Israel Is Testing A Levitating Monorail Designed To Replace
Cars
By Beckett Mufson —
Jul 1 2014
Congestion and pollution are two widely-known evils that
come with post-Industrial urbanization. Futurists like Elon Musk—founder of the
Tesla electric car company—have presented possible solutions to the smog and
CO2 saturating the air, but eco-friendly vehicles still saturate roads around
the globe. SkyTran, a
futuristic California transit company and NASA
partner, believes it can solve the problems modern commuter culture faces
in one fell, magnetic swoop:
Its main infrastructural component is a series of elevated
monorails, which the site claims are silent and eco-friendly. These rails will
support the bubble pods using the same crazy futuristic MagLev technology that
China has been implementing in its Super-Maglev rail system.
The pods can be ordered through a smartphone app, and will
pick up and drop off travelers along the rail’s route. In its concept video, SkyTram
says that this system will integrate into quiet neighborhoods and urban areas
in a way that ends the “vicious cycle of grow, build, crowd, followed by grow
more, build more, crowd more.”
SkyTran’s first customer is the company’s partner, Israeli
Aerospace Industries (IAI), which will be building a demonstrative
MagLev monorail on its campus in Tel Aviv. There, the world see whether or not
SkyTran CEO Jerry Sanders can back up his ambitious claims about
efficiency.
The current model reaches a meager 45 miles per hour,
obviously not creating any competition for the highway speeds of the cars the
company seeks to replace. And despite the measure of freedom SkyTran’s personal
pods grant, they’ll still be restricted to the monorail’s route, which roaming
enthusiasts won’t appreciate. Also, local lawmakers may not see value in
replacing the current public transit system with an entirely new
infrastructure.
On the other hand, if the technology overcomes these
limitations and all goes according to SkyTran’s plan, we may see the
Jetsons-like pods zooming in and out of buildings sooner than we think. Hopefully
it doesn’t turn out anything like the titular train in The Simpsons episode, “Marge
vs. The Monorail.”
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