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Subsections


General characteristics

The translation of the design objectives (see above) into general characteristics is considered ``common sense''. It is a collection of opinions from different people that are supposed to know the potentials of state of the art technology. Note that these are the characteristics primarily from the user's point of view. More detailed aspects that are important for developer, producers and operators are addressed in Sections 1.2.


Increase in life quality

Here, only those aspects of life quality are considered that are directly related with transportation. Other aspects are discussed in Sections 1.1.2 and 1.1.3. Concerning transportation, it is understood that people will perceive an increase in life quality if their latent demand for mobility and flexibility can be satisfied. Therefore, the important characteristics of the new TS should be: For professional users, (mainly freight transport) the following (additional) points are of importance:


Social aspects


Environmental aspects

The TS should be low in consuming natural resources and polluting the environment. This means: All items apply to the entire life cycle of the system and components, comprising production, operation and recycling/disposal.


Aesthetic aspects

All visible parts of the TS (mainly guideways, rails and stations) should be aesthetically appealing and they should compliment the architecture of the city and be unobtrusive in the countryside.

Economical viability

The system should be economically attractive for system users, service providers, operators, and manufacturers. More details are developed in Section 1.2.

Other aspects

Preliminary conclusions

A TS that must be available1 24 hours a day, easy to use by almost everybody and at the same time efficient, flexible, economic, environmental friendly, safe and reliable. This can only be accomplished by a complete automation of the transport system . However, it needs to be shown that such a system can be efficiently solved with today's technology.

Vehicles need to be as small and light as possible in order to reduce space, costs, visual impact and to increase flexibility of infrastructure. A vehicle sharing option would further minimize land-use and pollution. For freight that is too large or too heavy to be transported in one or more smaller vehicles, there would be the following options:

Electric moters can provide high energy efficiency, low emission and low noise, but the flexibility of electrically driven vehicles is limited by the inherent storage problem of electrical energy. The tracks should be small, inexpensive, flexible and with low visual impact. Of special interest are elevated guideways that can help to remove high density through traffic from ground level. This may also help to facilitate a transient from present transport systems to the new TS as it separates the new TS from car traffic and pedestrians. However, it is not expected that elevated guideway structures can provided everywhere door-to-door service. They may also be aesthetically unacceptable in historic city centers with narrow streets.

It appears that there is no single technological solution that sufficiently satisfies all criteria. Therefore, the new TS need to consider solutions that integrate different transportation technologies.
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