Sunday
March 5, 2000 08:24 PM
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Could Commuter Transit Pods be the
Answer to Easing Triangle Traffic?
WAKE COUNTY (WRAL) -- State
highway engineers say the Triangle needs alternatives to
help ease traffic troubles. Could the answer be buses,
trains, or SkyTran
-- a commuter option that looks like it comes from outer
space?
Imagine zipping along to work in a two-person pod that
travels non-stop at 100 miles per hour, and is powered by
environmentally-friendly magnetic levitation.
Backers of SkyTran are very confident the system will
work for the Triangle.
"I have no doubt it will be in the Triangle and
North Carolina some time in our future. It's just a matter
of when," says Bob Cotter, SkyTran vice president.
Cotter says electricity on a raised rail would power the
personal, rapid transit pods.
"When you hop into one of the SkyTran pods you're
not sitting there with a bunch of other people waiting for
them to get on and off," says Cotter. "You're by
yourself. You listen to music, you watch television, you
read the paper, look at the Internet -- whatever you want to
do on your way to where you're going."
The biggest cost of many transportation projects is
buying up the land and acquiring rights of way. With the
SkyTran system all that is needed is airspace 20 feet above
the side of the road or right down the median.
SkyTran claims its system would be cheaper to build and
operate than a traditional commuter rail system. The company
also claim it is much more user-friendly than buses.
The North
Carolina Department of Transportation
says the Triangle needs alternatives to get cars off of
clogged commuter routes. But DOT officials who have talked
with SkyTran say they do not think commuter pods are the
answer.
"There's no reason to go back and use old technology
like light rail and buses," says Cotter. "We're in
the 21st Century. It's time to make use of automation. It's
time to make use of computers and move forward and get there
fast."
Right now SkyTran is just a prototype, but the company
says it is a prototype that will work.
Transportation engineers in Phoenix are talking with
SkyTran representatives as they plan a 177-mile public
transit system.
Reporter: Mark
Roberts
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