China to build ginormous buses that cars can drive under (video)

by Richard Lai


Seriously, this is the future that China’s envisioning: huge friggin’ buses engulfing smaller cars on the road. Despite the silly picture and the eccentric “3D Express Coach” branding, this cunning project by Shenzhen Huashi Future Car-Parking Equipment actually makes sense. The idea is to make use of the space between regular-size cars and bridges, thus saving construction costs as well as minimizing congestion impact by allowing cars to drive underneath these jumbo buses. Fancy hitching a ride? You better start planning your move to Beijing’s Mentougou district, which is where Huashi will commence building its first 186km of track at year’s end. For now, enjoy the Chinese demo video after the break (translation text at source link).

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Now available: guaranteed high-return investments

by Will Schroeer
In his New York Times blog yesterday, Edward Glaeser asks for nuance and careful thinking on the question of whether countries should spend their way out of the recession: there’s no one answer, and we need to look carefully at the situations different countries are in. Similarly with different kinds of public spending. Some work, some don’t.
It’s a good argument, but one he then fails to apply to infrastructure. “[P]ublic spending on roads or high-speed rail can be extremely wasteful,” he writes, lumping them together. “Infrastructure is serious business, and it is impossible to spend quickly and wisely.”
Certainly it is possible to waste money on roads or tracks. But it is simply untrue that we can’t spend both quickly and wisely, and one wonders how it is possible to both recognize that infrastructure is important and then speak so falsely about it.

Cornell economist Robert Frank points out: “The potholes in the roads do more damage to vehicles each year than it would cost to fix them. That’s just ridiculous that we don’t fix them.” The first year, the investment produces jobs and saves money in auto repairs; every year after, the money saved on auto repairs is free.
Fixing potholes is the very definition of spending both quickly and wisely, and poo-pooing that investment because it might increase the size of the public sector, as Glaeser does, is the very definition of not taking our infrastructure seriously.

Even faster and possibly wiser than fixing potholes is operating the buses we have already bought, and that people use to get to work each day. Lack of money is forcing systems across the country to cut routes and in one case shut down altogether, instantly converting their users from productive workers into unemployment recipients.

Glaeser has plenty of company in noticing that state DOTs build too many roads that produce low returns while they let existing ones deteriorate. The last time Congress sent states flexible transportation stimulus money, too many states missed too many opportunities to spend it well. Congress should help the states take advantage of opportunities to make high-return transportation investments by sending additional transportation stimulus money, but only if it guides that money thoughtfully to places where it will produce real returns. Otherwise, not.
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New York passes bill to make infrastructure investments smarter


The bill, which amends the state’s Environmental Conservation Law, requires state agencies to comply “to the extent practical” with specified smart growth criteria as they prioritize infrastructure projects, including:
* Advancing projects in already-developed areas and projects consistent with local governments’ plans for development.
* Prioritizing projects related to existing infrastructure over expansion.
* Protecting New York’s natural and historic resources.
* Fostering mixed land use, compact development, and affordable housing near jobs.
* Providing mobility through transportation choices and reducing automobile dependency.
* Coordinating planning among government jurisdictions
* Ensuring predictability in land use and building codes.

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Youthworks on the Gwynns Falls Trail

By Shatara Lumpkin

”Many people wonder why we ride bikes for so many miles while working instead of getting in a car and making it easier. Well, wonder no more. Riding our bikes is actually cheaper, healthier, less time consuming, and better for the environment. Not only are our youth working on trails, but their bodies as well and you could do the same. Traveling by bike is a lot less expensive because you are saving money on gas. The average person spends an estimate of about forty dollars a week to fill up their gas tanks versus a person riding a bike that may only spend seventy-five cents to put air in their tires. Baltimore City has now even arranged the MTA to fit bike riders as well. Even if you ride to your destination and are too tired to ride back, you can hop on the light rail, bus, and/or the trains and spend one dollar and sixty cent or three dollars and fifty cents at most for the entire day. As for bike riding being healthier, you’re burning calories with each pedal you take and keeping your heart rate steady. Just from experience, the Gwynns Falls Trail youth workers have learned that it is definitely less time consuming as well. We use the trails where there is less is little to no traffic at all, making our trips shorter and easier. While cars are stuck in traffic, we’re zooming right through the city nonstop. Using our bikes causes less pollution in the air. Many vehicles leak gas or have toxic fumes coming from them which pollute our air and make it bad for the people around them. If everyone would ride a bike every once in a while, our community could truly be on its way to being healthier, cleaner, and safer for its people.”
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Coast to coast for a cause

Seven years ago, Mark Koltz was 260 lbs and had just been diagnosed with type-two diabetes and high blood pressure.
“That was my wake-up call,” said Koltz, who resides just outside of Baltimore, Maryland.
Koltz picked up a bicycle, lost 60 lbs and has since taken his bike more than 72,000 km. By August, he’ll have more than 77,000 km under his belt.
Koltz is participating in America By Bicycle’s Across America North Ride, a group ride that sees 50 cyclists ride almost 6,000 km across the northern U.S. and southern Canada over 50 days.

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Bicyclist Searches for Driver/Closure

by

I was recently sent this article about a cyclist in Frederick County who was injured in a hit and run accident. (tip)

Keith Krombel was on the final leg of a 250-mile bicycle ride with
his friends on May 30, 2009. The journey had taken them on a loop along
Md. 180 and Md. 17 into Brunswick
, across the Potomac River into Virginia and eventually came back
through Gettysburg, Pa., after they went to Hancock and Newville, Pa.

Krombel
was on Yellow Springs Road, five miles from the end of the ride, when a
vehicle struck him. He was just south of the Bethel Road intersection.

The force of the crash threw him into the air. Krombel landed on the side of the road, bicycle parts scattered around him.

The driver disappeared.

After more than a year, the Frederick
County Sheriff’s Office closed the case. No witnesses to the crash were
found, and after a year and a day of investigation without success, the
sheriff’s office can close the case.

Krombel has hired a lawyer
to help him look for leads with the idea of pursuing civil action, he
said. The $10,000 reward is for information leading to an arrest and
conviction.

Considering that cyclists can get hit, get a partial plate and a description of the driver without an arrest I can’t say I’m surprised that in a case like this – where the police have little to go on – that the driver got away with it. Hit and run deaths are on the increase according to AAA-Mid-Atlantic, and 60% of them are pedestrians.

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Andy Clarke responded to Will Bicyclists And Pedestrians Squeeze Out Cars?

This is SO the wrong question. Zero-sum games are rarely constructive and rarely ask the right questions. The issue for urban transportation planners isn’t, or shouldn’t be, “which mode is going to win”. The questions should be more along the lines of what is the balance we need achieve among the different modes; what are people trying to do in urban areas that transportation facilitates or enables? Transportation – even riding a bike – is rarely an end in itself; in fact it almost always imposes costs that individuals and the community end up paying for somehow: in time, or pollution, or energy consumption, etc.
We should be asking how we minimize the need to travel in urban areas; and how we minimize the impact and cost of urban travel – in part so that essential traffic, like deliveries and emergency services and Presidential motorcades (kidding…), doesn’t get stuck in traffic made up largely of single-occupant vehicles driving a mile or two down the street at not much more than walking pace. Just look at the madness we create for ourselves with the school trip: 20%-30% of morning rush-hour traffic in many metro areas consists of perfectly able-bodied kids being ferried to school by parents with better things to do with their time who won’t let their kids walk or ride their bikes to school because there are so many harried parents rushing their kids to school and the roads and sidewalks around the school aren’t safe. And frankly, many of the kids could use the exercise.
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