capacity.


    Energy consumption is very low due to the close coupling of vehicles to form a train. This principle also increases safety, since collisions within the train are eliminated when the vehicles already touch each other.


    The rufs are electric vehicles with small batteries. The batteries are partly recharged while the ruf uses the rail.

  • This allows there to be a mesh of tracks and stations thoughout a city, as opposed to traditional transport which tends to run along corridor routes to a city center

    I've always though the city could use a few more tracks. Seriously though, why do these things have to go to every nook and crany of a city, why cant they just drop you off and let you walk a couple blocks to your destination?

    OK, I know we're becoming lazier every day so I have four words for you: George Jetson People Mover. You'll never have to take another step again.
    • by FreeUser ( 11483 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @01:17PM (#2855332)
      With the demise of netvan and the undesirability of purchasing a car solely to go to the grocery store I, for one, would find a mass transit system that would drop me off at my front curb very useful. Add to that the fact that getting a cab at my local food store is next to impossible (while finding one 6 blocks away is easy, go figure), and the physical challenges (read:impossibility) of carrying 15 bags of groceries on foot, and even the most casual, non-knee-jerk-cynical observer can see the usefulness of such a system.

      As for it being "out of the question" that such could track systems could be laid down in a major city, don't be absurd (not you, but another poster in this thread). Major cities are exactly where this kind of thing would be most useful. Like Europe, they could be integrated into the existing streetplans a la streetcars. If the traffic implications are too significant (possible during the installation and early use, likely the opposite once such a system were adopted widely) they could be built on an elevated track. Personally, I'd just take lanes away from old-style cars ... making traffic a little worse in the short run might be just the kind of incentive that would help speed adoption of such a system.

      Of course, entrenched interests such as automobile manufacturers and taxi drivers are likely to raise a stink and do everything they can to slow adoption of such a system, but that sort of thing should be resisted and fought, not pandered to. Alas, in an age where the government spends more time and money trying to preserve the business models of buggie whip manufacturers (c.f RIAA, MPAA, DMCA, SSSCA, Copyright extentions, etc.) rather than promoting the adoption of new technologies and the new capabilities they promise (c.f. universally accessible, virtually cost-free libraries, free sharing of information, etc.) the future we face, at least in the short term, is not an optomistic one at all.
    • I don't see it as particularly inovative. Good transport systems already have a mesh, for example Toronto's [toronto.on.ca], where every major street has a subway, streetcar or bus route, and you can switch from one to the other wherever they intersect.
  • I wish I had access to my home library right now to check references and details, but there have been a bunch of proposals like this, most of them decades ago. Some got fairly far along, consuming large amounts of money, time and effort, before ultimately collapsing. There was one book in particular I remember addressing a French experiment with alternate light rail ideas.

    Working from memory, one problem they hit was the decision of whether to go for the ultimate taxi-like model, as here, or with some intermediate-sized light rail cars. The problems I recall with the taxi-like model included the problem that they couldn't get them connected to enough points for people to actually use them enough to pay for the service; and nightmare scenarios about someone's grandmother being trapped in an unmanned small car with a deranged killer.

    I'm hoping someone else can come up with the title of the book on the French experiment I'm thinking about. It focussed much more on the social problems with making this kind of project happen than on any particular technical difficulties.

  • This is also featured in zzz online's latest edition [zzz.com.ru]. It's the last story on the page.
  • There was an article in Scientific American about three years ago regarding the advances in public transportation made in Curitibo, Brazil. Their basic idea was to redesign all their roads from the standpoiont of getting people around. They placed seperate bus lanes on each road (seperate physically from the other lanes), and people paid to enter the bus stop instead of the bus. This meant people quickly entered the bus at each stop, without anyone digging around for change when entering the bus, etc. And the seperate lanes meant the buses went from place to place without much hinderance from car traffic. Also, their roads were all laid out with a great deal of thought, resembling a darts target with circular and radiating routes. The system worked remarkably well, and most people used public transit to get around.

    Its amazing what can be accomplished when someone actually puts real thought into the system they're developing.
  • by kaszeta ( 322161 ) <rich@kaszeta.org> on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:50PM (#2855061) Homepage
    In transit engineering circles, these have been called PRTs (Personal Rapid Transit).

    Another good web site on the topic is Taxi2000 [taxi2000.com].

    Make sure you check out their FAQ [taxi2000.com].

    The important topic that's always brought up is infrastructure. The beauty of the PRT design is that the infrastructure costs aren't all that appalling, since all the system needs to run is a narrow elevated track which can be built above existing roadways (so no right of way issues, etc). Yeah, it's more expensive than bus stations, but it's *way* cheaper than tunnels or elevated train track.

  • by Rackemup ( 160230 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:50PM (#2855064) Homepage
    I think I saw something similar to these in an issue of Popular Science not long ago... personal transports that could auto-drive you to your destination. Instead of working on the bus/train schedule and having to travel to the station you would use your personal transport, drive it to the nearest on-ramp and set the auto-pilot.

    Places like North America that already have a huge transportation infrastructure would find it expensive to implement one of these, good to see that some European countries are testing them out now.

    I dont know about some of you, but I hate driving. I'd much rather have an automated transport that could take me where I need to go without having to deal with Metro transit and all the crazies on the bus.

  • One problem, there's no conductor. I mean like a guy who is gonna sit there and say "no, don't destroy the inners of the vehicle.

    What happens if before I get to my stop, I disable my car somehow and cause congestion? What about the congestion of people just getting in and out of a car serially vs in parallel like a subway does?

    Sounds cool, but somehow doesn't. Unless the stations are as big as parking lots and these cars can pass one another, I'm not too into this idea.
  • except instead of using one of these cars, you drive your own car onto a pallet that will take you and your own car to the destination of your choice... and this one idea will not work because people dont want to give up their own cars (or add another one to the drive)
  • by ekrout ( 139379 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:54PM (#2855101) Journal
    Despite what anyone says, nothing can beat Springfield's Monorail...

    Lyle Lanley:
    Well, sir, there's nothing on earth
    Like a genuine,
    Bona fide,
    Electrified,
    Six-car
    Monorail!
    What'd I say?

    Ned Flanders: Monorail!

    Lyle Lanley: What's it called?

    Patty+Selma: Monorail!

    Lyle Lanley: That's right! Monorail!

    [crowd chants `Monorail' softly and rhythmically]

    Miss Hoover: I hear those things are awfully loud...

    Lyle Lanley: It glides as softly as a cloud.

    Apu: Is there a chance the track could bend?

    Lyle Lanley: Not on your life, my Hindu friend.

    Barney: What about us brain-dead slobs?

    Lyle Lanley: You'll be given cushy jobs.

    Abe: Were you sent here by the devil?

    Lyle Lanley: No, good sir, I'm on the level.

    Wiggum: The ring came off my pudding can.

    Lyle Lanley: Take my pen knife, my good man.

    I swear it's Springfield's only choice...
    Throw up your hands and raise your voice!

    All: Monorail!

    Lyle Lanley: What's it called?

    All: Monorail!

    Lyle Lanley: Once again...

    All: Monorail!

    Marge: But Main Street's still all cracked and broken...

    Bart: Sorry, Mom, the mob has spoken!

    All: Monorail!
    Monorail!
    Monorail!

    [big finish]

    Monorail!

    Homer: Mono... D'oh!

  • by Robber Baron ( 112304 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:54PM (#2855102) Homepage
    What kind of volume will it handle? From the looks of the things you'll need almost as many of those little driverless cabs as you do cars in a given urban area. That's going to cost! So what do we do to pay for the system, give up our cars and contribute the money that we spend on them to this system? Then what are we supposed to do if we want/need to travel outside the area serviced by this or other public transit systems? Ride our bikes? What if it's 300 miles away? Pouring rain? I don't think so Vern! I'm sorry but while it's a good attempt at replacing the automobile, it has a ways to go before it replaces the automobile's freedomof movement that our society's become accustomed to to the point of being dependant on it.
  • by drox ( 18559 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:54PM (#2855103)
    Americans tend to take a very negative view of public transportation. Part of this is due to the fact that it's public, and the public includes people who are drunk, abusive, and smell bad. People you would never ride with by choice. Even though they make up a small minority of the bus- and subway-riding public, they're enough to spoil the experience and make one not want to ride public transportation.

    These transport pods look like they'd eliminate most of that problem, as they're small enough one could travel alone or with a small group of one's own choosing.

    The dedicated track part could still be a problem. Americans like to go where they want, when they want (doesn't everyone) and with the ready availability of (polluting, road-clogging) cars, I don't see them opting for any track-based transport system in the near future. Americans also take a kind of pride in their vehicles (witness the huge number of heavy, expensive, rollover-prone "off-road" vehicles that have never been off a road). Maybe this kind of thing will work in Cardiff, but to really make an impact on the environment, petroleum industry etc., one needs a system that will work in the U.S. Where the cars are.
    • "one needs a system that will work in the U.S. Where the cars are"

      Now, before anyone starts flaming this poor guy for being "americanist" (or what ever you call it), please bear in mind that the US actually has around 30% of all the cars in the world. For a country that only has >5% of the worlds population, that's quite a lot.
    • by denzo ( 113290 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @02:04PM (#2855777)
      What American commuters/travellers need is a system that utilizes our current transportation infrastructure, but improves congestion, and allows us to drive wherever we want when we're off of a freeway.

      I believe there is a significant amount of research going on in a retrofitting of regular automobiles, where a computer system can keep track of all freeway traffic, and manuever them in the most efficient way in order to not cause clogging on the roads, like anticipating traffic merging from onramps, preventing unnecessary weaving, adjusting for breakdowns or accidents (accidents should be significantly lessened by this system, though), etc.

      On the heaviest travelled highways, I see all too often people doing dumb things just for their personal perception of getting home faster, like madly weaving in between lanes, or passing traffic in the auxiliary (onramp/offramp merging) lanes, or semi-trucks gaining a whole 1MPH by passing another truck. Things like these make an already-congested road worse. This is the best shorter-term solution. We ain't going to see very many alternatives in the next 10-20 years, believe me. Instead of kidding ourselves with environmentally-friendly space-age pipe dreams, we need a system that is more affordable and fits in with our lifestyle.

      No single mode of transportation is advantageous in every area of the world.

  • by robhranac ( 173773 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:56PM (#2855120)

    This is a concept commonly refered to as Personal Rapid Transit (PRT), a subset of Automated People Movers (APM) found at many airports. PRT has been around for a while and has somewhat fringe supporters [cprt.org] (like me). Edward Anderson at the University of Minnesota has generated some of the most credible system designs and incorporated under Taxi2000 [taxi2000.com]. In fact, Raytheon [raytheon.com] developed a full test track of Anderson's concept outside of Boston; Bostonians can visit thier Marlborough, MA facility and see the future, [raytheon.com]!

    The reason that PRT remains a fringe concept is related to economic challenges, not engineering ones. Although there are claims to the contrary, the general problem is that - like all public transit - PRT require a very high inital capital outlay. In dense urban areas, right-of-way costs are prohibitive. However, just as with information networks, public transit networks generate positive externalities: the larger the system, the more useful it is to everyone.

    Furthermore there is little incentive to invest in expensive public works projects have prevented the testing of a fairly unproven technology. Public agencies would much rather invest in light rail systems that they have seen before than fancy driverless systems. Also, there is no conclusive proof that these decentralized systems can sustain the high corrider passenger/hour throughputs that make public transit so desirable for really dense urban areas.

    Hopefully, projects like Cardiff will succeed and PRT will get recognition and legitimacy, but this is a technology that has been kicking around for a while and - as you can probably tell - is not insanely complex. As usual, economics and public policy get in the way of interesting engineering!

      1. Raytheon in Marlborough Mass. is a closed facility.
      2. The prototype was considered a failure.
      3. It was disassembled several years ago.
      4. The architecture Raytheon was using had long ago been proven inefficient in professionial transportation engineering circles.
      5. This was to be one of those swords-to-plowshares "Peace Dividend" stories. Instead it was remarkably similar to when Boeing Vertol stopped making helicopters and attempted to build LRVs (ask Boston's MBTA what they're like and about the court settlement.)
      Unfortunately this poster is absolutely classic of so many of the alternative transportation folks: Short on details, wrong on facts, and prone to handwaving aside problems - the exact same problems that hamper existing systems. With supporters like this no wonder the field hasn't progressed markedly in 30 years.

    • PRT in action at WVU (Score:2, Interesting)

      by daemonc ( 145175 )
      Ah, PRT, the future of transportation. West Virginia University [wvu.edu] has had it's own PRT [wvu.edu] (Personal Rapid Transit, also known by the students as Pretty Retarded Train) system since the early 1970's. The PRT serves as the primary mode of transportation between the two main campuses for thousands of students every day.

      In fact, this morning I was riding the PRT to my CS lab, when I experienced first hand one of the minor glitches in the computer system that controls the PRT.

      The computer system is still the original one from the 70's, housed in a warehouse-like building, mainframes with magnetic tape reels and all, running programs written in Fortran by the engineering students that built the thing, with all the processing power of the average digital watch.

      Anyways, the PRT car I was in was right in the middle of the long straight stretch, having reached it's top running speed of about 40 miles per hour, when the power went out. The little electric cars are designed so that when the power goes out, the wheels lock up.

      So, our PRT car goes from 40 mph to a dead stop in under 1 second. I was immediately reminded of physics class; objects in motion tend to stay in motion unless acted upon by an outside force. I was standing up at the time. Fortunately, the outside force acting upon me was the soft and squishy back of the person in front of me. The people sitting in the front had the less pleasant experience of having their faces acted upon at 40 mph by the front plexiglass window.

      So, yeah, PRT all the way!
  • I've heard about something like this before, it is a mass-transit train system that runs on "streets" rather than tracks. Interesting, to say the least.

    Here's a good link about Tokyo Teleport Town Transit System [washington.edu] (whew!)

    What is a Teleport you ask? [worldteleport.org]
  • Jetsons, but not (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Ouroboro ( 10725 ) <aaron_hoyt AT yahoo DOT com> on Thursday January 17, 2002 @12:58PM (#2855141) Homepage Journal

    I find it interesting that we keep proposing (and implementing) systems that are really quite "space age" whatever that means, but the actual face of the world doesn't seem to change that much. This is such a fascinating idea, and one that I think has quite a bit of merrit. The only problem that I see is that of mixing this and regular traffic. I don't want to be trapped inside one of these little boxes toodling allong at a leisurly 25mph and have some jackass with his suv and cellphone run over me doing 50. I know the solution described in the article runs on a special track, but for a mass transit solution to work and gain wide use in anything but the largest cities, it has to share the infrastructure with regualr vehicles, otherwise it is often prohibitively expensive.

    I know that mass transit works, but it works best in very dense population centers, because it is limited to specific routes. What if only one of your destination endpoints is near a mass transit station. Then you either have to walk or drive to the terminal. That works durring summer, or if you live in a warm dry climate, but right now I have to think twice about walking across the parkinglot to get my car it is so cold outside. I guess my point is that mass transportation needs to be nearly door to door or it will not gain wide acceptance.

    • mass transportation needs to be nearly door to door or it will not gain wide acceptance.

      And that is exactly why it works well in urban areas, and in fact promotes urban growth and reduces sprawl. In the city people routinely choose to live near the bus or subway because it's much more convenient than driving a car. Even out in the burbs, the recent growth of "transit villages" where you can buy a condo walking distance from the subway is a sign of people's preference to avoid traffic.

      On your other point, mixed flow of transit vehicles (of any kind) and autos is bad because it's much SLOWER than a dedicated right-of-way. The idea of taking the cars off the track into normal traffic seems pretty inefficient to me, for that reason. Of course, if you're way out in the sticks, no traffic, but then also no critical mass to support the transit system.

  • I'm having total 70's flashbacks... sitting on the living room floor playing with my Legos and watching Logan's Run [bbc.co.uk]... again.
  • ULTra Web Site (Score:5, Informative)

    by shut_up_man ( 450725 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @01:00PM (#2855170) Homepage
    Urban Light Transport has more information on their web site [atsltd.co.uk], including some much higher-res images, FAQs and other info.

    The most interesting (and not really mentioned) factor is that the automatic taxis don't travel on predetermined routes, they navigate their small network of paths to get to your destination.
  • The real problem: (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Sobrique ( 543255 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @01:00PM (#2855172) Homepage
    The real problem is going to be pissed people on the way back from the pub throwing up in it.
    If yer in a taxi they can hit you lots until you clear it up any pay for cleaning.
    On a bus, well sort of the same.
    Can you imagine getting aboard one of this and smelling a 2 hour old pool of vomit?
  • by Alien54 ( 180860 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @01:27PM (#2855415) Journal
    Here are some other links:
    • Innovative Transportation Technologies [washington.edu] - Descriptions of over 40 electric, automated transport technologies, ranging from conceptual to operational. Includes people movers (supported and suspended systems: monorails) and automated freight systems.
    • Monomobile: Electric Rail Car [iac.net] - Lightweight electric car that attaches to suspended monorail for long trips and can run independently of the rail for local trips.
    • RUF: Rapid Urban Flexible [www.ruf.dk] - Hybrid car/monorail: you drive it on and off roads and monorail tracks as needed.
    The last one is one I remember in the newsin the past year. of course, being Danish, it might not get promotion in the British press. ;-)
  • Trolleys used to run on city streets and provide alot of the features that this system does.

    Trolley tracks used to run on existing streets and provided rail links in congested areas of cities & even intra-city travel.
  • by cryptochrome ( 303529 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @01:33PM (#2855463) Journal
    My favorite link for this sort of thing is this PRT [electric-bikes.com] page. (And on a side note, I think hanging the cars makes more sense than riding on top of the rails). It's a good idea but it will take some getting used to, and will require mass-production to become truly cheap.

    A finite resource will always be completely consumed so long as there are no limitations on the consumption of that resource. A resource in short supply becomes expensive, while a resource in good supply becomes cheap, and a resource in oversupply is still snapped up by anyone who thinks they can use it.

    This is true of transportation as well. No matter how much road you build, someone will always find a way to use it. The only limiting factor is that people don't like to travel for more than an hour. When highways are built suburbia springs up around them. When the Long Island Railroad was built, the areas around the stations w/in an hour's travel quickly became heavily developed. Building roads does not make travel easier - it just enables more of it. Thus the most important factor in a transportation system is not how much it can carry, but how well it performs at peak capacity. Railroads, and presumably PRT, may become crowded the traffic continues to flow. But auto roads perform miserably above a certain traffic level - some sort of breakdown always occurs and brings huge chunks of the system to a standstill.

    The first key to making PRT a reality is to make it effective enough and cheap enough to allow near door-to-door travel as fast or faster than cars. If people have to take a car to get to the PRT station, they will figure that they might as well drive all the way to their destination. The second key is to make the system strong and flexible enough to allow changes in how it is used (like cargo transport, and automatic delivery).
  • If you search for "Personal Rapid Transit" on Google [google.com], you'll come up with several excellent sites.

    CPRT [cprt.org] is an organization dedicated to promoting these kinds of transportation systems, and Taxi2000 [taxi2000.com] is one commercial system being developed. The washington.edu [washington.edu] evaluate many different systems.

    Note that it is essential for these kinds of systems that cabs are small--if they hold many people, they either need to stop a lot (=longer travel times), or they waste a lot of space and resources.

  • Vandalism? (Score:3, Informative)

    by CyberDruid ( 201684 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @01:41PM (#2855554) Homepage
    People will destroy and/or urinate in anything that is remotely "public" if they are not being watched (and sometimes even then). For you see, most of us are complete assholes, especially when drunk.
    Won't the maintainance cost be huge on these things?
  • . A true replacement for the car!"

    A true replacement for the car?? It is still a car.. you just have less choice of where you want to go because once you leave your house, you can only ride on the tracks and only go where the tracks lead.. this doesn't seem like a good thing imho..
  • Best info on PRT (Score:2, Informative)

    by kmacleod ( 103404 )
    The most comprehensive info on PRT is available at Jerry Schneider's Innovative Transportation Technologies [washington.edu] site in the section on Personal Rapid Transit (PRT) [washington.edu]. The site has a much broader scope and compares PRT with several other systems as well.
  • Hardly newfangled. More than 25 years ago, the French embarked in an ambitious "transit-on-demand" development program, which culminated in the Aramis test network in Paris.

    The technology used automobile-sized cars that could follow each-other at a less-than braking distance whenever they had to run on the same track.

    Needless to say, the complexity of implementing the required movable block technology proved too much for the researchers, and the whole idea was scrapped.

  • by sulli ( 195030 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @02:02PM (#2855758) Journal
    Vandal-proof my ass. At least in the US the punks will have those windows etched in no time.
  • by hughk ( 248126 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @02:11PM (#2855856) Journal
    As a brit marooned out in continental Europe, I have discovered the plethora of local transport systems, buses, trams, light railway services and suburban train services.

    All of these have a disadvantage, but it is a system that exists now in most European cities. Even some UK cities are reintroducing the tram now.

    However what really makes it work in Europe is the integrated transport policy which links the different types of public transport together.

    What is discussed here is a blue sky project for te distant future. It may be created in some new purpose-built 'city' like Milton Keynes, but otherwise creating that network of lines would be a nightmare.

    Just using a mixture of conventional public transport technologies can reduce road loading by an incredible degree. Having a policy of integration means that I can use different types as a simple way of getting from A to B.

    Here in Germany, I can hit the web site of the transport system [www.rmv.de] (it is also in English so have a look) and it can give me the right mixture of trains/trams/metro/buses to get between A and B throughout the region.

    This isn't rocket science, but perhaps if we could drag the UK's tansport system to the level of other major European countries, then we can start to look at more radical technologies.

  • If a system is automatic, who become liable on an accident? this is what will hamper, if not prevent, any automatic transport device for civillian use.
  • Sweet (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Uttles ( 324447 ) <[moc.liamg] [ta] [selttu]> on Thursday January 17, 2002 @02:41PM (#2856144) Homepage Journal
    Future versions may have dual control to allow people to drive the cars from the nearest station off the track to their homes.

    Now that's something I could buy into. Public transport is great and all, but the problem has always been (at least in the US) that once you get to your stop, there's still quite a ways to go. Also, Americans in general just plain and simple don't want to give up the mobility of having a car.

    Personally, I live near Atlanta, GA. We have the MARTA trains to move you through the city. The only problem is, the city is huge, and MARTA has maybe a couple of dozen stops thorughout the city, and it doesn't even span out to where I live. The result is if I were to take the MARTA anywhere, I'd still end up travelling 2-5 miles, sometimes more, to my final destination. That's just plain useless.

    Being able to drive your car onto a public transportation grid that would take control and send you whisking off to whatever exit you chose would be great. I don't know how it would handle tremendous volumes, but if they can get the process down pat I would be one of it's biggest supporters.
  • Dual mode is better (Score:3, Interesting)

    by D_Fresh ( 90926 ) <slashdot@dougalP ... om minus painter> on Thursday January 17, 2002 @03:05PM (#2856404) Journal
    I think a major problem with the adoption of systems like this is the lack of any transitional strategy for people with their individual cars. Why not use a Dual Mode [megarail.com] concept where people have personal vehicles that can operate either on or off the tracks, and transition smoothly between the two? It's the best of both worlds, at least until people get used to the concept of riding single cars on a track instead of driving themselves.

    It also solves the problem of the stations not being nearby - just drive your car to the on ramp, sit back and enjoy the ride. Until the exit comes and you have to wake up, of course.

  • by John Murdoch ( 102085 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @04:07PM (#2857034) Homepage Journal

    This is called Personal Rapid Transit, and the first PRT system in use was a "demonstration project" in Morgantown, West Virginia, funded by the U.S. Dept of Transportation. (Morgantown is the home of West Virginia University, and the system linked the WVU campus and downtown Morgantown.) It was built in the early 1970s, but I believe it is no longer operating. Subsequent to the development of the Morgantown project a similar system was developed at the Dallas-Ft. Worth airport. All of the "ultramodern" features described for the system in Cardiff were used there: variable destinations, multiple route paths, standby cars to "flex" demand, etc.

    The submitter of this article makes a slight mistake in his summary: PRT, including the Cardiff system, does not envision users being able to take vehicles off the tracks. There have been rail- and rubber tire-based PRT systems proposed, but even the rubber tire-based systems are designed for a dedicated, exclusive right of way. (Several mass transit systems, notably Toronto's, use rubber tires instead of rail.)

    PRT suffers from a relatively simple problem: massive capital costs. I believe what finally killed the Morgantown project was a moment of clarity at the Urban Mass Transit Administration (UMTA, the U.S. D.O.T. agency that oversaw the project). A consultant pointed out that while the PRT system had been fun, it would have been substantially cheaper to simply buy every student and staff member of WVU a new car every two years. (My stepfather was the smart-aleck consultant.)

    The Cardiff project? Three words: Big Government Boondoggle. The fundamental problem of PRT is the fundamental problem of Light Rail and Monorails too: they are dedicated right-of-way solutions that run along an extremely expensive path. (Even if the cost of construction is trivial, the cost of land acquisition is enormous. If the cost of land acquisition is NOT enormous then there isn't sufficient population density to support a fixed right-of-way system.) It is dramatically cheaper to buy buses. It is dramatically more efficient to run buses. Buses can change routes instantly--so buses that "prowl" the city center Monday through Friday can run on suburban loop routes among shopping malls on Saturday and Sunday. And a bus-based transit system only requires a marginal additional cost for right-of-way (bus stop marking, signs, shelters, etc.).

    But buses don't have the sex appeal of big transit projects, so people still throw money at thirty-year-old concepts and call them "ultramodern technology."

    How 'bout if we haul out the big networking technology of the time, and proclaim ARCNET as "ultramodern" networking?

    • Yes, I know that for the typical cost of a mass transit system, you could have bought every regular rider at least one new luxury car. But:

      1) How was the cost of building the roads factored in? Not fair to compare the cost of a new railbed to just stuffing more traffic into existing roads... I'm not sure about this, but it would seem like a mile of dual-track railbed built only heavy enough for car-like vehicles should cost less than a mile of four-lane road, and (with central control) would handle more traffic.

      2) I'd think the cars for one of these systems would actually be a little simpler than an automobile built for independent operation. Electric motor instead of that horribly complex gasoline engine and transmission. Simpler suspension, because you can count on the rails meeting certain standards for smoothness, and no steering. Lots of electronics, but that's cheap nowadays. So if the cars were built in sufficient quantity, they'd cost the same or less as autos.

      Of course, the trouble is that autos are built by the millions, but trams are custom-built. Could you design the trams to use an existing car body, just drop an electric motor under the hood, leave out the steering, and change the wheels?
  • by cr0sh ( 43134 ) on Thursday January 17, 2002 @04:47PM (#2857327) Homepage
    Here in Phoenix, there was an initiative passed called Transit 2000 [transit2000.org]. That link is now dead, but here [trainweb.org] is one that gives the information about it in more detail. Notice the cost. Notice where it is being put. I live here in Phoenix, and I honestly don't know where they plan on getting space along the roads and freeways they plan this thing to follow - it isn't there. That last site says construction is supposed to begin in 2003. I tend to doubt it. Likely the money will be pocketed by our "illustrious" government.

    That is system picked. Want to see what we could have had, for far less money, had our government had more vision, and taken a chance on a proven inventor?

    The SkyTran System [skytran.net]

    This is a system invented by Douglas J. Malewicki, an independent inventor [canosoarus.com].

    Read about SkyTran. I am sure there are a few drawbacks, but I would say the majority of them have been seen to by Mr. Malewicki. His reasoning is sound, and fully documented.

    Unfortunately I won't get to see my tax dollars go toward this system...
  • by natpoor ( 142801 ) on Friday January 18, 2002 @01:54AM (#2860375) Homepage
    One problem with Slashdotters is they don't know a lot about a lot of things... Like the French worked on such a thing from 1969 up to 1987! Bruno Latour, a French sociologist of technology, wrote about it in a book called "Aramis." You can read about it at Amazon [amazon.com]. The reviews even say it was like packet switching. Unfortunately the reviewer doesn't understand the book, and says incorrectly that the project was "squashed by the French government." I had to read it for my doctoral exams... This is an idea that doesn't work, but since so few people know about technological failures and the basics seems easy enough, it keeps coming back. It's framed as "no one has done it, it must be cool!" instead of "no one that I know of has succeeded with this, perhaps they've all failed!" It is not the first of its kind at all, the author of the article has no idea what he's talking about.

"If I do not want others to quote me, I do not speak." -- Phil Wayne

Working...