BEIJING: China’s capital Beijing, recently named along with Mexico City as having the worst traffic jams in the world, is looking for solutions. One could be the elevated “super bus”. The bus, due to be tested in the coming months in the western part of the city, travels on rails and straddles two lanes of traffic, allowing cars to drive under its passenger compartment, which holds up to 1,400 people. “We’re going to start laying down test tracks along a sixkilometre stretch towards the end of the year,” Song Youzhou, the chief executive of design firm Shenzhen Hashi Future Parking Equipment, told AFP. “From the second half of 2011, we’re planning to test the bus with passengers on board,” he said, noting that after a full year of trial runs, authorities would make a decision on whether to use the bus on a wide scale. Song said Hashi was in talks with three Chinese carmakers to produce the ecofriendly bus, which runs on both electricity and solar power. Authorities hope eventually to install 180 kilometres of “straddle bus” lines including a route to the capital’s international airport, Song told the official Global Times. Song said the “super bus” could ease traffic congestion by up to 30 per cent, as it does not take up actual road space, but special tracks would have to be put down, elevated bus stops built and new traffic signals developed. Only small and mediumsized vehicles will be able to pass under the bus, meaning drivers will have to be extravigilant. An alarm would sound if an oversized vehicle attempted to pass, the report said. Song said the bus had to be tested with car drivers in realtime situations to detect any possible problems. According to government data, Beijing is on track to have five million cars on its roads by year’s end. The four million mark was passed in December. The head of the Beijing Transportation Research Centre, Guo Jifu, warned this week that traffic in the capital could slow to under 15 kilometres an hour on average if further measures were not taken to limit the number of cars. Private cars are currently kept off Beijing’s roads for one day per week depending on licence plate numbers. Beijing’s air is among the most polluted in the world, and the problem is getting worse amid high demand for private vehicles from its increasingly affluent residents. For days, Chinese and foreign media have issued reports explaining how thousands of vehicles were trapped in an epic traffic jam stretching for more than 100 kilometres on a highway leading to Beijing. The bottleneck on the Beijing-Tibet expressway, which began on August 14 due to a spike in traffic by cargo-bearing heavy trucks and was compounded by road maintenance works... seems to have vanished. A team of AFP reporters drove 260 kilometres on Wednesday along the highway out of Beijing, through the northern province of Hebei and into Inner Mongolia – and did not encounter anything but intermittent traffic jams at toll booths. Hundreds of trucks were on the road to Beijing, packed with everything from produce to live goats — but the traffic was moving.—AFP |
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Elevated ‘super bus’ solution to Beijing’s traffic woes!
Way to Go China .............. You find the right solution ........... Amazing
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