Shangas
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,116
- Location
- Melbourne, Australia
http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/city-not-ready-to-lose-its-wclass-act-20100227-pa8v.html
Melbourne's green and cream W-Class trams, rattling, rumbling, creaking, bell-dingling icons that have been transporting people through the southern Australian city since the Roaring Twenties, may be set to make a comeback, as transport unions and historical groups fight to make a case to return the aging streetcars to regular, scheduled public service.
To remove the trams from the streets is to lose a part of Melbourne's early 20th-century history, preservationalists claim, and many other Melbournians would much prefer the trams to remain in operation, even if they're noisy, hot and have no air-conditioning!
For the past few years, these old trams have been removed from the streets by transport officials, citing the trams as a public danger, due to poor brakes, fire-risks and other hazards. They exist now, only on selected routes and as tourist attractions in the center of Melbourne. But people are fighting to change that and bring back an icon of the city's past.
A Melbourne W-Class tram
Melbourne's green and cream W-Class trams, rattling, rumbling, creaking, bell-dingling icons that have been transporting people through the southern Australian city since the Roaring Twenties, may be set to make a comeback, as transport unions and historical groups fight to make a case to return the aging streetcars to regular, scheduled public service.
To remove the trams from the streets is to lose a part of Melbourne's early 20th-century history, preservationalists claim, and many other Melbournians would much prefer the trams to remain in operation, even if they're noisy, hot and have no air-conditioning!
For the past few years, these old trams have been removed from the streets by transport officials, citing the trams as a public danger, due to poor brakes, fire-risks and other hazards. They exist now, only on selected routes and as tourist attractions in the center of Melbourne. But people are fighting to change that and bring back an icon of the city's past.
A Melbourne W-Class tram