Electrify
Senior Member
Shame, Sydney's line may not have been well planned, but it was a great example of how a monorail could work in a dense urban setting visually.
Here's an interesting concept and would well along suburban routes like Finch. Has a great video, check it out.
www.skytrolley.com
Toronto should be so lucky as to have a rapid/mass transit as many 3rd world countries.
New group plans to have Ballard-to-West Seattle monorail running by 2018
Submitted by Michael Harthorne, KOMO Communities Reporter
Monday, March 26th, 2012, 9:36am
Topics: Transportation
Expanding? Courtesy of the Seattle Center Monorail.
On the 50th anniversary of the Seattle Center Monorail Saturday, a new group announced plans to bring a Ballard-to-West Seattle monorail to the city by 2018.
Century Transportation Authority – backed by pro-Viaduct, anti-tunnel activist Elizabeth Campbell – has already drawn up the map for a 16-mile, 18-station route through Ballard, the 15th Avenue corridor, the Seattle Center, downtown and West Seattle.
The new monorail would be completely separated from traffic and would use some of the previous planning and engineering work from the city’s last (doomed) monorail project.
But, that plan comes with a steep price tag. According to the Century Transportation Authority, or CenTran, the new Seattle monorail would cost at least $85 million per mile for a final minimum price tag of $1.4 billion.
In its March 24 announcement, CenTran vowed to create a viable financial plan for both construction and operation of the monorail through possible public/private partnerships, public stock sales and bonds.
Despite being very recently formed and still recruiting board members, CenTran has an aggressive schedule in place for the new monorail system, starting with gathering 3,600 signatures to place the creation of the new transportation authority up for a public vote in August.
After that comes ones year of planning and design and two years of environmental reviews and permitting. Construction could start in 2016 following a second public vote to approve funding and construction. According to CenTran, that would make the monorail operational by 2018.
A Ballard-to-West Seattle monorail has been a popular idea with many residents for a number of years and was part of Mayor Mike McGinn’s election campaign. But, the question remains: With the Alaskan Way tunnel and light rail projects already underway, the city looking at a handful of new streetcar lines, and a failed monorail project in the city’s recent past, are Seattleites ready for another expensive transportation project?
Doesn't sound particularly likely, reading the article. After 50 years, they are still only have 2 stations.New group plans to have Ballard-to-West Seattle monorail running by 2018