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I can't remember where it was but I have ridden some trolley that had rubber on the wheels so it wasn't steel wheels on a steel rail and it was a lot quieter.
If we had true street cars here the slaughter would be unimaginable. In Southern California courts also tend to favor the IQ challenged, there would be class action suits against the trolley systems with in days of opening.
New York is nobody's model for public transit. It's a better argument against it than for it, because no other place is like New York. We Americans tend to either/or thinking, and the transit options that seem most viable to us are mixed modes for the dense northeast vs. car and limited bus for everywhere else.Thanks for the link, Smithy. Thinking about NYC’s current automobile culture, I don’t have high hopes for a successful revival for trams/streetcars.
I know many people ride the buses and subways, and each has their pluses and minuses.
Buses are above ground, a big plus for me. But they are subject to the same horrendous street traffic. Trains run underground, something I was never very thrilled with, but are not subject to street traffic.
Hence, the positives for trams. Above ground – easier to get to, and you cant get stuck in a tunnel!!! If theres a problem, you just get off. Biiig plus in my book.
If the cars can somehow keep out of the tram lanes, and abide by the rules in the link you supplied, Smithy, theyre much quicker than buses. However, NYC has never struck me as the type of place that will abide by rules like that to allow such a system to work. Drivers here do just about everything they can, short of driving in the sidewalk, to shorten the time of a trip.
Then again, if an effectively laid out tram system was introduced here that actually worked the way it is supposed to, maybe less people would drive into the city. One of the reasons I drive into the city is not because I dint like the LIRR. The railroad is quick and virtually pain-free. Its because that getting around, once in the city, is so time consuming. Buses take forever, and I don’t like being on a train underground for so long.
New York is nobody's model for public transit. It's a better argument against it than for it, because no other place is like New York. We Americans tend to either/or thinking, and the transit options that seem most viable to us are mixed modes for the dense northeast vs. car and limited bus for everywhere else.
Absolutely, but there are always huge obstacles to meeting needs in NYC. Every part of the existing order, or chaos, benefits someone while inconveniencing someone else.I had brought it up because NYC can be horrendously difficult to get around in at times. It is a city, btw, that needs some help, and model or not, I felt it worthy to include in the discussion.
Sure, and again, it's because of those pre-automobile patterns of settlement - centralized, linear, and dense.On another note, downtown Brooklyn still has some cobblestone streets with trolley tracks imbedded in them. I can see how trolleys in that relatively small area, sort of a small city in itself, could still benefit from a reinstatement of a trolley system.
On another note, downtown Brooklyn still has some cobblestone streets with trolley tracks imbedded in them. I can see how trolleys in that relatively small area, sort of a small city in itself, could still benefit from a reinstatement of a trolley system.
Maybe Brooklyn residents will be known again as "Trolley Dodgers," like they were a hundred years ago. And what a great name for a baseball team that would be.