wjstix Of course, part of it is salesmanship. Streetcar = old, wood, slow "Toonerville Trolleys". LRV = modern, fast, clean, streamlined. Trying to get government to back a new system, you want to make it sound new, not re-creating a museum line. You can sell calamari for a lot more than you can cooked squid....
Of course, part of it is salesmanship. Streetcar = old, wood, slow "Toonerville Trolleys". LRV = modern, fast, clean, streamlined. Trying to get government to back a new system, you want to make it sound new, not re-creating a museum line. You can sell calamari for a lot more than you can cooked squid....
Your point is very well taken. It was not that many decades ago that public officials were selling the notion that streetcars were old fashioned and busses were the future of local surface transportation. Hence, the various euphemisms for the same or nearly same thing as what we had well into the 1950's.
John Timm
Light rail seems to fall somewhere on the continuum between streetcars and rapid transit, containing elements of both. Toronto streetcars, which are almost exclusively street running, are described as light rail vehicles, as are the cars on NJ Transit's Newark subway, which is private right-of-way.
Above sound and correct and proven in practice. Exceptions are heritage systems, SF F Line, New Orleans, Tampa, Kenosha, and where a "down-home-flavor informaiity is cultivated -- Portland, OR.
Sometimes the nostalgia flavor is effective. "We should never have gottten rid of streetcars, let us bring them back."
But most of the time wjtix is on the mark.
At least in the USA, a streetcar runs in the street, along with automobile traffic. Autos run in front of it, behind it, and along side it. LRV lines are normally dedicated right-of-ways, running on one side of the road or between the lanes. There are dividers so automobiles can't cross the LRV's track except at designated areas like street crossings.
This is the new University Avenue "Green Line" LRV between Minneapolis and St.Paul MN, running near the University of Minnesota on a dedicated two-track right-of-way, with traffic lanes on either side of it.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5a/Green_Line%2C_University_of_Minnesota%2C_May_2014.jpg/300px-Green_Line%2C_University_of_Minnesota%2C_May_2014.jpg
...and here's a shot a few miles east on University Avenue in St.Paul, taken during the days of the Twin City Lines streetcars c.1945. You can see a streetcar in the middle distance, running on the street along with autos.
http://www.universityavenuehistory.com/images/UniversityAvelookingWestfromSnellingStPaul_c1945_MNHS.jpg
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