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Tysons Corner: Transformation via PRT An option for the Tysons Circulator Plan. First version: Feb 09. Current revision: Aug 09.
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, Metro, and 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.
The Virginia Legislature's January 2009 "Viability of PRT for Virginia" report concludes: "Interest and development of PRT appears to be growing around the world. With the inevitable construction of at least two systems and the testing underway of several others (although in most cases not at full scale), it can be argued that PRT is proving to be a feasible technology." In California, three cities are pursuing PRT systems: San Jose, Santa Cruz, and Alameda.
Below is a simplified PRT system concept sketch. The red, green, and blue segments roughly follow the three shuttle bus circulator routes shown in the Tysons Strawman report (see below for a shuttle bus map). Each of the three PRT segments has roughly 15 stations and 4 miles of PRT guideway, with a very rough cost estimate of $30M to $60M per segment. The latest PRT cost information may be found at: http://www.ultraprt.com/cms/index.php?page=cost-per-mile-7m---15m. The greater PRT system covers a 4km x 2.5 area:
High resolution satellite imagery of this sketch can be found at: http://www.ultraprt.com/cms/tysons2b.jpg (4000x2800, 3MB). This sketch does not attempt to snake the PRT guideway around buildings as it should.
Relevant PRT Quotes
PRT is Faster than a Car. Trip time from Freddie Mac ( 8000 Jones Branch Dr.) to Metro Stop #2 (Tysons Blvd & Chain Bridge Rd - Tysons Corner Center):
120 years ago, streetcar transit was a brand new technology, providing faster, better, and cheaper local transit than the alternatives. Starting in 1888, streetcars changed the way cities were built. Likewise, PRT is a brand new technology, providing faster, better, and cheaper transit than current alternatives. Conventional local transit serves narrow strips at a slow pace. Non-stop, faster-than-a-car PRT serves two-dimensional areas. Cities are two-dimensional areas, not narrow strips. A PRT system can put all Tysons workers and residents within a 300 meter walk of a PRT station; conventional local transit will serve only a small fraction of that many people. At the Congress for New Urbanism 2005 Conference, Peter Calthorpe said, "One of my pet peeves is that we've been dealing with 19th Century transit technology. We can do better. We can have ultra light elevated transit systems with lightweight vehicles. Because the vehicles are lighter, the system will use less energy. If you think about what you'd want from the ideal transit technology, it's PRT: a) stations right where you are, within walking distance, b) no waiting."
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Background Information, Links, etc 1. PRT System Design Notes For discussion of PRT design to transform major office centers, please see: Major Activity Center PRT Circulator Design: Hacienda Business Park. Transportation Research Record #2006 (TRB 1/07). Published as part of U.S. EPA's “Transforming Office Parks into Transit Villages” study. http://www.cities21.org/TRB_PRT_HBP.pdf - 4.4MB. ABSTRACT: The design of a comprehensive mobility system for a suburban San Francisco East Bay Area office park exposes a number of new transit circulator implementation challenges. Original system design perspectives are provided regarding:
Question: Where should PRT stations go in Tysons? Where can we find groups of 1,000 or more workers/residents/shoppers within a walkable superblock? Is 300 meters a reasonable walking radius for Tysons workers? (PRT systems can sometimes blanket an area even with only 150 or 200 meter walking radius.) The goal of PRT stations is to avoid having to have pedestrians walk across dangerous arterial streets (don't get me started about Leesburg Pike). As the land use is transformed, islands of new urbanist walkability spread out from PRT stations. 2. Tysons Corner Information and Planning Studies 2A. http://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/dpz/tysonscorner/ 2B. http://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/dpz/tysonscorner/drafts/tysons_strawman_02062009.pdf has four pages about circulators, including the map below. It is straightforward to create PRT system to match the four circulators, though it is limiting to force the routes to follow roads. PRT can easily cut through the middle of super blocks, placing stations close to buildings. The straw man indicates that circulation will initially be provided by shuttle buses, to be replaced by a fixed-guideway system when feasible.
2C. http://www.dullesmetro.com/ 2D. Some folks are fighting the elevated Metro alignment: http://www.tysonstunnel.org/images/boards/TysonsTunnel_ElevatedPhotos.pdf . They point out that the elevated part is 60 or 70 feet high in places (plenty of room for PRT to go under). 3. Streetcar notes: Typical streetcars provide an average speed of 7-12 mph for local-stop service (6.5 mph from a separate analysis) - jogging speed. Streetcars are further slowed long waiting time - headways are 13 minutes during peak hour in Portland. The streetcar speed is often exceeded by ordinary local-stop bus services. One clear speed-and-reliability benefit of the bus is intrinsic to the technology: Buses have the physical ability to go around obstructions that occur in their lane, while the streetcar is stuck behind them. (see: http://www.humantransit.org/2009/07/streetcars-an-inconvenient-truth.html, http://web.cecs.pdx.edu/~monserec/courses/urbantrans/projects/9A_presentation_2007.ppt, http://portlandtransport.com/archives/2005/07/how_fast_is_tha.html). |