IMAGE:Advanced Transport Systems
|
ON TRACK: One of the automated vehicles
that will shuttle people around London's
Heathrow Airport.
|
A snaking array of steel pillars outside the newly
renovated Terminal 5 at London's Heathrow Airport will,
by the end of next year, hold up a guideway upon which
little automated electric vehicles will shuttle
passengers and airport workers back and forth between
the terminal and a distant parking lot. In doing so, the
pillars will also be supporting a transportation
movement decades in the making.
The project—dubbed ULTra (Ultra Light Transport) and
designed and built by Advanced Transport Systems, of
Bristol, England—is but one example of a mode of
quasi-public transportation known as personal rapid
transit, or PRT. According to PRT purists—including the
board of the Advanced Transit Association, which
advocates the use of technology to solve transportation
problems—this label can be applied to transit systems
that have all the following characteristics: fully
automated vehicles that run on a reserved guideway;
small vehicles that can, like taxis, provide exclusive
use for small groups or even a single passenger; nonstop
service using the most direct route available; off-line
way stations; and on-demand access to vehicles instead
of fixed schedules [see photo, “At Your Service”].
As with ice cream, the basic ingredients that PRT
systems have in common impose few limits on variety.
When ULTra is completed in late 2008, it will comprise
3.9 kilometers of paths populated with battery-powered,
four-seat jitneys capable of speeds up to 40 kilometers
per hour and able to follow each other with a 6-second
separation between one car's tail and the next one's
front bumper. ULTra's cars will run on rubber tires;
other proposed systems will anchor the cars on rails
above the guideways or suspend them from the dedicated paths.
Because this will be the first true PRT system to go
into passenger service, the ULTra project is a test case
for whether all the claims made by PRT proponents are
true. Proponents maintain that PRT can be an important
complement to existing mass-transit systems such as
light rail, commuter trains, and buses. PRT advocates
also predict that personal rapid transit systems will
entice people to drive less, reducing the congestion,
energy consumption, and environmental impact from
passenger car traffic.
If ULTra can be completed on time, on budget, and
operate as designed close to 100 percent of the time, it
could represent a tipping point. Once Heathrow has set
the example, other municipalities might jump on the
bandwagon. “There's a long, long line of cities, and
they're all really keen on being second,” says Martin
Lowson, Advanced Transport's CEO.
IMAGE:Advanced Transport Systems
|
AT YOUR SERVICE:Advanced Transport’s four-seat
jitneys will provide private, nonstop, on-demand
service along exclusive guideways.
|
But to this point, a host of variations on the theme
have always fallen short when transit authorities have
looked to expand their operations. For example, the city
of Irvine, Calif., reported earlier this year that PRT
is no longer under consideration for a transit extension
that would serve a new park being built on the grounds
of a shuttered U.S. Navy air base.
Some observers say that PRT's inability to gain any
footing is purely political. “The rail lobby has
exhibited a lot of influence over these types of
decisions,” says Robert Hendershot, who runs a PRT-like
system that connects scattered parts of the University
of West Virginia's campus with the city of Morgantown's
central business district. “The technology has really
proven itself,” he insists, adding that, “Honestly, I
thought the tipping point would have occurred 10 or 15
years ago.” But Morgantown's 30 year track record
doesn't sway decision makers because it isn't considered
a true PRT system. It features 20-passenger cars and
frequently operates on a scheduled, station-to-station
basis during peak hours rather than on demand.
Also getting in the way is the memory of one or two
past PRT projects that failed spectacularly and others
that went away quietly after funds dried up. One
oft-cited example is PRT2000, a Raytheon-backed transit
system that was to be installed just outside Chicago
during the 1990s. Raytheon terminated the project when
the company discovered that changes from the original
design conceived by University of Minnesota engineering
professor J. Edward Anderson had raised the construction
costs to nearly US $30 million per kilometer. (The
rights to Anderson's design, which subsequently reverted
to the university, were later sold to a Fridley, Minn.,
start-up called Taxi2000.)
Asked about these failures and what sets Advanced
Transport's effort apart, Martin Lowson, the company's
CEO, gave several reasons for optimism. “Early attempts
happened in the 1960s and 1970s,” he says. “Technology
has advanced a long way since then—not only in
capability but in cost. Components that would have cost
tens of thousands of dollars 20 years ago you can now
get for less than a thousand.” Still, the company's
mantra has been “no more technology than necessary.”
Lowson says Advanced Transport takes pride in the fact
that ULTra will use mostly off-the-shelf equipment,
including a 48-volt lead-acid battery for propulsion
power. It will also have an anticollision system modeled
on the one used by railways for decades, in which the
cars communicate their positions on the track via
inductive loops in the tracks instead of a more
expensive wireless link. The results, he says, are lower
start-up and operational costs as well as greater
reliability. He notes, for example, that in two years of
tests at the company's 1-kilometer track in Cardiff,
Wales, the system hasn't failed.
Critics, however, remain unconvinced. For this limited
application, covering one part of Heathrow, personal
rapid transit might work, says Vukan R. Vuchic, a
professor of transportation engineering at the
University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia. But he
doubts that the system will be scalable—not even to the
extent that it will be able to take over from shuttle
buses the entire task of ferrying people across all of
the airport's grounds. “I don't see what kind of
function personal rapid transit will serve, because it
combines the negative features of cars and subways:
expensive guideways [for subways] and low capacity [of cars].”
Mike Lester, chief operating officer at Taxi2000,
explains that PRT was never meant to replace trains and
buses but to extend their reaches in ways that are less
expensive and more environmentally friendly. “You'll
never hear me say that we shouldn't have light rail or
subways,” Lester insists. He and Advanced Transport's
Lowson say that one of the tough parts of waking people
up to the benefits of PRT has been managing
expectations. “There are a lot of people who are
skeptical about it, which is an entirely reasonable
point of view to take when it comes to new technology,”
says Lowson. “We have a low-speed system with modest
capacity, and we're very confident that we can do an
effective job delivering that service in a way that is
reliable and ranks high in terms of passenger service.”