1. Hamburg's newly-revitalized port could get a completely privately-funded cable car line, if the city allows it. 2. Quincy, Mass., a few T stops away from downtown Boston, is getting a new downtown from a private developer, replete with infrastructure and dense development. It's unique, … [Read more...]
Links
1. Private companies are offering to build Hamburg a 3.2-mile cable car line connecting the red light district of St. Pauli with two other tourist destinations. 2. Alex Block links to a video about NJ Transit's new commuter rail trainsets. Apparently the trains are so heavy because of uniquely … [Read more...]
Links
1. An excellent Wikipedia article about the old DC streetcars. I wish there were more economics, and I'd also like to know about the state-mandated consolidation that they talk about in the mid-1890s. Also note that streetcar use reached its peak in the mid 1910s – when people talk about interstate … [Read more...]
Elevated rail vs. road, and…monorails?
I started reading Fogelson's Downtown with the intention of learning more about elevated trains, and though I've been slightly disappointed in that regard (more to come on that after I finish and attempt a more comprehensive review), he does include a lot of interesting history. I'm posting this … [Read more...]
DC link list
I didn't mean for these all (except the last one) to be about DC, but it looks like it turned out that way... 1. Matt Yglesias on lot occupancy rules in DC. I have a feeling, though, that these are more or less irrelevant in the face of other, stricter limits on density. 2. The feds, along … [Read more...]
Japanese transit and what it can teach us
For a libertarian urbanist blogger, I've always felt kind of embarrassed by my lack of knowledge about East Asian transit, considering that it's the only place left on earth with a thriving competitive private transportation market (they even have profitable monorails!). I've heard good things about … [Read more...]
The “Systemic Failure” of US transportation policy
Today I stumbled upon a blog that's gotta be the best one I've found in a while. It's about US transportation policy by a blogger who seems to be based somewhere in the Bay Area, and it's called, fittingly, Systemic Failure. The post that first got my attention was this one about London's bike … [Read more...]
The problem with “public” transportation
The blog 2nd Ave. Sagas has written something that I think sums up pretty well transit advocates' poor knowledge of private mass transit history: Of course, public transit is vital to the city’s well being. Because Manhattan is an island, it can’t handle the traffic. It’s a commercial hub … [Read more...]