• @[email protected]
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    41 year ago

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvvA_GToc0M

    Cable cars certainly have their uses. They are dope in situations where you do not have an existing alternative (like up a mountain) and still want to move a reaonable amount of people. Places where the terrain is not condusive to a straight connection on ground level (like up a mountain). Places where you have a somewhat steady and reliable but not overly huge stream of people (like up a mountain).

    But they also have issues: They’re not actually that fast. On a level path even a casual cyclist can keep up. While you can have intermediate stops - every gondola has to stop there. You can’t have express gondolas that skip it in order to get from end to end faster.

    • @Fried_out_KombiOP
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      11 year ago

      They can also be useful for water crossings or informal developments (e.g., favelas) where it’s hard to acquire linear rights-of-way. Tricable gondolas can go faster (up to around 30 km/h) and carry more people (5k to 8k pax per direction per hour), which puts it comparable to a single-lane BRT. But yeah, they’re certainly not a replacement for heavy metro or suburban rail for servicing longer distance and/or higher capacity routes.