Friday, July 24, 2015

FERNANDO DE ARAGON

The future of Ithaca, NY is guided by the knowledge and disciplined thinking of Fernando de Aragon, and he understands the engaging potential of podcars. He will bring his perspectives and insights to PCC9 (Nov 4-6, Silicon Valley). The 2nd Podcar City conference was held in Ithaca in 2008 before a podcar feasibility study was undertaken there.

Intelligence center for the Ithaca-Tompkins Co. Transportation Council

Fernando is MPO director for this small oasis of urban life. Ithaca is located at the southern end of a NYS Finger Lake and home to Cornell University, Ithaca College and other lively institutions. It is known as a cool, happening place with both traditional and counter cultures. MPO stands for Metropolitan Planning Organization, public agencies that coordinate transportation investments, hopefully in synch with community land use objectives.

With roots in Puerto Rico and early years in southern Florida, de Aragon has worked in Ithaca seventeen years. Topography and special demographics make it challenging to meet current needs and future goals. He studied city and regional planning at Rutgers University in New Jersey and has a PhD in energy management and policy from the University of Pennsylvania. He recently published a novel about the Spanish conquests in the Caribbean.

Come meet him and understand what MPOs are all about at PCC9.

Saturday, April 4, 2015

MARCUS SHARPE

To Marcus Sharpe, PRT is common sense. The appeal is obvious and the benefits will be substantial. He wrestles with the status quo of metro planning which a recent FTA report has labeled dysfunctional.

Sharpe lives up to his name.


Marcus is a native Georgian studied telecommunications as a journalism major and now works for MARTA.  Helping plot out a strategic growth plan for a progressive transit agency, his certification for business analysis of complex projects comes in handy as does work with Africa 10. He routinely balances the demands of people long for more and better transit services and like living in multi-story TOD districts, as well as those who savor the convenience of cars and see a house and yard with trees as the basis of the American Dream.

Clayton County Options

Much of Sharpe’s sharp thinking these days goes to Clayton County, the other side of Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Airport. C-Trans’s meager bus service stopped several years ago, but last fall voters approved a 1 cent sales tax hike to get it back and rail service too. MARTA could extend its metro past the airport, but at a cost unattainable from sales tax revenues.  Marcus sees extending the landside airport APM as a lighter, more viable option. Many locals get excited by commuter rail possibilities.

Pods have a scale that Skytran conveys to Marcus.


Skytran images inspire Marcus to go beyond the images of the past.  He has had positive talks with Clayton officials, although one quickly cautioned that  PRT/podcars do not qualify for FTA funds.  In 2015, under Obama and Secretary Foxx, is that valid?


Saturday, March 7, 2015

BOB CAPORALE

Born and raised in the shadows of the countless skyscrapers of New York City, Bob Caporale moved to Mobile, Alabama to join the publishing and research house known as Elevator World in 1993. The founder and editor Bill Sturgeon already thought vertical and horizontal transport people should talk to each other more. In 1995 Bob as editor continued the dialog, encouraging it in many ways through articles and workshops.

With Assistant Brad O'Gwynn, Caporale
snaps a pic with journalistic flare.


Caporale approached and still approaches a wide range of related architectural, planning, regulatory and contractual issues with an open, flexible mind that sometimes conflicts with the hard worlds of mechanical engineering and public safety. This takes a good listening ear and a careful use of words.


Although still a Yankee who knows the challenges of winter, Bob has become addicted to Caribbean breezes and to West Indies Salad --  a crab dish special to the Mobile Bay. He retired from EW in 2013, and has stayed along America’s South Coast. He still finds time to contribute to www.highrisefacilities.com and his interest in smart horizontal movement innovation remain sharp. 

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

BILL JAMES: MOBILITY LIBERATION

Bill James of Jpods is a man on a mission of liberation. He sees himself upholding the United States Constitution by undoing a Federal "monopoly" on transportation. Bill despairs over the oil-guzzling stupidity of our road-focused infrastructure, He knows well the agony of bloodshed especially when it’s over something as mundane as gas and oil. “Our dependency on oil is a lot like the antebellum South’s dependence on slaves.” He calculates that a barrel of oil is the equivalent of twelve slaves for a year. We need to stop this.
Bill James;s happy solar vision,

James’s thinking focuses on US constitutional issues that have produced intolerable congestion and carnage on our Interstate highways of the oil-giddy 1950s thanks to General Dwight D. Eisenhower as president in the 1960s. He argues that Government needs to get out of monopolistic assumptions that cars and streets are the beginning and end of American life. Young people today are not as infatuated with cars. Smartcars are emerging as major generational shifts take place. Jpods  aims at them as it integrates solar power collection into PRT designs. “PRT technology is not the issue. Morgantown’s decades of safe and reliable service is today’s baseline.”

Jpods has obtained formal consent from the New Jersey town of Secaucus to install and operate within their jurisdiction. James works with Atlantic Energy, a Sacramento-based manufacturer of solar roofing tiles. With a network of West Point classmates and friends, he is opening new mobility dialogs with Boston – the City and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. And he may yet be the first to break podcar dirt in Silicon Valley.



Tuesday, November 18, 2014

FLANIGAN'S EMISSIONS TIME BOMB

Ted Flanigan not only worries about carbon emissions, he has figured out ways to make a living convincing and helping others to green up their buildings and campuses. Image and communications are key. One of his tools for that is a 32-foot diameter sphere. That's the size of a ton of carbon dioxide -- one of the billions of tons that gets belched into our atmosphere every day. This is the major cause of Global Warming. Seeing Ted's Emissions Time Bomb brings that message to people right where it counts - their minds and hearts.



Although Ted, like his brother Bill, grew up in New York, his company EcoMotion is based in Irvine CA. They motivate people and institutions to green up their operations. They do walk-through assessments, feasibility and cost/benefit studies, and program management. His brother Bill has long been active in ATRA, and he understands the potential of podcars. Bill occasionally leaves his Colorado home to work with Ted and has been trained to inflate, safeguard and then deflate the Save-A-Ton balloon. So Ted understands podcars too.

Ted is active in professional and academic circles and often gives talks on renewable energy, bringing to the podium years of experience accumulated while working at the New York Power Authority in the 1980s and 1990s, and then as Director of Energy Efficiency for the City of Los Angeles. Learn more about his green aspirations and services at www.ecomotion.us.


Friday, July 25, 2014

PHILBRICK leads San Jose's MTI

Karen Philbrick has been appointed the executive director of the Mineta Transportation Institute as Rod Diridon retires. She is well qualified for this challenging role after working five years as MTI's research director leading three subcenters and directing more than 200 principal investigators for both agencies,. She oversaw the competitive selection of 122 research projects, and the production of more than 150 peer-reviewed research reports. 


MTI is on the campus of San Jose State University.


MTI enjoys a well-documented reputation for providing practical, relevant surface mobility research for legislators, public agencies, and others who can benefit from peer-reviewed data. The Institute will continue on this path into the future while also retaining its dedication to astute financial management, transportation workforce development, and public information resources. Benefiting the nation’s mobility, economy, environment, safety, and security will always remain a priority.

Dr. Philbrick oversaw research that assessed the ATN industry -- the accomplishments, failures, lessons to date and prospects for commercial growth. The USDOT-funded report is to be released this fall.

Prior to joining the MTI team, Dr. Philbrick was assistant director of the National Center for Intermodal Transportation at the University of Denver working on operator fatigue issues. She has extensive contacts in the Asian Pacific region. Recently she was reappointed to the USDOT’s Transit Rail Advisory Committee for Safety (TRACS). She is active with the national Council of University Transportation Centers (CUTC).
Dr. Philbrick did undergraduate studies at CalState-Fresno, earned two masters degrees at Columbia, and a PhD from the University of Denver.


Wednesday, June 4, 2014

JOHN LOCKE and SUSTAINABLE GOOD

If John Locke's idea is accepted that government is a social contract guiding individuals to a common good, then public officials should be thinking of ways for us the people to live and move in harmony and promote a sustainable general welfare. Many of them are already doing that, some quite eloquently so. We need government to satisfy needs (such as rubbish removal) and to create opportunities (e.g. education, public works). 

Would John Locke smile on this scene in China?


Our transportation infrastructure, so heavily weighted to auto addiction, is sadly unsustainable. Many civic leaders wonder how much of the seemingly unending stream of new road vehicles are really needed. Whether gas or propane, vehicles USA generate millions of tons of carbon dioxide every day. Road costs keep getting higher, and we hardly have funds to maintain existing highways and bridges  --in the USA about 50,000 miles of Interstates, dwarfed by 2.6 million miles of paved roads with a total of 8.6 million lane-miles, dotted by thousands of acres of parking lots and garages.

What a climate-challenged mess! What would Locke, whose writings influenced Voltaire, Rousseau and the writers of the U.S. Constitution, say about it?

A Pod-Way Out of Our Dilemma

Few doubt that car costs will continue to rise. We, the People, whether under the sway of John Locke, Rand Paul, or Elizabeth Warren, need preemptive policy shifts to get us out of our auto addiction. There are very strong arguments that investing in pedestrian and bikeway networks provides more benefits per dollar than highway improvements.  Wisely planned, new ped-bike infrastructure will make mass transit more viable. ATN has emerged as an option for community-scaled mobility services. They can feed existing transit stations. Much can be done without costly guideways.  

Sadly, ATN is not being designed into huge road projects. Witness New York’s $4-billion replacement of the cross-Hudson Tappan Zee Bridge north of NYC. ATN is light and would not impact structural requirements. Rail was dropped for these very reasons.

Things do change and here is a striking but little-known example. According to Harvard’s Professor Emeritus Charles Harris, in 1850 eighty percent of the land in southern New England was directly used by humans: only 20% was forest.  With no government master plan, radical change came as the USA expanded westward. By 1950, agriculture and industry had dwindled in Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island so that 80% of the land was again in forest!

Today over 90 percent of urban travel is by motorized vehicles. Transit’s share is generally given as 2-3 percent in the USA. Walking and biking are harder to measure, and it seems like they are growing. Let’s say that 10% is green.  Can we push that to 25% and then to 50%? What might the Sierra Club, the National Institute of Health and the League of Women’s Voters have to say such matters? 

Podcar City 8 in Stockholm

The auto industry is fast becoming a quaint leftover from the twentieth century. Who cares what Detroit thinks? More is happening in California’s hot Silicon Valley - hotbed of Google, Uber, and ATN. California is collaborating with Swedish officials, and the 8th annual Podcar City conference will take place September 3-5 on Stockholm’s airfront. Come up to speed there with those who under the influence of John Locke's 17th century thinking, believe that government is part of the solution in the 21st.