View Full Version : TransLink considers $70-million gondola from Lougheed to SFU


Yellow Fever
September 23rd, 2010, 09:38 PM
TransLink considers $70-million gondola from Lougheed to SFU

By Kelly Sinoski, Vancouver Sun September 23, 2010

http://www.vancouversun.com/news/3397176.bin


TransLink is thinking of running a gondola up to Simon Fraser University, saying it would free up dozens of buses, save money and potentially carry 3,000 people an hour up Burnaby Mountain.

The transit authority has issued a request for proposals to determine the feasibility of the gondola project, which it said could whisk passengers from the Production Way SkyTrain Station to SFU in just eight minutes, about six minutes less than a typical bus ride up the mountain.

"This could be a green alternative," TransLink spokesman Ken Hardie said.

"What we really need to do is have a very serious look at the concept to see if there is a business plan for it."

The proposed 2.6-kilometre tramway -- estimated to cost $70 million -- would likely be based on the Peak 2 Peak Gondola linking Whistler and Blackcomb mountains.

The project has been pitched by the SFU Community Trust as a reliable means to get students to SFU and residents to the UniverCity community, particularly in the winter months when buses can't make it up the hill.

About 3,000 people live in the area now, with a student population of 25,000, and both are expected to grow substantially in the next 20 years.

The gondola would also serve mountain bikers and tourists, said Gordon Harris, the trust's president and CEO.

The gondola would provide faster, reliable and more efficient service, Harris said, while cutting greenhouse-gas emissions by taking diesel buses off the mountain.

Hardie said about 25 to 30 buses would be needed to move the same number of people the gondola could carry per hour.

"We burn a lot of diesel going up the mountain, and a lot of brake pads going down."

Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan agreed a gondola on Burnaby Mountain would be a "spectacular" tourist attraction, but questioned where Trans-Link would get the money to build it.

The cash-strapped authority is already struggling to maintain existing services and build the long-awaited Evergreen Line, while facing demands for more transit across the region.

TransLink has indicated the gondola could be built as a private-public partnership or P3.

But Hardie said it's too early to say how it will be funded or if there is demand for it.

The business study proposals for the project are due next month.

Warren Sparks, general manager of Doppelmayr Garaventa Group, which built the Peak 2 Peak, said his company would

be interested in building the SFU tramway.

The company has already done a feasibility study on the project, which Sparks said he sees running in a straight line from Production Way to SFU, adjacent to homes along the corridor but not over them.

But he said the project hinges on a lot of issues, including how residents feel about the project, land acquisition and funding.

If TransLink does build it, he said, people will use it.

"If the business plan clearly shows the new system would be less expensive than the existing bus system, then I think it would be a no-brainer to build the tramway," Sparks said.

"Without question, if anyone

had to choose to ride this thing or ride the bus, they would jump on this thing in a minute."

ksinoski@vancouversun.com


Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/TransLink+considers+million+gondola+from+Lougheed/3566576/story.html#ixzz10NmueP7G

Yellow Fever
September 27th, 2010, 05:00 AM
the proposed gondola line and stations


http://i990.photobucket.com/albums/af28/Hongkongese/map.jpg

dleung
September 30th, 2010, 08:59 AM
I love armchair transit planners... Some idiot letter-writer to the Vancouver Sun said that $70 million is "too much". Apparently a cheaper alternative should be to build a skytrain extension underneath Burnaby Mountain. Uh, ok... 3km of skytrain, at a typical $150+ million per km, comes to nearly 7 times the cost... genius.

Anarchos
April 5th, 2011, 09:04 AM
Any idea why it would cost so much? The one in Whistler cost 35-40 million IIRC, and is more than a km longer than this. Whistler also has the longest span in the world with no towers...the towers are beefy as hell since there is only two on each side. That being said, I think this would be awesome and would like to see more urban gondolas. They seem like a good way to get around a city. Might not be the fastest things in the world but pretty cool and could potentially carry a lot of pph with larger cabins.