Are Elevated or Underground Metro Systems Better?

  Рет қаралды 373,805

City Beautiful

City Beautiful

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 788
@chow-chihuang4903
@chow-chihuang4903 Жыл бұрын
As a rider, I prefer trains with a view. As a resident, I’d prefer they be underground due to the noise. There are pros and cons to each, but I’d rather have rail transit than none, so whatever gets built and used is fine with me.
@PhotonBeast
@PhotonBeast Жыл бұрын
Yeah; this is where having a network of two halves might be more effective. You have trains that serve longer transits so they travel at higher speeds but don't stop at every stop; so it might stop at the airport, the city center/convention center, and major transfer points. And then trains that serve the shorter transits and so they travel at lower speed (and so less noise) and hit more stops - so not just the airport and major transfers but regular stops along the line. Both can use mostly the same lines and stations, while serving different slightly overlapping needs. Some stations might serve both on the same track, some might have multiple tracks, some might have bypasses. It also means that service can be adjusted more finely - local trains can run longer in the day and may have increased schedule outside the work day because residents have post-work things to do. The longer transit trains can be very busy during rush hour with frequent service but might have a reduced service outside the work day.
@ababababaababbba
@ababababaababbba Жыл бұрын
i live less than a block from an elevated BART line and i can barely hear it honestly
@xr6lad
@xr6lad Жыл бұрын
There’s no pros for above street. None.
@Slenderman63323
@Slenderman63323 Жыл бұрын
@@xr6lad cost, scenic view from the train, geographic challenges to building underground.
@KeitieKalopsia
@KeitieKalopsia Жыл бұрын
@@xr6lad Man, did you even watch the video?
@thomasblyth7539
@thomasblyth7539 Жыл бұрын
Its worth noting that on the noise front, a new concrete elevated line will be much much quieter than the 100 year old lines with steel supporting structures that we have in Chicago and NYC
@thecomment9489
@thecomment9489 Жыл бұрын
True. Modern metro systems are very quiet.
@russianbear0027
@russianbear0027 Жыл бұрын
Much quieter is an understatement. Modern viaducts are basically silent from below, and still pretty quiet above (Personally I enjoy hearing the roar on the old structures, but I understand its better for health to have less noise)
@jyw0000
@jyw0000 Жыл бұрын
Concrete insulates noise better than exposed steel. In the Bay Area, BART’s elevated tracks are on single concrete pylons. The only noise you hear is the sound of the wind and the notorious BART track grind 😂, but none of the bass heavy rumbling that the Chicago L makes.
@atm1947
@atm1947 Жыл бұрын
@@jyw0000as someone who’s ridden BART hundreds of times, you’re far more likely to experience hearing loss WHILE riding it rather than being near its elevated track 😂
@googleyoutubechannel8554
@googleyoutubechannel8554 Жыл бұрын
Guess what's even quieter....
@erickpalacios8904
@erickpalacios8904 Жыл бұрын
As a mainly elevated transit system, I love riding the Skytrain in Vancouver. Especially on clear, sunny days with breathtaking views of the mountains dotted with the dense, urban construction at and around some of the stations.
@appletree13
@appletree13 Жыл бұрын
WORD. Sometimes I'll just hop in the Skytrain and look out the window and the city and landscape.
@TheRandCrews
@TheRandCrews Жыл бұрын
@@appletree13man my long commute to Surrey is not as bad when the views are beautiful especially going urban, rural, suburban, riverfront, forest mix
@creaturexxii
@creaturexxii Жыл бұрын
Agree, gotta love the view when riding the SkyTrain and any other elevated metro.
@AmurTiger
@AmurTiger Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite things on a morning/evening commute is catching the flash of a low sun off glass towers in the distance.
@hnitsua
@hnitsua Жыл бұрын
@@appletree13 the expo and millenium lines are my go tos for joyriding, doing that since 2007 baby!
@DavidTheScientist
@DavidTheScientist Жыл бұрын
One thing I like about elevated trains are the views... You get to see and understand the city you're passing through. In contrast, with underground systems you go down one hole and pop out another, rather like a mole, with little sense for the distance or direction in which you've travelled, or what you've missed seeing in-between. Also, modern elevated trains seem to be much quieter than the EL, presumably in large part due to the mass dampening and sound-blocking properties of the solid concrete bases on which they rest...
@Libertaro-i2u
@Libertaro-i2u 2 ай бұрын
Not to mention, there are places where you just can't build underground, largely due to high water tables and low elevations relative to sea level.
@Chris6d
@Chris6d Жыл бұрын
As a New Yorker, I absolutely love the classic look of an el train. Nothing beats it! Wish more cities in the U.S. had it
@Minelaughter
@Minelaughter Жыл бұрын
As a Chicagoan, I also love the look of the ‘L’. I like New York’s but Chicago feels more coordinated
@qjtvaddict
@qjtvaddict Жыл бұрын
Build modern ones like Mumbai
@danielkelly2210
@danielkelly2210 Жыл бұрын
It'd have been nice if they'd kept the 3rd Avenue el at least.
@Eli-ss9gj
@Eli-ss9gj Жыл бұрын
It looks cool but I hate how absolutely noisy they are. Glad that they’re majority underground now
@ryle4h
@ryle4h Жыл бұрын
Yeah, you guys have also got architecture that would make an elevated train a real treat.
@usernameryan5982
@usernameryan5982 Жыл бұрын
I live in Honolulu and have been following skyline extensively. There is nothing inherent about that project that required it to be so expensive. They’ve been dealing with lawsuits, expensive land, and it really is mismanaged (as everything is in Hawaii). Our constructions costs for anything is routinely way higher than anywhere else. Even road maintenance or construction is ridiculously expensive. The H3 highway, even though was built as a higher up bridge, was the most expensive highway built per mile in the US I believe. If Honolulu would have tunneled the project, my guess is they would’ve spent over a billion dollars per kilometer. The train is now being constructed in the city and they are spending 496 million dollars to move the utilities down only one road. The costs for everything here is just insane.
@faenethlorhalien
@faenethlorhalien Жыл бұрын
Interesting. I had never thought of that, but it makes so much sense. Shipping everything needed for public works there has to be soo expensive.
@usernameryan5982
@usernameryan5982 Жыл бұрын
@@faenethlorhalien Despite what people say about shipping or the Jones act, the cost of materials is negligible due to shipping. These materials are sent in massive bulk which brings down cost. I work in real estate and the cost of lumber and concrete is a bit higher than the mainland but not by much. The biggest obstacle is the fact that the price for labor when compared to production is insanely high. There’s a huge deficit in human capital in Hawaii. Also, every government body is mismanaged and at odds with each other so there is no streamlined permit process. This drives up costs dramatically. This isn’t exactly hard evidence by I know the owner of a union tile company that did work at the stations of skyline and even though they accepted his bid which would be higher than anywhere on the mainland, he ended up losing money on the jobs because the plans were not detailed (meaning things needed to be redone) and his guys also needed to be sent home early due to lack of coordination.
@nicelol5241
@nicelol5241 Жыл бұрын
corruption, probably
@nimaiiikun
@nimaiiikun Жыл бұрын
Honolulu can't build a subway because the tunneling work would have been ridiculously expensive due to its unique geological features
@alastairhewitt380
@alastairhewitt380 Жыл бұрын
I am so tired of literally everything in the US. We are a disease. We can't do anything right and we fuck up everything that falls within our borders, and often, vast regions beyond them.
@sethland
@sethland Жыл бұрын
You missed an important consideration: hydrology. Although there are subways in Chicago, The area was naturally a marsh not much higher than lake Michigan and the Chicago river. Flooding can be a major concern. Also the soil needs to have strong shear strength, preferably bedrock, otherwise construction gets really onerous to shore up the soil. Makes subways more expensive relative to build. This is why elevateds are prominent in Bangkok, Manila, and in tropical cities in general.
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
True, and on the other hand you have terrain considerations -- trains can't climb steep hills (unless you're talking about cable cars), so in mountainous areas, the lines have to be underground so they don't have to follow the terrain like an elevated line does!
@sethland
@sethland Жыл бұрын
Yes.. “geology” is the word that might be more important than hydrology. Hard to make tunnel walls out of sand, silt, or muck. Mountains usually portend the existence of rock nearby. But for Chicago, downtown street level is actually 1-2 stories above ground level to get above the boggy ground level.
@MarloSoBalJr
@MarloSoBalJr Жыл бұрын
I think what's even more fascinating is that both of Chicago's subway lines (Blue & Red) can reroute to the elevated section and continue on as normal if the tunnels ever corrode and/or flood. Service wouldn't be hindered besides a few stations being skipped
@urbanfile3861
@urbanfile3861 Жыл бұрын
Good point. For the same reason in London there are few underground lines South of the Thames (and in some case they're not even under-ground). Over all at the time the system was developping, tunneling there was challenging and expensive. Though they mainly built above ground railways (at grade or elevated) that never became part of the metro system
@danravv
@danravv 10 ай бұрын
Well, Manila is currently building a subway and it's one of the most anticipated and ambitious transportation projects in the country so far. Although it is indeed hella expensive, 33km for almost 9 billion USD.
@SigmaRho2922
@SigmaRho2922 Жыл бұрын
Most metros in India that opened in the 2010s and 2020s are elevated but some of them like Bangalore, Pune, Lucknow and Ahmedabad had a limited number of underground stations in the city center. Other systems like Chennai and Delhi have extensive city center tunnels.
@riderchallenge4250
@riderchallenge4250 Жыл бұрын
mumbai metro have lines that are underground too the line 3 is underground
@kindpeoplewithtreatness8012
@kindpeoplewithtreatness8012 Жыл бұрын
Kolkata metro blue line is almost completely underground, it runs through the main parts of the city
@sylvy16
@sylvy16 10 ай бұрын
while it’s true that bangalore doesn’t have a completely underground line. many portions of the upcoming blue and pink line are underground, especially the blue line stations near the airport. and of course many of the stations in the city centre are underground but many aren’t too
@jonahg6654
@jonahg6654 Жыл бұрын
As a Chicago-born transit nerd, I love elevated trains and will take them above subways any day. It also means that drivers can see exactly how much faster a train can be (thinking of Blue Line and the Eisenhower) and that can spur more transit construction. All that said, if a subway is what gets built, so be it. A metro is a metro. edit: wrong highway thanks @A-M4
@kpopgrrl
@kpopgrrl Жыл бұрын
But the CTA should definitely sound insulate the highway median stations as they are super loud. I would also love floor to ceiling platform screen doors in the subways to cut down on noise but I imagine it would be very expensive and disruptive especially considering how long the platform is in the State Street subway
@theultimatereductionist7592
@theultimatereductionist7592 Жыл бұрын
"It also means that drivers can see exactly how much faster a train can be " Damn.. now THAT is an ORIGINAL point! I never considered that!
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
@@kpopgrrl Platform doors are for safety, not for noise reduction -- and safety-wise, waist-high is better than floor-to-ceiling (although they won't prevent a suicide, they will prevent an accidental fall, and at the same time if someone is trapped between the doors and the train, he/she can usually climb back over to the platform)!
@kpopgrrl
@kpopgrrl Жыл бұрын
@@agentorange153 They can do multiple things at the same time. I've been to the Seoul subway so I know how the walls and doors help insulate sound. I do think the shorter doors would probably work better on elevated or at-grade platforms, which is also what they use in Seoul elevated stations (and other elevated stations in Japan, other countries, and the new Honolulu Skyline)
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
@@kpopgrrl My point is that waist-high is better for safety than full-height, regardless of whether the station is underground, elevated or at-grade!
@LoveToday8
@LoveToday8 Жыл бұрын
I like elevated because I get to know a city better and as a result can navigate much easier. I love Chicago's L system and look forward to the CTA having leadership that takes transit seriously.
@bobbyswanson3498
@bobbyswanson3498 Жыл бұрын
i love a good combination of both. there’s something cool about going through tunnels and popping up right at your destination, while you just can’t beat the view of trains riding above the street
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
More to the point, this allows the lines to be built downtown with a minimum of disruption, and then extended into the suburbs at much less cost!
@TikoVerhelst
@TikoVerhelst Жыл бұрын
AS A DUTCH PERSON I think Rotterdam absolutely nailed this. Basically the system is elevated most of the time, but underground in the city centre where above ground was impossible. The system is mainly used to connect suburbs to the city centre. They treat it more or less like they do with trains. So sound shields whenever needed and a lot space around the stations anyway. (the metro stations often being major local bus stops as well) Personally, I love taking the C line from Spijkernisse and slowly getting deeper and deeper into the city seeing the buildings getting higher and higher and higher! I love the Rotterdam metro system, the public transport obsessed Netherlands has nothing like it! :P
@CortexNewsService
@CortexNewsService Жыл бұрын
I used to live very close to the Red Line in Chicago's Rogers Park. You'd be surprised how quickly you get used to it. Sometimes I had to pause a convo depending on where I was in the apartment, but it just becomes background noise.
@Starkus23
@Starkus23 Жыл бұрын
One great thing about elevated lines on the Subway systems in Berlin and Hamburg is also when they don't go directly above a street, there'll often go right over shops and restaurants. It's super cool being in a bar where the rooftop is basically a subway track. Also some of the best night clubs in Berlin are located within the elevation structure of the subway.
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
Typical German, only thinks about where to have the next beer ;-) 🍺 But yes, it's cool to have all those shopping areas with direct transit access (BTW, in New York they also have shops and cafes right inside some of the bigger station complexes, like Columbus Circle for example)!
@GTAVictor9128
@GTAVictor9128 9 ай бұрын
I've seen footage in China where the elevated rail was built to go through some buildings too.
@publicminx
@publicminx 8 ай бұрын
@@GTAVictor9128 exists also in Berlin
@crowmob-yo6ry
@crowmob-yo6ry Жыл бұрын
They both have their place. Underground is better in areas with extreme temperatures (such as Moscow or Singapore), while above ground is better in areas with high water tables (such as Miami or Honolulu). There are plenty of other reasons a particular track location might work better for certain areas, but geography is perhaps what influences above vs. underground the most.
@lzh4950
@lzh4950 9 ай бұрын
Singapore's MRT (subway/metro) is mostly underground as its newer lines serve suburbs built up decades earlier & thus without space for rail lines & stations above ground
@krycekuva
@krycekuva 11 ай бұрын
Berlin has a couple of metros U1/U2/U3 and trains (sbahn) that run partially or totally elevated. those are my favorite ones. there's even a new elevated sbahn buing built and i cant wait to use it.
@bojstojsa7574
@bojstojsa7574 Жыл бұрын
Beyond the cost savings, a major advantage of elevated metro is that its infrastructure represents substantially less embodied carbon than tunneled metro, which can be so substantial that it may take decades for a new heavily tunneled metro line to save more CO2 emissions than was emitted during construction.
@MegaBanane9
@MegaBanane9 Жыл бұрын
@@alexanderdvanbalderen9803 depends on the ground type - normally anything underground stays at a near constant temperature, but with enough activitiy and insulating ground, you can run into the problem that London's underground has with its super warm tunnels
@EnjoyFirefighting
@EnjoyFirefighting Жыл бұрын
@@alexanderdvanbalderen9803 the one and only underground system I experienced to get hot was the NYC subway ... not sure what they did wrong for stations to heat up like a tropical monkey house at the zoo. Most subway systems don't require climate control or ventilation at all; They stay rather cool even on the hottest day in summer
@empireoftruth3291
@empireoftruth3291 Жыл бұрын
@@EnjoyFirefighting I was in NYC and noticed this during the summer. On my life some of the stations were 10-20 degrees hotter than the air outside.
@EnjoyFirefighting
@EnjoyFirefighting Жыл бұрын
@@empireoftruth3291 not only hot, but also intense humidity at some stations
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
Why is CO2 even an issue??? It's not like it's toxic or anything!
@johnmyers8633
@johnmyers8633 10 ай бұрын
The Berlin Stadt-Bahn that runs right through the city centre east and west is beautiful for passengers. It passes right through the museums on its way to Alexanderplatz. Even as a commuter, I sometimes plan my routes to have more overground trains, since it's more scenic.
@tdb7992
@tdb7992 Жыл бұрын
I visited Chicago a few years ago, it's such a cool place. It reminded me a lot of Melbourne, Australia (my hometown). The street grid, elevated tracks and huge number of skyscrapers really reminded me of home.
@hofmenace
@hofmenace Жыл бұрын
Miami's Metrorail and Metromover are both elevated and also go through Downtown Miami and Brickell
@lizardman464
@lizardman464 Жыл бұрын
We're currently in the heated process of expanding our ground level light rail in Phoenix and this video really makes me feel like an elevated rail is what's needed. The previous expansion down Central through downtown was super contentious as most people saw it as removing vital road lanes for a rail system that, considering how our city is designed, won't see much use at the moment. Building over would certainly solve that and we don't even have much of a skyline for it to work around, the rail would be the tallest thing in most parts of the city.
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
True -- ground-level light rail is a non-starter, it's really the worst of both worlds (combining the slow speed of road transit with the inconvenience and inflexibility of rail transit)! If you want REAL public transit which people actually USE, rapid transit (whether elevated or underground) is THE way to go!
@Kenionatus
@Kenionatus Жыл бұрын
One place where light rail can be a viable solution is if almost all of it is separated, the passenger volume is relatively low and the part where it does interfere with roads is not too busy. When demand gets higher and the sharing of roads becomes too disruptive, the shared part can be put underground and eventually the entire track could be upgraded to a metro one. On the other hand, car dependent places would probably just opt for one more lane in those cases...
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
@@Kenionatus **cough** **cough** light metro, and then upgrade it with higher demand **cough**
@HallsofAsgard96
@HallsofAsgard96 Жыл бұрын
​@@agentorange153 Or you could add Transit Signal Priority, but that's contentious
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
@@HallsofAsgard96 Not a solution -- the tram would still have to slow to a crawl when crossing a street in case someone runs the red, the ONLY way this could possibly work is if you also add automatic crossing gates like for a real railroad!
@EnjoyFirefighting
@EnjoyFirefighting Жыл бұрын
before watching the video: underground ones greatly reduce the noise impact for the surrounding area and residents; Also it's not an eyesore or blocks the view and sunlight in front of residential buildings, historic buildings etc and you simply have more space above ground ... more space for anything from trees to space for ladder trucks from the fire department. The further you get to the outskirts it makes sense to let the underground lines get up onto ground level. Below ground lines aren't exposed to the weather conditions above, unless it's like on the NYC subway which gets flooded in case of a hurricane.
@brandonroberts7357
@brandonroberts7357 Жыл бұрын
As a rider of the L it’s also helpful for me to be able to see the train platform as I’m approaching it; I can see if the train is arriving and I need to hustle, and when I’m exiting I can get a better sense of where I am on the street. Just a small thing, but helpful when navigating in a hurry!
@TheNewGreenIsBlue
@TheNewGreenIsBlue Жыл бұрын
Vancouver's SkyTrain is a great example of over/under/at-grade. Underground for three stations downtown (although waterfront was originally not really underground. Elevated from downtown for three stops, dipping into a slightly below ground station, then elevated for all but one more of the Expo Line.
@creaturexxii
@creaturexxii Жыл бұрын
That's definitely one of the benefits of using conventional, steel-wheeled metro trains (I know the SkyTrain uses Linear Induction Motors, but apart from that it uses conventional railway infrastructure for the tracks and switches) as it can easily transition from at grade, to underground and elevated.
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
@@creaturexxii Vs. Montreal Metro, which uses rubber-tired trains, and therefore had to be built completely underground because these trains can't run if there's snow on the tracks!
@jeanbolduc5818
@jeanbolduc5818 Жыл бұрын
Vancouver ; the overrated city of homless , drugs and crimes and rain.
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
@@jeanbolduc5818 I love rain, but I can definitely do without these other things -- however, this is a video specifically about transit systems, not about comparing cities as a whole!
@TheNewGreenIsBlue
@TheNewGreenIsBlue Жыл бұрын
@@agentorange153 IKR! Thankfully, Montreal's coming to its sense in building out its latest project, the REM.
@Heifer_Zephyr
@Heifer_Zephyr Жыл бұрын
Falling under the cost to build for subways is the composition of the ground. Chicago used to be a swamp so digging tunnels is very expensive. So even though downtown Chicago is dense the L will never go underground as the swampy ground makes cost prohibitive and the caissons from the skyscrapers would have to be planned around.
@pimpnamedslickback7780
@pimpnamedslickback7780 Жыл бұрын
Singapore is even more swamp and they built it
@kpopgrrl
@kpopgrrl Жыл бұрын
Chicago already has two subway lines, as pointed out in the video. The main issue is cost
@FART-REPELLENT
@FART-REPELLENT 6 ай бұрын
@@pimpnamedslickback7780That would have required the natural materials below ground to be frozen using liquid Nitrogen, before tunnelling.
@mic1240
@mic1240 6 ай бұрын
Chicago has subways, still called the L, but running underground. There is also miles of the system at grade level. The biggest line in the system is both elevated, subway and grade level.
@emu5088
@emu5088 Жыл бұрын
5:11 ahh it is so cool that you filmed what was my stop for over 7 years! I probably watched one of your videos standing right at that platform. Love the focus on Chicago, here!
@blores95
@blores95 Жыл бұрын
I like elevated or at grade (as long as it's not mixed with traffic) because it's nice to see where you're at and is basically free advertising of the transit compared to driving in traffic. And as someone who's wife gets motion sickness from cars and stuff, having the option to look out the window helps compared to being in a tunnel where you can't see anything.
@LeftysLefty
@LeftysLefty 11 ай бұрын
I grew up in Inwood, in Northern Manhattan half a block from where the IRT lines come up from underground into an "El". (I remember people standing under the El during air drills we used to have when 8 was young. But my point is that the amount of noise associated with the El wasn't really that bad - we were all very very used to it. As I say - half a block away
@williamhuang8309
@williamhuang8309 Жыл бұрын
The elevated rail noise argument: It's worth mentioning that above ground lines are still significantly quieter than even a modestly size road.
@GTAVictor9128
@GTAVictor9128 9 ай бұрын
Moreover, the noise may be louder but a train only passes once every few minutes on the most busy lines. Along major arterial roads, the traffic noise is CONSTANT.
@williamhuang8309
@williamhuang8309 9 ай бұрын
@@GTAVictor9128 Plus your eardrums won't explode whenever it rains Rain makes roads so much louder while trains are barely affected at all
@ph5.484
@ph5.484 8 ай бұрын
I feel like the video was still a little too dismissive of the problem of noise, to be honest. Maybe this is just me speaking as someone with sensitivity to sound and who would really struggle living next to a rail track, but writing people off as NIMBYs for not wanting that stress and reduced quality of living doesn't seem particularly fair to me.
@Konnersaki
@Konnersaki 6 ай бұрын
@@ph5.484unfortunately they’re not going to base a cities entire train infrastructure on a very small percentage of people with hearing sensitivity.
@alexmcintyre8229
@alexmcintyre8229 2 ай бұрын
I’d say it depends upon the age of the trains & condition of the rails. Older trains are louder than new trains, in Vancouver the Mark 1 trains(once considered quite) are now the loudest trains on the Skytrain network. Thing like tight curves also create more noise & the condition of the rails also determine how loud the trains are. In some cases elevated trains are louder than the road noise(unless there’s a really loud vehicle)
@FoxBoi69
@FoxBoi69 Жыл бұрын
i think it shouldn't be such a dividing question. it should be a question for each part of each line. vienna has 6 underground lines. not a single one of them is entirely underground. 2 of them (u4 and u6) are mostly above ground. u1 and u2 are underground in the city center but as they go into the outer districts they come out of the ground and are elevated and sometimes also at grade.
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
Most cities actually have a mixture of elevated and underground lines!
@chesvvick
@chesvvick Жыл бұрын
5:23 the Chicago resident quote should have said, “so often you won’t even notice it.”
@TheRandCrews
@TheRandCrews Жыл бұрын
I feel like with the dense urban nature of Manila, tunneling would’ve been more or less harder with being hit with a lot rainfall and flooding throughout the year, back when it was built. Leading to systems being more so overhead wires and elevated, though with newer lines having third rail and tunneled sections at more developed areas. Also it also shows that the proposed commuter railway is being built on top of current Philippine National railway right of way due to having many grade crossings and elevated expressway following the same ROW
@abrqzx
@abrqzx 11 ай бұрын
Manila will have a subway to be finished in 2028, constructed by Japan
@FastCarsNoRules220
@FastCarsNoRules220 Жыл бұрын
Elevated and underground are both better than whatever Calgary did with the C-Trains running in the middle of the road in downtown, which I find annoying since they always have to keep stopping at traffic lights at intersections. Trains shouldn't be stopping to give way to cars.
@fuzzylon
@fuzzylon Жыл бұрын
I'd be interested to see a video comparing suspended railways (e.g. Chiba and Shonan in Japan) with conventional elevated railways discussing why suspended railways are better in certain situations (or at least, why they are chosen).
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
Are you referring to suspended vs. conventional monorail lines?
@urbanfile3861
@urbanfile3861 Жыл бұрын
Suspended rails, which are basically Wuppertal Schwebebahn system, opened in 1901, are very peculiar and worth to build in very peculiar and rare cases (which is why in more than 120 years just few systems of this kind were built worldwide). Basically if there is lack of space and you can't build underground. Wuppertal is a city along a river in a narrow valley. So they created this system hanging on the river itself, and over some city street. Then, if you have even steep slopes (as in Chiba case) that system is fine. But in most cases you can build underground instead of going schwebebahn. And 'conventional' monorail could face steep slopes too
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
@@urbanfile3861 So what are the advantages and disadvantages of schwebebahn vs. "conventional" monorail (like the one in Seattle)?
@heyjude9895_
@heyjude9895_ 10 ай бұрын
I LOVE the L (and Chicago in general). It’s so easy to use and I love a ride with a view. I’d kill for good transit here in Florida but with the way we’re all so spread out here it’d be EXTREMELY costly to get any city here up to par with other metropolitan areas in the country 🥲 anywho, in Florida it would have to be at grade/elevated anyways cause we can’t dig 6 inches without hitting water haha
@kenobi-san2306
@kenobi-san2306 Жыл бұрын
The two lines in the Santo Domingo metro both have underground and elevated portions. They're extending line 2 and eventually line 1 with what appears to be mostly above ground tracks. Like you mentioned in the video it seems the downtown portions were made underground to not disturb those important streets while further out the elevated parts are used more.
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
Most metro systems have both underground and elevated portions, although usually a system would predominantly use one or the other -- it's uncommon for a metro system to be 100% elevated, and even more rare for it to be 100% underground!
@Vednier
@Vednier 10 ай бұрын
One thing is making me O_O about Chicago transit is at 5:21 - i mean there is windows right next to train line (and in this video it not worst case). Doesn't people get little concerned by fact that passing train passengers have great view of their home insides? (albeit seeing passing train from your window maybe cool).
@TheKamzok
@TheKamzok Жыл бұрын
"Let's follow this TRAIN of thought" . Well done sir, well done.
@GreatLakesDrifta
@GreatLakesDrifta Жыл бұрын
Awesome, saw my old stop on the brown line. Making me homesick!
@SoSo-ci8su
@SoSo-ci8su 11 ай бұрын
I’m from Miami so definitely above ground🔥
@oldman4353
@oldman4353 10 ай бұрын
Another difference between London & New York is that London (North of the river) is built on clay which is easy to tunnel through. However New York is build on granite which is much harder to tunnel through. That is probably another reason that New York did not build tunnels in the 19th century.
@shad0w137.
@shad0w137. 10 ай бұрын
There is one more factor. Comfort. Honestly, I'm not sure how it is in New York or in London, but in Moscow underground metro is always warm in winter and chill in summer. There is also an elevated train system and... it's cold on its stations in winter. Although there are more comfortable German trains on these lines
@Gfynbcyiokbg8710
@Gfynbcyiokbg8710 6 ай бұрын
Except that's not something that changes between the two. In bad (often old) systems you can have stations be too hot in the summer and too cold in the winter regardless of if they are elevated or underground. Just like how good systems can have either elevated or underground stations that are the perfect temp. all year round.
@AmyLExtraordinaire
@AmyLExtraordinaire Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure how this keeps coming up but I am reasonably certain the Chicago 'L' do not have "streetcar origins" like what RM Transit said or what you just mentioned at 4:10 that "the original loop was a trolley loop" . As far as I am aware, that was never true. The loop was an intentional combination of the already existing South Side and Lake Street 'L's, with the Metropolitan being completed soon after. Even the originally constructed portion of the Loop was just the extension of the Lake Street 'L' to Wabash, branching away from its initial water street terminus
@zephyrus2219
@zephyrus2219 Жыл бұрын
There was a street-level loop for streetcars that existed before the current L structure was built (Chicago used to have a massive streetcar network until it replaced them with buses in the 1950s). I think that's what the "streetcar origins" is referring to.
@Aaron-be2pt
@Aaron-be2pt Жыл бұрын
@5:30 "How often does the train go by?" "So often that you won't even notice."
@brianmolina8818
@brianmolina8818 Жыл бұрын
Where is the location of the photo at 0:08 (Chicago, 1895)? Is that the South Side L or Lake Street L? I can't tell for the life of me; I haven't seen that pic before.
@ritambanerjee15
@ritambanerjee15 Жыл бұрын
In my City Kolkata India, here both Underground and Elevated Metro system functioning at the same time
@notroll1279
@notroll1279 10 ай бұрын
One big advantage of above ground rail is easier and better ventilation. Some London underground lines suffer from terrible air quality and the gradual heating up of the air in the tunnels over many decades of insufficient ventilation and most of the tube trains' energy being ultimately converted into heat through friction.
@Gfynbcyiokbg8710
@Gfynbcyiokbg8710 6 ай бұрын
Not at all. That example of the tube is irrelevant. Modern underground railways can (and almost always are) very well ventilated, the only reason the tube isn't is because it's old.
@kiosk5595
@kiosk5595 Жыл бұрын
I have such a childhood glee and love of transit that directly comes from traveling underground via subway, specifically the State Street subway funny enough. So I’m incredibly biased in its favor, I love subway stations. But that said, a good view from an elevated line is lovely too
@pauldelorean4339
@pauldelorean4339 Жыл бұрын
I live in Taibei, in Beitou off the Xinyi-Danshui line, aka the red line. out where I'm at the line is above ground, before going underground near the edge of the Shilin District and central Taibei. The above ground line is honestly not very noisey, it seems they did a great job with noise protection on the above ground lines here. The whole system uses a mix of the two, with most the above ground sections being more on the edges of the city, with the exception of the Wenhu Line which runs above ground near the city center. It's a great system nothing much to complain about!
@stroll-and-roll
@stroll-and-roll Жыл бұрын
Very good video! Elevated and underground sections of metro networks both have their own benefits and downsides. Good comparision.
@hollow3256
@hollow3256 Жыл бұрын
In Tampa, Florida underground is not a option and acquiring property in already developed areas is difficult given the shear number of different interested parties. So if we do expand on city wide metro we will likely have to go elevated like in Miami, and develop with easement permissions rather than outright ownership. Will also help deal with flooding
@CO84trucker
@CO84trucker Жыл бұрын
My favorite metro is the Vienna U-bahn... it's got a mix of underground, elevated & 2 lines that operate on the old historic Stadtbahn.
@DougGrinbergs
@DougGrinbergs 11 ай бұрын
4:00 Chicago trains are so short so they can make tight curves
@gold5398
@gold5398 10 ай бұрын
There were several plans to eliminate the elevated structure in the central city and construct more subway tunnels. However as the State Street Subway was delayed by the Great Depression, then WWII, the Dearborn Street Subway was pushed back and plans for the LaSalle Street Subway became so expensive by the 1950s, that the city abandoned the plans.
@JarrettOriginal
@JarrettOriginal Жыл бұрын
As someone who lived above a subway line in Brooklyn and later next to an elevated line in Queens; you get used to the noise very quickly. The elevated line didn't lightly shake my apartment the way the underground did.
@kittenmasaki
@kittenmasaki Жыл бұрын
You didn't live literally next to one then. You can't even hear the person next to you in my apt. I'm literally at eye level with the train on Broadway in Astoria. It's a nightmare.
@TheElectricGhost
@TheElectricGhost Жыл бұрын
@@kittenmasakiIt depends on the building. I've been in the newer buildings in L.I.C and you can't even feel or hear the 7 train going by on 21st.
@TheElectricGhost
@TheElectricGhost Жыл бұрын
@@kittenmasakiI should add that I had the opposite experience in Philly where I was five blocks away from the subway there, inside of a newer building and it would shake the place🤣
@thefareplayer2254
@thefareplayer2254 Жыл бұрын
5:22 I was waiting for the resident to say “it goes by so often, you don’t even notice it.”
@monowheeling
@monowheeling 11 ай бұрын
I find street noise considerably less bearable than train noise, at least with modern tracks and trains.
@JohnKennethHuszagh
@JohnKennethHuszagh Жыл бұрын
I used to live in a high rise building directly above an underground portion of chicago's red line. 13th floor and I STILL could hear it every time a train passed.
@harkstreak6952
@harkstreak6952 Жыл бұрын
Here in the Philippines, the current metro rail has a combination of elevated, at-grade, and underground stations. The ones that are underground are in the more developed parts of the metropolitan area while the elevated ones are over the busier parts of the avenue the line runs through. The light rails meanwhile only have one station underground. The views on the elevated parts aren't really that good-looking but some of them act as terminals to malls.
@flamingcacti
@flamingcacti Жыл бұрын
As an American in a non-major yet still squarely metropolitan area, I’d be happy with any rail based transit. Buses suck.
@ethancrisp3491
@ethancrisp3491 Жыл бұрын
Speaking to the noise... Depending on the frequency of the line, it might be loud every few minutes or every 30 minutes for only seconds at a time. I live basically on a highway and it is loud all day at all times with no break
@SoManyDucks
@SoManyDucks Жыл бұрын
I lived near an el line for 5 years in Chicago, and what the video says is true - you get used to the sound. Honestly, it's regularly enough that police and ambulance sirens were actually worse, and general car traffic could be just as obnoxious as a train passing. Admittedly, I only heard any of this when the window was open. My favorite view of the city from the el is on the brown or purple line after it makes its turn east between the Armitage and Sedgwick stations - gives a gorgeous view of the skyline for a brief few moments. The view from the river crossings are a close second.
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
Train noise is only loud up close, it doesn't carry far!
@Hiro_Trevelyan
@Hiro_Trevelyan Жыл бұрын
As a transit enthusiast, I'd kill to have a nice view of line 6 of Paris. Well, not too close, but ideally a nice view, I don't mind the noise.
@JesusChrist-qs8sx
@JesusChrist-qs8sx Жыл бұрын
Chicago's L has unfortunately not recovered from the pandemic, while also suffering from the same flaws all US transit systems do in existing solely for feeding into downtown
@qjtvaddict
@qjtvaddict Жыл бұрын
The METRA needs to get upgraded to high frequency service
@hadhamalnam
@hadhamalnam Жыл бұрын
​@@qjtvaddictUnion Station should be directly connected to CTA lines, the fact that it isn't is kind of baffling when you look at how well integrated urban rail and metros are in other cities around the world. Metra needs to increase ridership first to make it viable to bring prices down and increase frequency, and I think the way to do that is to make it easier to access any point in the city via public transit from Metra stations.
@ficus3929
@ficus3929 Жыл бұрын
Definitely the most disappointing part of the el. All those miles of track but not much of a network.
@jaybinning2890
@jaybinning2890 Жыл бұрын
ya, CTA is super helpful to get around most places in a pinch, and great for commuting to and from downtown, but in general, if I haven't planned my trips specifically around L stations, I usually just end up driving for most things. Chicago transit is basically screwed for the next 60+ years by the 75 year privatization of our streets (parking) that basically means we can't build better walkable streets for half a decade. Possibly the best reason to move out of here at some point in the next decade, if other US cities become more walkable and less car centric.
@johnsnow5125
@johnsnow5125 Жыл бұрын
Lived in Berlin and Vienna, which both have a substantial network of both underground and above ground lines, and interconnected metro and train lines. I much prefer above ground. I also really liked the sky train in Bangkok
@maas1208
@maas1208 Жыл бұрын
As a Person living in Chicago, I'd Els are better since they tend to be cheaper.
@kenyonmoon3272
@kenyonmoon3272 Жыл бұрын
Chicago also has the fact that parts of the city were built over wetlands as a consideration. Below street level means dealing with drainage, making elevated appealing for eliminating that particular issue.
@michaelcullen5955
@michaelcullen5955 Жыл бұрын
As a student who lives in lakeview that goes to UIC, you unintentionally mapped my morning commute in video
@duck8dodgers
@duck8dodgers Жыл бұрын
I live a block away from the elevated part of the one train in NYC, and I barely notice the noise.
@BGTuyau
@BGTuyau 7 ай бұрын
Another nicely researched and done video -with nothing artificial added- from one of the top KZbin urbanism experts.
@michaelrobinson166
@michaelrobinson166 Жыл бұрын
I think it is worth adding that the law at the time didn't allow for lines above ground to be built in the London city centre, hence why the London Underground was first built below ground.
@NE-BO
@NE-BO Жыл бұрын
lived in japan for a bit and all of their rail is above ground for the most part and it was pretty great imo... moral of the story is any mass transit system is better than none at all.
@piguy3945
@piguy3945 11 ай бұрын
6:14 Correction: The 7 train runs on the Flushing Main Street Line. Not the Flushing Ave line (Thats in Brooklyn)
@tim..indeed
@tim..indeed Жыл бұрын
My city (Stuttgart) is built right into the hills so the metro is constantly swapping between being above and below ground lol.
@jsrodman
@jsrodman Жыл бұрын
Elevated trains can be quiet. I spent 2 hours in a city parknin amsterdam just a hundred fet or so from the main rail line and didnt even notice the trains going by. Granted that requires an effort on maintenance I havent seen attempted in north america.
@tortellinifettuccine
@tortellinifettuccine Жыл бұрын
Really well done video! As a Chicagoian we are literally one of the least talked about cities in urbanism in the usa despite being the only ones other than new york to have actual city urbanism. The cta is the only transit system in the usa thats comparable to new york and it shows haha, im glad the L gets a good rap here. People really think they must be super loud or something, and they can be, but they're no louder than a lifted truck trying to go 20 miles an hour, and they also fucking SPARK. No cooler looking metro system in my opinion
@chill1224.
@chill1224. 10 ай бұрын
Ig it’s considered something different but there’s the metro mover in downtown Miami too
@NateHatch
@NateHatch Жыл бұрын
Here in Salt Lake City our trains are all street level. The road to the airport used to have major traffic and now has barely any on it at all now that the train goes right there. As cost is a major factor in transit I think street-level light rail is the best. You can just walk right on to a station, no stairs, no elevators. I live right on a line and I love watching the trains go by and hearing the bell ding, and even though it's probably not as fast a subway I get to watch the city go by when riding.
@EricMesa
@EricMesa Жыл бұрын
That was neat. Not train related, but I didn't realize that back then, Chicago was as big a city as NYC
@zhappy
@zhappy Жыл бұрын
Delhi metro is elevated in most places but also has significant underground portions in different parts of the city. The views (and daylight) from elevated lines are a big plus for riders and modern metros are a lot quieter. Some lines often go from elevated to underground and vice versa on the same route, its fun to travel around.
@TheMiddlest
@TheMiddlest Жыл бұрын
You are really underselling how amazing modern windows are at canceling all the noise. I stayed in a hotel right next to the EL, less than 5 feet and didn't hear a single thing because of the windows were modern
@CharlieMile
@CharlieMile Жыл бұрын
I think another advantage of an underground railway is that there is more flexibility when building lines that cross, making interchange stations easier to build and maintaining capacity. This is especially important the centre of many cities where many lines cross
@lephtovermeet
@lephtovermeet Жыл бұрын
Noise isnt an issue with modern trains and proper maintenance. Els make ground level a bit drearier, but are generally cheaper to maintain and arguably make nice views and a nicer riding experience. Tubes are more expensive to maintain and in theory unrestricted by above ground structures and potentially waterways, they also don't compromise street life at all. But again, they are significantly more expensive.
@SpaceEndeavour
@SpaceEndeavour Жыл бұрын
Minor correction, the first loop wasn't trolley cars, it was cable cars
@jeffreyrule8143
@jeffreyrule8143 10 ай бұрын
Great video. Thank u.
@DuckOfRubber
@DuckOfRubber Жыл бұрын
The scene in Blues Brothers with the noise from L trains constantly passing the apartment was not an exaggeration.
@creaturexxii
@creaturexxii Жыл бұрын
While I am biased given that I ride the Vancouver SkyTrain on a regular basis, I got to say that I love riding elevated metros, mainly because of the views. Apart from practical reasons like cost, construction, safety, ventilation, etc. elevated metros allows passengers to see the landscape around them, enhancing passenger experience and making their ride more comfortable.
@teh-maxh
@teh-maxh Жыл бұрын
Miami also has elevated lines through downtown. (Although calling them "lines" plural is kinda cheating.)
@JorgePetraglia2009
@JorgePetraglia2009 Жыл бұрын
The big deal with transportation, in general, is that in North America (USA and Canada), we tend to concentrate the population around the services the nation provide, such as universities, hospitals, government offices and such. Decentralizing is the key word, but in reality in these parts of the world, we keep constructing high rise buildings to maintain the largest number possible of people in the same area. That brings another problem : cars and places to park them, two expensive alternatives. The reason people buy cars to drive in the city is simply because our transportation systems suck, and it does, purposely, to force people to keep buying more cars, which in turn need fuel that is getting scarce and costly; let alone the damage to our own environment. An elevated train is obviously easier and cheaper to build, but the very people who drive every day for hours at the time, need larger and wider roads to accommodate the huge numbers of vehicles that are making our cities unlivable; which is worse than the noise the trains generate. A decent transportation system, above ground (trains and buses), is what is truly needed to make the cars go away from big cities as in other parts of the world. Northern European countries provide that and most of the private cars are driven when people go out of the city, leaving a lot of room for emergency and commercial vehicles; let alone the fact that these people walk more than we do in our car fixated societies. Greetings from Toronto.
@pastorjerrykliner3162
@pastorjerrykliner3162 Жыл бұрын
"How often does the train run by?" (Jake Blues) "Often enough you won't even notice it." (Elwood Blues)
@dumdumsaregood
@dumdumsaregood Жыл бұрын
Love love love when you get out 'on scene' !!
@philpaine3068
@philpaine3068 Жыл бұрын
I think New Yorkers turned against elevated trains in 1933, when King Kong attacked an el and killed a lot of passengers on it.
@amorphousblob
@amorphousblob Жыл бұрын
As someone who's been on the London Tube in the summer, I'll say this: underground definitely isn't better if there's clay all around it.
@kevinmartinez1477
@kevinmartinez1477 Жыл бұрын
Im more towards the classic. Grew up going down the stairs to get to the subway. It felt like a different world when you walk down. I do like some above the ground stations/lines but the ones that underground were always better for me
@spartan117zm
@spartan117zm Жыл бұрын
There’s no right answer to this question. Cities should build the transit that is most suitable for the location and situation at hand, period. Whether it is elevated or underground matters very little so long as it is accessible, frequent, reliable, cost effective, and generally gets the job done in the best way possible.
@girldaddividendinvestor
@girldaddividendinvestor Жыл бұрын
Until you're stuck in the Red Line between Chicago and Lake, below the Chicago River, you have a different feel about below ground transit.
@laurencefraser
@laurencefraser Жыл бұрын
For reference, the London underground railways weren't yet 'the tube system' at the time, as they didn't yet include any of the deep level tubes from which they got that name, which were added later (after tunnel boring was a thing. All the earlier 'sub surface lines' were built using cut-and-cover: Dig a whole to where you want the bottom of your tunnel, then build a roof over it and cover it back up). Properly speaking only the actual deep level tube lines are 'the tube', at least in theory... but in practice no one actually cares about that distinction outside of contexts like this (where it's an anachronism issue), trivia quizzes and the like, and the occasional pedantic twit, so the entire tunnel system gets called 'the tube' anyway. Cut and cover construction also meant that the London underground (though not the later deep level tube lines) mostly had to conform to the streets, because diverging from the streets involved demolishing the buildings the line would pass under. Which usually wasn't exactly practical. (edit: Ahh, you mentioned some of this later).
@agentorange153
@agentorange153 Жыл бұрын
Note that most of the London underground lines are in fact deep-level tubes (only the original Metropolitan and District lines are cut-and-cover, and for good historical reason -- they were originally steam-powered, and so they couldn't be built as deep-level tubes because the ventilation would have been impossible, the smoke was bad enough as it was!)
@ianmoseley9910
@ianmoseley9910 Жыл бұрын
Also, the underground developed from several different competing companies and some of the above ground sections were originally mainline services. The DLR has a mixture of elevated, at grade and underground sections, with part of the elevated section being the route of a previous railway.
@DosAussieThai
@DosAussieThai Жыл бұрын
4:56 It's ironic that the footage to show "At Grade" railway is from the only section of Bangkok Sky Train which looks like it's at grade while in fact, it crosses the river along the bridges which are as high as the Sky Train track xD
@BabsW
@BabsW Жыл бұрын
As someone who has grown up in London and Chicago and currently lives just feet away from Chicago's Green line, underground trains are much better- much faster and less noise pollution above ground.
@Phantom-kz9bv
@Phantom-kz9bv Жыл бұрын
To anyone thinking that Elevated metro systems are load that's only true for older metro systems. If you look at the rem light metro it is not very load at all.
How Chicago Built an Amazing Lake Shore
20:25
City Beautiful
Рет қаралды 938 М.
The Most Dangerous Subway in America
26:30
Wendover Productions
Рет қаралды 2,3 МЛН
REAL or FAKE? #beatbox #tiktok
01:03
BeatboxJCOP
Рет қаралды 18 МЛН
人是不能做到吗?#火影忍者 #家人  #佐助
00:20
火影忍者一家
Рет қаралды 20 МЛН
It’s all not real
00:15
V.A. show / Магика
Рет қаралды 20 МЛН
The Bridge That Changed the Map of Europe
16:58
The B1M
Рет қаралды 1,1 МЛН
Can we fix the suburbs?
17:11
City Beautiful
Рет қаралды 369 М.
My Top 10 Metro Systems of the World
13:12
RMTransit
Рет қаралды 655 М.
Why Don't Cities Use Hexagon Blocks?
11:00
City Beautiful
Рет қаралды 827 М.
This Train Station Has No Business Being This Good
17:44
Not Just Bikes
Рет қаралды 2,1 МЛН
Why Everyone Wants to Live in These Corn Cobs
13:19
Stewart Hicks
Рет қаралды 1,6 МЛН
How Washington DC fixed their Metro’s biggest problem
14:44
The Flying Moose
Рет қаралды 379 М.
Chicago's Deep Tunnel Project
6:42
Built World
Рет қаралды 846 М.
America Always Gets This Wrong (when building transit)
15:27
Not Just Bikes
Рет қаралды 1,9 МЛН
Are the Suburbs Getting Worse?*
14:01
City Beautiful
Рет қаралды 200 М.
REAL or FAKE? #beatbox #tiktok
01:03
BeatboxJCOP
Рет қаралды 18 МЛН