They hit a hard wall fast. They're great in connecting suburbs over rough terrain at low cost, but their throughput is ass.
Build trains and trams. The cost is high, but they do what one more lane never could
They hit a hard wall fast. They're great in connecting suburbs over rough terrain at low cost, but their throughput is ass.
Build trains and trams. The cost is high, but they do what one more lane never could
Ebike highways that charge your bike battery as you ride on them
They're only useful in very specific scenarios, because they can have very few stops, aren't very fast, and people don't like them over their yards.
For GTHA where we don't have a lot of mountains or islands and what we do have has established roads? Just. Build. A. Train.
Sure, it's been done. It has worked well in Medellin and now several Latin American cities are starting to get them. There's a proposal to do one in Burnaby, BC to go up Burnaby Mountain.
It seems like mountainous terrain is a requirement. Are you thinking about anything specific, or is this just a shower thought?
Mountainous terrain isn't required, but it's the situation in which cable cars make the most sense because "better" options that require relatively flat ground aren't available.
Remember, the big selling point of a cable car is that it's cheap, but it's also lower-capacity than more usual kinds of transit. It's more legit than some gimmicky 'gadgetbahn', but not by much.
If a normal LRT is possible then it is the gadgetbahn.
Yeah I shouldn't say a requirement, but it's certainly more likely to be considered in elevated terrain.
Not just mountainous terrain. Mexico City has one that goes over some densely packed naighborhoods. The roads are not good for buses, so the cable cars go over the town and connect to the BRT
Also works well over bodies of water.
There's a new CBC Radio article that OP may have forgotten to link to.
It does seem like there's not much of a use case if you don't have the requirement to cover a large change in elevation in a relatively short distance - mountains, or to get up and over a shipping lane, or something like that. The article argues for them to be inexpensive, which...I'm sure they are, but they seem to be relatively low-capacity, and pretty limited in terms of the number of stops you could include on a route. But I'm not an expert, and maybe I'd be surprised.
I did! Yeah that was the one 🤨
FYI when you post articles it is best practice to keep the same title
Noted! Damn newbs! 😝
Yeah I read the same article and thought I included the link but silly me 😝 I assumed a mountainous terrain was a requirement but appears to be doable here in the GTA too. I was surprised to learn a project is already underway in the Oshawa region.
You can edit your post and add a link, and articles should be link style posts, not image style posts.
No.
😔
I would love to see a feasibility analysis for these in Vancouver, going from the end of the Broadway extension across pacific spirit park to UBC. I think that one main draw back of cable cars is limited surge capacity but I think that's not too bad for a university campus.
They have a line in Toulouse (France) and my wife found it very enjoyable and convenient while she was there.
Seen them in Mexico City on the hillsides of the outskirts
They lack the capacity to be usefull unfortunately. A tram, bus lane, train/metro or bike lane would do the job better.
The way it is build in La Paz in Bolivia allows it to have quite a lot of capacity.
Yes each cabin only holds 10 people or so, but they come every 30 seconds or so if I remember correctly.
Not quite the same thing, but we have a funicular in Kyiv on a particularly steep rise that was inaccessible for the normal trams.
I saw those in New Zealand, in the case of steep hills they are hard to beat.
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