Hillsboro, Oregon: PRT circulator sketch for AmberGlen / Tanasbourne / OHSU

First sketch: Aug 7 2009. 

"Thinking Bigger at OHSU/AmberGlen"

 

ULTra is a battery-driven, 200-mpg-equivalent, elevated personal rapid transit (PRT) system with many four-person vehicles. First deployment is scheduled for London Heathrow Airport in Spring 2010, to serve Heathrow's new Terminal 5. Working as circulator transit for office parks, airports, universities, and other major activity centers, ULTra is faster than a car. In these applications, ULTra makes carpooling, MAX LRT, and TriMet bus more effective, by solving the "last mile problem." PRT also enables longer bike commutes and shopping trips. A three-minute youtube video of ULTra can be viewed here: http://www.ultraprt.com/  Peer-reviewed market research for two San Francisco Bay Area transit-served major job centers, Palo Alto's Stanford Research Park (SRP) and Pleasanton's Hacienda Business Park, forecasts a PRT-induced commuting mode reduction from more than 80% single occupancy vehicle (SOV) down to 45% SOV. In these two studies, carpooling increased to more than 30% and commuter rail transit increased beyond 15%. Such commuting shift shifts acres of parking for higher use. 

 

Below is a very rough PRT system concept sketch. 22 stations. 6.4 miles of one-way PRT guideway. Very rough capital cost range: $48M - $96M (The latest PRT cost information may be found at: http://www.ultraprt.com/cms/index.php?page=cost-per-mile-7m---15m). System would probably be built in two or three phases, emanating out from LRT. Quiet electric vehicle PRT (with tight turning radii) can penetrate residential neighborhoods, putting transit stations closer to residents than a streetcar system could.

 

200 meter walking radius shown around the PRT stations

 

 

Relevant PRT Quotes

  • "We've concocted a system where local trips take an auto. That's our biggest tragedy. Streetcars, such as those used in Portland's Pearl District, and elevated people movers, like those in downtown Miami, are moving people from rail stations to their final destinations. But a new concept, PRT, may help revolutionize urban transportation, providing a cost-effective way to get people from train stations to where they need to go." - Peter Calthorpe, co-founder, Congress for New Urbanism.

  • One of the advantages of a PRT network "is that it offers a lot of flexibility. It's much less expensive than traditional transit. It doesn't serve the same needs as high-speed rail or BART metro. It's a complement to those systems," Laura Stuchinksy, Sustainability Officer, City of San Jose Department of Transportation.

  • "All the advantages of New Urbanism - its compact land saving density, its walkable mix of uses, and its integrated range of housing opportunities - would be supported and amplified by a circulation system that offers fundamentally different choices in mobility and access. Smart Growth and new Urbanism have begun the work of redefining America's twenty-first century development paradigms. Now it is time to redefine the circulation armature that supports them. It is short sighted to think that significant changes in land-use and regional structure can be realized without fundamentally reordering our circulation system. We've been developing TOD without the T for far too long.  PRT is the T." - Peter Calthorpe.

PRT is Faster than a Car. Trip time from Sunset Center Office Park (19225 NW Tanasbourne Dr.) to Quatama MAX LRT (2.0 miles)

  • PRT: 4:30 minutes (including 20 second average wait time)

  • Driving: 6:00 minutes via Google Maps driving directions. (Add additional time for traffic. Add additional time for parking hassle.)

  • Streetcar: 22.30 minutes (6.5 min average wait time with 13 min headways, 8 min/per mile [jogging speed])

  • Trip time for a "milk run" circulator bus is similar to streetcar

Background info: