People mover
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Image:New-Tram.JPG A people mover is a fully-automated, grade-separated rail transit system. The term is generally used only to describe elevated single-rack loops serving small areas such as airports or theme parks, but is sometimes applied to considerably more complex automated systems.
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Types
Simple back-and-forth shuttles are referred to as hectos, short for hectometric, meaning designed for a few hundred meters.
Multi-station systems intended for mass transit in a city are more formally known as automated guideway transit (AGT) systems. This term is generally limited to rubber-tired vehicles led by a guiding track; fully automated rapid transit lines, such as the Singapore MRT's North East MRT Line, are usually not considered AGTs.
It has recently been suggested that could be used for driverless transit services and potentially for 'dual-mode' automobiles [1]. A Rapid Urban Flexible (RUF) test track was opened at Ballerup, near Copenhagen in 2000. The track is very short (25 meters) and has one test vehicle. Tests have shown that practical personal vehicles can be developed with dual mode qualities [2] [3].
Complex APMs deploy fleets of small vehicles over a network of guideways with off-line stations in a dynamic configuration that supplies non-stop service to passengers. These taxi-like systems are referred to as personal rapid transit (PRT).
History
The term was coined by Walt Disney when he and his Imagineers were working on the new 1967 Tomorrowland at Disneyland as a working title for a new attraction, the PeopleMover. According to Imagineer Bob Gurr, "the name got stuck," and it was no longer a working title.
The world's first airport people mover was installed in 1971 at Tampa International Airport in the United States. The VAL (Véhicule Automatique Léger) system in Lille, France, opened in 1983, is often cited as the world's first mass transit AGT, but the title is disputed by Kobe's Port Liner, which opened two years earlier in 1981. Lille's VAL is, however, acknowledged to be the first AGT installed to serve an existing urban area.
Driverless metros have become common in Europe and parts of Asia. The economics of automated trains tend to reduce the scale so tied to "mass" transit, so that small-scale installations are feasible. Thus cities normally thought of as too small to build a metro (e.g. Rennes, Lausanne, Brescia, etc.) are now doing so. In the U.S. APMs have become common at large airports and progressive hospitals.
Examples
Urban transit
- USA
- Lake Buena Vista, Florida: Disney Monorail, Disneyworld
- Detroit, Michigan: Detroit People Mover -- elevated loop system (Downtown People Mover)
- Jacksonville, Florida -- in the form of a monorail (the Jacksonville Skyway) (Downtown People Mover)
- Miami, Florida: Metromover (Downtown People Mover)
- Japan
- Hiroshima: Astram Line
- Kobe: Port Liner and Rokko Liner
- Komaki: Peach Liner
- Nagoya: Nagoya Guideway Bus
- Osaka: New Tram (Osaka Municipal Nanko Port Town Line/OTS New Tram Technoport Line)
- Saitama Prefecture: New Shuttle
- Sakura: Yamaman Yukarigaoka Line
- Tokyo: Yurikamome
- Yokohama: Kanazawa Seaside Line
- Singapore
- The Philippines
- Bangkok, Thailand: Skytrain
- Dortmund, Deutschland:
- Kuala Lumpur, Putra Light Rail Transit
- London, UK: Docklands Light Railway
- Taipei: Muzha Line
- Toronto, Ontario: Scarborough RT (semi-automated)
- Vancouver, British Columbia: SkyTrain
Airport
Image:Birmingham airport rapid transit system.JPG Many people movers operate at airports and some also connect with other public transport systems. Airport examples include:
- Birmingham International Airport, Birmingham, UK
- Charles de Gaulle International Airport, Paris, France, CDGVAL
- Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport
- Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport
- Denver International Airport
- Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport
- Düsseldorf International Airport
- Frankfurt International Airport
- George Bush Intercontinental Airport, Houston, Texas
- Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport
- Hong Kong International Airport
- John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York City, AirTrain JFK
- Kuala Lumpur International Airport
- London Gatwick Airport
- London Heathrow Airport
- London Stansted Airport
- Las Vegas McCarran International Airport
- Miami International Airport
- Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport
- Newark Liberty International Airport, AirTrain Newark
- O'Hare International Airport, Chicago, Illinois
- Orlando International Airport
- Kansai International Airport Osaka, Japan (Wing Shuttle)
- Orly Airport, Paris, France, Orlyval
- Pittsburgh International Airport
- San Francisco International Airport, AirTrain (SFO)
- Seattle-Tacoma International Airport
- Singapore Changi Airport
- Tampa International Airport
- Toronto Pearson International Airport
- Zurich International Airport
Other
- The former PeopleMover attraction at Disneyland, which ran from 1967 to 1995. (the source of the name "people mover," even though it wasn't meant to be used, WED Enterprises could not come up with any other names for it)
- The Tomorrowland Transit Authority attraction, which was formerly called the WEDway PeopleMover, at Walt Disney World
- West Virginia University (Morgantown, West Virginia) -- a Group Rapid Transit system, similar to Personal rapid transit
- Seibu Railway Yamaguchi Line (Leo Liner), which is a people mover Between Seibuen Park and Invoice Seibu Dome, Japan.
Different meanings
The term people mover is sometimes used to refer to moving sidewalks. The name People Mover is also used by:
- Anchorage, Alaska's bus system
- The Niagara Parks Commission People Mover bus system in Niagara Falls, Ontario.
See also
- Bombardier Advanced Rapid Transit
- Intermodal passenger transport
- People carrier
- Slidewalk
- Véhicule Automatique Léger
- Personal rapid transit