Wednesday, January 16, 2013

151> Forward Compatibility and Extensibility





A great PRT design should squarely address forward compatibility and extensibility. These are two distinct, although related, concepts.  To be forward compatible a current system must be designed to gracefully interact with future versions of itself. This is extremely important with PRT because the track or guideway will generally become a permanent piece of infrastructure whose design should support any conceivable future vehicle improvements.

Extensibility is somewhat different. It is the ability of a system to be adapted to whole new uses. An example for PRT would be to use the system to deliver freight. Designing to be extensible is a whole different challenge because it tends to conflict with the optimization of a system for the original purpose. Nevertheless it certainly seems silly to foreclose future functionality through design decisions that might otherwise be completely arbitrary.

Some current PRT offerings seem to have been forced, presumably by financial restraints, to curtail design features that would enhance forward compatibility and extensibility. It remains to be seen whether this strategy helps PRT adoption or actually hurts it by limiting the flexibility needed to address a city’s varying needs.

One example of this, which we will examine here, is the off-line station paradigm, which has become an assumed characteristic of PRT. This notion presupposes a number of issues, most notably a steady flow of would-be riders at every station site. One of the strengths of PRT is that it does not rely on aggregating passengers to fill large vehicles. This advantage is traded away, however, when the cumulative cost of feeder track and an elevated station effectively means that it must be busy at all times to pay for itself. This requires a pedestrian density that typically won’t be found throughout the city. Yet PRT is envisioned as a distributed network – one that only realizes its full promise with large geographical reach and many stations. If you have already grouped people together, and you are sending them all to one of only a few destinations, what is the point of doing it in individualized vehicles? Sure, the individualized vehicles make the system extensible…just add track. But does the city’s layout include contiguous station sites with sufficient pedestrian density to make each station viable?

One idea that I have never seen discussed is to have low speed loops that serve minor stations, each having only a very short drive-in-back-out spur. In such an arrangement these loops would act as feeders for a more conventional route with greater speeds and capacity, similar to the feeder roads along freeways but looping away to get greater geographical reach. The regular line would have the more conventional off-line stations. In this design, which works like a typical residential road where residents back out of their driveways, vehicles would obviously need to wait their turn, just like the road-based counterpart. Still, significant local traffic can pass without this being a significant disruption. The idea would be to keep each loop small enough to limit traffic to just a few vehicles per minute. This would presumably be able to service several city blocks in areas where there are no high-rise buildings to create high peak demand. With a control system that allows variable vehicle speed, vehicles on such a slow loop can exit at very low speeds, meaning the spur would be a sharp turnoff, and not a long  deceleration ramp.

The picture at the top of the page shows how, in a fully 3D system, a spur can be dropped anywhere.  Bus stops are particularly attractive destination choices, since they come readymade with seating and at least some sort of cover. The picture below shows a portion of a traditional PRT loop with low speed track serving the areas within. In this example there is one way in and two ways out, but there are probably hundreds of other possible configurations. In this example the same deceleration/acceleration ramps are used for off-line stations and to access the slow loop.




It should be noted that the low speed track can be manufactured more cheaply than higher speed track because it can be designed for greater headway, (less weight) sharper turns, (kept within an easement) can be designed to never admit heavier vehicles, and would not have as much stress from vehicle inertia. It would also require less copper because of the scant traffic load.

To bring this all back to the subjects of extensibility and forward compatibility, this is an example of designing PRT with both in mind, especially in the direction of less expense and greater coverage. Larger, heavier or faster systems will necessarily cost more, and this is what cities are most likely to seek when there is an immediate, otherwise intractable problem. PRT configurations need to address these immediate concerns first. But for a long-term, more comprehensive mobility solution, a more extensive network is needed. Thus there is a need for extensibility toward the lighter, cheaper track and stations that could put more areas in reach. On the other side of the coin, in a growing city, faster, longer range (and maybe even bigger) solutions will be increasingly needed, so a system should be able to grow into those roles as well.

Clearly, it is less challenging and more straightforward to simply say, “Here is our vehicle, here is our track, and here is our station,” and a product that involves a confusing array of choices is hard to introduce into the marketplace. But the ability of a particular PRT system to evolve and improve would seem to be an important measure of its worth as well.