Quote:
Originally Posted by furiousmcd
Yup. It's supported by metal beams that can be spaced extremely far apart. Up to 600 meters, they claim. This makes it much cheaper to construct and much easier to travel over rivers and ground obstacles. No bridges or intrusive concrete beams like a monorail would require!
It's actually comparable in price to a Bus Rapid Transit system too. They quoted it on the Aerobus site to be between 15 and 20 million per mile which would equate to roughly the same amount Canadian per kilometer if not less.
If you want to see more, the site is www.aerobus.com
I could definitely see that thing floating over gridlock in Winnipeg.
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I keep reading that LRT would be using old railway alignments, such as the Letellier & Marconi Lines, etc. So If we "picked" LRT as the technology of choice, we really wouldn't be able to provide LRT to many important areas of the city, such as high volume arterials like Portage, Main, St. Mary's Rd., as they're not wide enough to allow proper clearance for both vehicles and an at-grade LRT alignment. Am I wrong? Or would the city elevate the LRT "SkyTrain" style along these high volume routes? Or... (Or!) would the city just pull a Winnipeg and make some more pointless diamond lanes for our busses on those routes INSTEAD of building out a real rapid transit option for these routes?
It'd be so great to have one technology "blanket" the entire region in rapid transit, along all our major arterial routes and converging at Union Station. Are there any good reasons why an Aerobus technology couldn't work here?
Maybe in your WUI meetings you guys can 1.) agree to a tangible option 2.) agree to a logical and (NIMBY-friendly) alignment, and 3.) Determine how to be heard by the city on this matter. Grassroots!