21 December 2022

How "Swyft" Are Their Ideas?

 Winter Solstice arrives today at 4:47 p.m. local time. The sun will set sixteen minutes earlier, thus beginning our "longest night"  here in New York City.





That is not the reason, though, I have posted the above image.  Yes, dusk and dark will come sooner than on any other day of the year.  And it seems that some former Google employees are doing everything they can, if unwittingly, to further prolong it.

They formed Swyft Cities, an organization that aims to "revolutionize transportation and real estate." (The more likely any group or organization uses any form of the word "revolution," the less likely they are to know what it means--or to have studied any history.) Their Twitter feed claims they "save time, space and costs by reducing parking needs, freeing up land use and providing a superior passenger experience."

I can get on board with "reducing parking needs."  It seems to me that it can be done most efficiently by, well, getting more cars off the road.  But their own promotional materials don't reflect any understanding of that, or what else might make cities truly sustainable or livable--for people from all walks of life.

I mean, an aerial gondola ride at sunset (or sunrise) can be quite lovely. I know:  I've taken such airborne voyages.  But, really, how many cars can they replace.  A bus. let alone a train, can carry many times more passengers per trip and run more frequently.





What really irks me, though, is that the folks of Swyft seem--as, to be fair, too many other planners--oblivious to bicycles.  As "Hannah" on Road.cc acerbically retorted, "Just build bike lanes!"  I agree, but with this caveat:  that the lanes aren't conceived, planned or built by folks like the ones at Swyft Cities.  I've ridden on too many bike lanes that seem to have been designed by people who haven't been on  bicycles since they got their driver's licenses, if indeed they ever rode for transportation or even recreation.

As for the people at Swyft:  They confirm, to me, that people who are smart enough to bring us "smart" phones and appliances sometimes lack in life experience, or simple common sense.

1 comment:

  1. While I'm not that keen on Swyft Cities' design, you're wrong the buses can run more frequently than something like this. These gondolas are much smaller than busses and therefore can both run substantially more frequently and also go point-to-point rather than stopping at many stations. You'd be hard pressed to find a bus system that has busses more frequently than once every 5 minutes. However, PRT systems like Swyft Cities have vehicles that wait for you, no schedules needed. So "frequency" isn't even meaningful in this context - a vehicle can depart from the station more often than once every 60 seconds. Find me a bus system that can do that.

    Swyft Cities tho has absolutely abysmal aerodynamics on that vehicle, which indicates to me they aren't thinking very hard. The fact that their vehicles look like they can carry up to 6 people or more means they're going to be quite heavy - almost as heavy as a car. Most trips will nevertheless be taken with a single person in each of them, which is quite wasteful. This along with the fact that they expect multiple vehicles can be supported between each support polealso means the system is going to be a lot more expensive to construct than if the vehicles could only hold 4 people or two people and only ran one per pole.

    But all in all its not a terrible idea and has potential. Streamline the vehicle, make it a bit smaller/lighter, be realistic about support infrastructure, and this could have potential.

    Not as much potential as something like SkyTran tho. While something like Swyft Cities should have a capacity of around 1600 vehicles/hour (limited by distance between poles and vehicle speed), faster PRT systems like SkyTran can easily achieve capacities of over 7200 vehicles/hour (limited by emergency braking requirements), and a system that allows vehicles to dynamically couple into trains can have a capacity upwards of 40,000 vehicles/hour, which is more than subway systems can handle.

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