Just Take the Trolley
Photo courtesy of Thomas Hawk.
I spent some time at the local library this weekend getting some work done. I took some time to graze through some periodicals, including the Utne Reader. It’s been several years since I last picked up the Utne in a tiny Michigan town, and that’s a decision I have come to regret. The January/February 2010 issue has some fantastic articles and dispatches.
In particular there’s a quick dispatch from the IEEE Spectrum on the coming streetcar revival. Considering I’ve been planning a move to the stereotypical trolley-land of San Francisco in two years, the timing is interesting, to say the least. Nevermind that the true trolleys are the land of tourists and real transportation is on subways and trolley-busses (far less romantic).
I’m sort of passionate about public transportation. While driving is convenient (and a necessity for my current locale), it stands in stark contrast to my ethics. Cars are perhaps, among other things, a hallmark of American consumption and consumerism. They’re also terribly inefficient in terms of resources, and time & energy waste. And I’m aware that most people who have never lived in a public transport mecca will go on and on and on about how that is false, cars save so much time, blah blah blah.
I hate to break it to you, but no. They don’t. I’ll concede that they do in public transport black holes, but anyone who’s lived in cities where transportation is essential to the entire population will understand my point. When implemented effectively, public transportation is superior and reduces pollution and the need for resources. It’s why I’m such a huge fan of the bicycle.
But back to the trolleys. I find them to be exciting. It could potentially be a way to get an effective public transportation system in place without the crazy high costs associated with them. Smaller metropolises could utilize a streetcar system to great effect. The more people we get on mass transit the better. Driving a car is political, and it’s not politics I endorse.
Tags: bicycles, environment, magazines, politics, public transportation, technology, Utne
December 10th, 2010 at 3:25 pm
Visit the University of North Carolina (Appalachian State U) web site, Http://www.hydrail.org and and also Google the word “hydrolley”. Hydrogen streetcars are way over due, US$7 million PER MILE is an unreasonable surcharge to pay to hang onto a 120-year-old technology a little bit longer.
Not having hydrolleys as an option puts an enormous drag on the return of urban rail and community design based on it. Electric tram superstructure has long outlived is useful working lifeas a new systems alternative.
December 25th, 2011 at 2:47 pm
Epilog:
Those who look forward to the return of urban rail transit, take heart! Next year (2012) the northern Spanish Principality of Asturias will place in service the world’s first hydrolley—a wireless, fuel cell hybrid tram or streetcar power by hydrogen fuel cells with regenerative braking.
My prediction: This will change everything! It cuts about US$10 million per mile from the cost of urban rail construction and eliminates tacky electric superstructure that clutters cityscapes and tends to prevent trees from lining beautiful urban streets.
For details, Google: FEVE+tranvía”serie 3400″+hidrógeno