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That looks exactly like the implementation Brampton wants for their LRT. They want to avoid going anywhere near their downtown, so they want to route it through a naturalized creek.
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Wasn't suggesting Wuppertal for RoW; but the Siemens systems I mentioned on the previous page would have been great.
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It's a custom thing made by Schwager Davis. It used to be a Von Roll monorail from what I recall and then SD did a big overhaul on it. Similar system runs in Indianapolis at the Clarion Health Sciences centre.
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12-19-2016, 10:10 AM
(This post was last modified: 12-19-2016, 10:10 AM by chutten.)
"runs on sidewalks" FWIW, it runs on a dedicated transitway that has at-grade pedestrian crossings. (If this is what you said, but more succinctly, then that's my bad.) I was disappointed that in the stretches between crossings they didn't kick it up a bit, but that seemed to also be where they put the ever-so-slowly-turning switches.
Ah well, there's a reason the staff call it the Hilton Walkalot Village.
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What's the downside of this "upside-down monorail" as compared to the usual monorail? The rail is obviously higher but that also makes it less visually obtrusive in my eyes.
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Wuppertal's structure is massive and is a result of the technology available at the time.
The Siemens systems in Dortmund and Düsseldorf (see previous page) are much more elegant structure-wise.
It's 6-of-one... I like straddle beam monorails more but I couldn't tell you why. Personal preference. The guideway is a little less obtrusive if the train sits on top since the supports don't have to "reach over".
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Yes! You get the same feeling from a lot of the older Tokyo railway bridges (Yamanote sen!) that were built more than 100 years ago.
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London has some of that, too! I remember getting off at Baker Street, stepping out of a shiny new train into a station that is older than Canada!
A lot of the Docklands Light Railway stuff is built onto hundred year old stone structures, too - so you have this cool automated train running across stone bridges and stuff.
I am all about new and brutalist (Westminster is heaven!), but I was pretty smitten with that - the whole Underground, overall. That constant tug between old and new.