PRT System
By: Lucas Shubert
This
week’s blog is an excerpt from the paper I recently submitted to Transportation
Research Forum titled Transportation Conditions and Solutions in Carbondale,
IL. It is a case study of the operational PRT system in Masdar City.
Masdar City Masdar City,
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates was founded in 2006 as a commercial center with
a very specific goal in mind—to develop a sustainable technology and renewable
energy research center and use the knowledge it creates in its own
infrastructure (Masdar City 2013). In fact, Masdar City translates from Arabic
to Source City (Farussi 2011). The
harsh desert climate of the region has taught many harsh lessons to its
inhabitants over the centuries, one of which being that sustainable living is
not a catch phrase, but a reality. It is for this reason that, even though Abu
Dhabi controls eight percent of global oil reserves, it “has enough hydrocarbon
reserves at current production levels to last 100 years (Masdar City 2013).”
Masdar City is being developed in one of the wealthiest nations as well as in
the world in an environment that rewards sustainable practices, making it a
seemingly ideal technology laboratory and its development over the next decade,
until 2025 according to the Khaleej Times,
integral to the future of energy-related technology.
Figure 8 shows a conceptual model
for sustainable urban design, one to which Masdar City is attempting to adhere
throughout its development and operation (Masdar City 2013). Each of the six
inputs below must be intertwined as shown, including transportation planning
and management. Perhaps the most important transportation-related fact about
Masdar City is its adjacency to the Abu Dhabi International Airport. That,
mixed with its focus on being a pedestrian friendly community, can possibly
lead to the complete elimination of private vehicles (Masdar City 2013).
Designers are following several strategies, including making “walking and
self-propelled transport…the most convenient forms of transportation to many
destinations within the city (Masdar City 2013).” Strategies as simple as
shaded walks and pathways and as complex as electric transit systems will be
integrated to this end (Masdar City 2013). The system being developed will
function on a series of levels, starting with light rail and mass transit lines
that connect the city itself with nearby population centers (Masdar City 2013).
For easy travel within the city, studies of personal rapid transit and freight
rapid transit that offer the comfort of private transportation with public
transit efficiency are being conducted (Masdar City 2013).
2getthere was selected to supply the
PRT system for Masdar’s first phase, in which it connects the Masdar Institute
of Science and Technology (2getthere 2013). The system features 10 PRT and 2
freight rapid transit (FRT) vehicles operating underground on a 1.2 kilometer
track accessing 5 stations (2getthere 2013). The vehicles are powered by
lithium-phosphate batteries, with a range of as much as 60 kilometers, that are
recharged when the vehicle reaches a station (2getthere 2013). Even though this
system currently only serves 500 people per hour per day, eventually the city
plans to have 3,000 PRT vehicles making 130,000 trips per day (2getthere 2013).
A fleet of that size would not be necessary in Carbondale, but the vehicles and
their operation methods could readily function there.
References
Masdar
City. 2013. “About Masdar.” Last Modified 2011. Accessed January 15. http://masdarcity.ae/en/86/about-masdar.
2getthere. 2013.
“Masdar PRT Application.” Last modified 2012. Accessed January 15. http://www.2getthere.eu/?page_id=10.
Farussi,
Federico. 2011. “Smart Cities VS Stupid Men.” GH Network. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
Figure 8.
Sustainability model for Masdar City (Masdar City 2013).
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