#gondolatransit

Sep 18, 2011
Sunday Statshot

Sunday Morning Statshot with Nick Chu: Transit Strikes

With an impending GO Transit strike in the near horizon, let’s take a quick look back at some of the more memorable public transit strikes in recent times: Last transit walkout in nation’s capital (Ottawa): 2009 Days lasted: 51 Payroll savings: $3 million/day Economic losses: $4 million/day Property damage losses due to seriously irate commuters in...

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Sep 16, 2011
Site Issues and Updates

The Logic of Hotel Wi-Fi

Sorry for not getting a post up yesterday. It’s been a very hectic week of projects, presentations and travel. I did, however, want to share an experience that just truly blew my mind: I’m currently staying in a hotel with the typical “free wi-fi” amenity. Now let’s ignore the fact that “free wi-fi” typically means...

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Sep 14, 2011
Announcements

Announcing: City Builder Book Club

The 50th anniversary edition of Jane Jacobs’ classic The Death and Life of Great American Cities was officially released today. The book may still stir up controversy in the City Building professions, but it remains essential reading today as much as it was 50 years ago. In commemoration of this anniversary, Toronto’s Centre for City...

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Sep 13, 2011
Complexo do Alemao Teleférico

The Psychology of Urban Gondolas

As Rio de Janeiro’s Complexo do Alemao Teleferico finally moves into full service operations, Rio Times Online has a great little column by Michael Kerlin. The column basically questions what transformative, psychological impacts the system may have on the favela residents it services. Says Kerlin: “The psychology of the gondolas can also inform smart policies in...

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Sep 12, 2011
Urban Planning & Design

What Does Your Report Say? Like, Really Say?

So a study out of the University of Miami discovers this: “Better-looking documents produce increased pride of ownership for a company, and this pride increases valuation.” Should this surprise us? Not at all. But consider how much of an impact aesthetics had in this study: When students were given the first three pages of two...

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Sep 11, 2011
Sunday Statshot

Sunday Statshot with Nick Chu: Urban Transit Speeds

A look at some of the things that make urban transit speeds laudable (or laughable) when compared to speeds achieved by other (in)animate beings on planet earth: Sloth speed: 0.12km/h Goldfish speed: 1.38km/h Average human walking speed: 4.5km/h Michael Phelps’ speed during 100m butterfly: 7.1km/h Average  vehicle speed in Jakarta: 10km/h Average Toronto streetcar speed:...

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Sep 10, 2011
Weekly Roundup

Weekly Roundup

A few highlights from around the world of Urban Gondolas, Gondola Transit, and Cable Propelled Transit: An ambitious urban gondola proposal for Annecy, France. Maybe too ambitious? Citizens opposed to the Burnaby Mountain Gondola in Vancouver plan to take their complaints all the way to the provincial government. The Doppelmayr Group announces plans for a...

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Sep 09, 2011
Thoughts

In The Name Of Fun

I want to build on yesterday’s post about how our decisions as human-beings can be and are constantly impacted by our desire for fun: When we sacrifice expediency’s sake for the scenic route, we do so because it’s fun. When we waste hours of productive time playing Angry Birds, we do so because it’s fun....

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Sep 07, 2011
Infrastructure

Building American Bridges – In China

Despite the paranoid and near-endless calls by come columnists and pundits for economic austerity measures throughout the developed world, there are those in America calling for much-needed upgrades to that nation’s infrastructure as a way to stimulate job-creation and engage in the patriotic act of nation-building by actually building a nation. The New York Times’...

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Sep 06, 2011
Research Issues

We Don’t Know What We Don’t Know – Revisited

There are somewhere around 20,000 cable systems installed and operating around the world at this very moment. Most of the have no implications or ramifications for the urban environment whatsoever. But some do – and there’s virtually no way to find out. That’s daunting to think about. While I’d like to think The Gondola Project...

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