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Jun 30, 2011
Uncategorized

New Posts

So sorry, folks. This week has been insanely busy for me and I’m trying my best to get out new posts. Please be patient and accept my apologies.

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Jun 29, 2011
Design Considerations

Making Design and Policy Agree

Consider the common airplane and it’s absurd carry-on baggage situation: Airline policy (at least according to their safety videos) is for passengers to store their heavier carry-on luggage below the seat in front of them and the lighter articles in the overhead compartment. This is, apparently, for your own safety. But have you ever been...

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Jun 27, 2011
Stanserhorn CabriO

Stanserhorn Cabrio – More Details Emerge

While admittedly not as visually stunning as the original designs released a year or so ago, Central Switzerland’s soon-to-be-realized Cabrio Seilbahn / Aerial Tram / Convertible Funifor promises to be one of the most unique installations in the world when it opens. Take a look here. (Note: The linked video is in German, so it would be...

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Jun 26, 2011
Sunday Statshot

Chinese Urbanism, Part 2 – The Sunday Stats with Nick Chu

Note: Nick Chu is presently on vacation in China but still managed to smuggle the follow observations out from behind The Great Firewall.     A quick look at some of the things that make urbanism in China work (or not) – all stats from The Concrete Dragon by Thomas J. Campanella: Length of Shanghai’s Inner...

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Jun 25, 2011
Weekly Roundup

Weekly Roundup: Another Gondola Proposal for Baltimore Area?

A few highlights from around the world of Urban Gondolas and Cable Propelled Transit: The Winstead Br0thers, those of the ill-fated and ill-conceived Baltimore Urban Gondola Proposal last week planned to present a similar proposal to Ocean City, Maryland Council. Like the Baltimore concept, this was not a transit system and merely a tourist-based installation. Mere...

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Jun 24, 2011
Research Issues, Thoughts

Vapour Research (Or, for the Americans, Vapor Research)

I want to build upon the concept I described yesterday of ‘Vapour Literature.’ You could also call it Vapour Research or Vapour Evidence but they’re all the same thing: Empirical evidence of a fact that was never meant to exist as evidence in the first place. The example I used was the photo-sharing site Flickr....

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Jun 23, 2011
Thoughts

The Literature Spectrum

There are three commonly known types of research (and we’re conditioned to only listen to and accept one): White Literature – Clean, pure and peer-reviewed. Academic. The Gold standard. Black Literature – Advertising, marketing, corporate literature, propaganda. Grey Literature – The stuff in-between. Company white papers, government reports and think tank advocacy pieces. I’d like...

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Jun 22, 2011
Events and Speaking Engagements

Shameless Self-Promotion

This summer Fusion Halifax is hosting a series of panel discussions entitled It’s More Than Buses – a conversation about the future of public transportation in Halifax. The first session is on June 28th and I’ll be sitting on the panel. Halifax is one of those curious cities. The largest city in Canada’s Maritime provinces, it’s...

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Jun 21, 2011
Oddities

Swiss Teen Builds Scooter-Car, Promptly Has Scooter-Car Confiscated By Police

Last Friday night a 17 year old teen was stopped by the police in the Swiss town of Jonschwil when they noticed the local Töffli-Bub (Swiss German slang for “scooter boy”) driving around town in a homemade “scooter-car.” It seems the inventive young man had created his Töffli-Auto by welding the rear end of an old...

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Jun 20, 2011
Economics

Is Public Transportation 340% More Expensive Than It Needs To Be?

Cable Propelled Transit systems could prove a boon to public transportation scholars and researchers because the technology’s curious history could open up the ‘black box’ of public transportation funding in the developed world and throw into question our entire model of how we build things that move other things. Because cable has a long history...

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