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| TESTING
TIME German maglev test facility runs trains regularly
up to 400 km per hour. (Photo courtesy of Transrapid)
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A throng of waiting
riders in Bremen, Germany, this spring watched the three-car
train rise 10 mm off the 400-volt DC rail track, levitated
by a bay of magnets that are repelled by reaction rails fastened
to the underbelly of the elevated concrete guideway. Those
within the cars were about to join thousands that already
have paid to ride the magnetically levitated test system owned
by Transrapid International, Berlin. It is a system that a
growing number of U.S. advocates hope to build on domestic
soil.
The train began to move, propelled
by stator packs aligned along each beam. As an alternating
current fed the electromagnetic traveling field, riders could
feel the pull of support magnets sweeping them along. The
linear motor along each 37-m section of the 30-km track turns
off as the train passes, rendering collisions on the same
route virtually impossible, says Robert Budell, Transrapid
spokesman.
In the U.S., the pull of support
and a groundswell of investments in studies by transportation
firms for high-speed rail developments is gaining momentum-especially
for maglev. But much still depends on whether the funding
motor in Congress will run during reauthorization of TEA-21.
A history of skepticisim, disputes with freight railroads
over labor laws and Amtrak's financial woes, along with persistent
wariness about high-speed rail, still daunt legislative efforts.
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| CHINA
First major maglev route is taking shape in Shaghai. (Photo
Lin Bin Chinapix) |
The situation "is pretty confused-looking
at the moment," says Mark Dysart, president of the High-Speed
Ground Transportation Association. Compounding the challenge
is the factionalization of steel-wheel high-speed advocates
and maglev proponents. "There is a real divide there,"
says Dysart. "Our formal position is that we just need
to find the money to make it all available, and let the market
decide."
The quiet Transrapid train-only
75 decibels loud-looped around one edge of the test track
as viewers watched from a platform. On the straightaway, it
began accelerating to 400 km per hour. Up ahead, track switches
on steel box beams 78 m long elastically bent and locked to
allow the train to cross without a break.
The huge amounts of steel involved
in building this system are exactly what U.S. steel companies
are eyeing. "We're extremely supportive of the concept,"
says John Cummings, general manager, commercial, for Bethlehem
Steel Corp., Bethlehem, Pa. "It's a huge opportunity."
At a control center, three technicians
watched the Bremen train on an electronic map, backup computers
in tow. The train decelerated as it approached the station
and the ride was over. But it is just the beginning for China,
whose prime minister rode the system in mid-2000. By 2001,
China committed to a 20-mile line with Transrapid technology
from Shanghai to Pudong Airport-a three-year project that
may vault it ahead of the U.S. as high-speed rail advocates
here continue to plan, lobby and wait.
Proving high-speed rail and maglev
will be cost-effective is key. "It does not help HSR
here to be seen as needing constant large subsidies,"
says J. Christopher Brady, president of Transrapid's U.S.
arm, noting that this is what has held back full-fledged U.S.
governmental support. But maglev, in particular, promises
a low operating and maintenance cost that will justify up-front
investments, he says. "Give us a chance to build a successful
system, and let's have an honest debate after that,"
Brady adds.
Transrapid hopes Shanghai will
bring that chance. A maglev system planned for Berlin to Hamburg
died on the blade of Germany's Green Party two years ago,
so China's decision to build its $1.2-billion line was a shot
in the arm, says Brady. The Chinese have been tight-lipped
due to the risks involved with the world's first comprehensive
maglev system. But officials with Shanghai Maglev Transportation
Development Co. Ltd. and Transrapid say all substructure work
is done and more than 500 of 2000 girders, each 24-m long
and weighing 175 tons, have been fabricated. Test trains are
to run next year, taking eight minutes to travel 30 km between
the airport and Shanghai.
American high-speed hopes are
still high. Thirty-two states are involved in designated high-speed
rail corridors, says George Gavalla, high-speed rail safety
administrator for the Federal Railroad Administration. Almost
all of the $55 million for preconstruction of maglev systems
is allocated, with $4.6 million requested in a 2002 appropriations
bill, says Arnold Kupferman, FRA maglev administrator.
The maglev "pot of gold"
is $950 million authorized for Baltimore or Pittsburgh, two
finalists selected from seven competing U.S. regions. FRA
will decide by 2003 which region gets the money, but "$1.8
billion needs to be raised beyond federal funds," says
Kupferman. The agency may recommend a design-build-operate-maintain
contract.
Advocates in both cities point
to the wealth of engineering work that would result and boast
the respective airports' support, though airlines-the parties
most likely to view maglev as a competitor-have been noncommittal
at best. Pittsburgh's 47-mile, four-station plan will cost
about $2.8 billion, connecting airport to downtown to suburb
through hilly terrain. Maglev Inc., the coalition of investors
formed for the project, wants to deploy Transrapid's system.
"It's the only revenue-ready technology today,"
says Maglev engineer Dan Disk, who has ridden the Bremen track
five times. Colleague Ken Flessas adds that it would be a
perfect test case: "If you can build in this topography,
you can probably build maglev anywhere."
In Baltimore, the 40-mile, three-station
track, also utilizing Transrapid technology, would connect
Camden Yards, Baltimore-Washington International Airport and
Union Station. "Eventually it would go up to Boston and
down to Atlanta," says Jack Kinstlinger, project manager
for KCI Technologies, a Hunt Valley, Md., firm involved in
the effort. The preferred alignment has five miles of tunnels
and parallels Amtrak's Northeast Corridor. It already has
Acela trains traveling at 150 mph, but Baltimore's maglev
proponents believe there is room for both systems.
Amtrak, the catalyst for the debate
over self-sufficient rail, must curtail high-speed efforts
under current budget bailout agreements. "We could be
in an advisory role, or a possible operator of HSR,"
says spokesman Cliff Black. "But Amtrak can't pay for
it-it would be like saying U.S. Air has to pay for an air
traffic control system." Black claims that the Amtrak
debate "has elevated the question of where we're going
with any rail in the U.S."
GLOBAL UPDATE
Japan has been researching maglev since the 1970s. At the
Yamanashi Maglev Test Line in April 1999, a five-car train
reached 552 km per hour in a manned run. But Japan is proceeding
more slowly with marketing efforts than Germany. "They
are not yet willing to export their technology," says
Kinstlinger.
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| MOMENTUM
High-speed rail is moving forward fast in Korea.
(Photo courtesy of KRTC) |
Korea has leaped onto the high-speed
track with a $14.2-billion system based on French TGV and
Japanese technology that will run between Seoul and Pusan.
The $9.8-billion, 412-km first phase is set for 2004 completion
with six stations, 139 km of tunnels, 112 km of bridges and
111 km of earthwork, says Young Wan Jung, an engineer with
the Korea Railroad Technical Corp. KRTC president Chong-Seo
Shin says that the government financed 45% of the project
and backed the 55% raised in bond issues. "Unless the
government is willing to provide funding, the private sector
will not be willing to participate," he says.
Elevated track is growing by five
35-m-spans every day on the biggest contract for Taiwan's
$15-billion high-speed railroad, to run the length of the
island from Taipei to Kaohsiung. "We are really on full
production," says Carlos Moller, executive director of
Germany's Bilfinger + Berger Bau A.G. The Mannheim-based firm
and Continental Engineering Corp., Taipei, are building nearly
a third of the 244 km of elevated track on the 326-km railroad
in two contracts together worth over $1 billion. The team
will cast some 2,000 tapering box girders, each weighing 900
tonnes, to form 80 km of track. The private operator, Taiwan
High Speed Rail Corp., finished awarding 12 engineering contracts
last year, and is on course for completion in late 2004. "Bullet"
trains from Japan are slated to run in October 2005. Click
here for Graphic
The Dutch government is pushing
its first high-speed line from near Amsterdam to the Belgian
border and is developing long-term plans for a northern route,
possibly using maglev. Due for completion by 2015, the 190-km
line would run northeast from Schiphol airport to Groningen
and cost an estimated $6.5 billion just for infrastructure.
Studies likely will last four years, says a spokeswoman for
the Dutch transportation ministry.
Construction already is under
way in a series of design-build contracts with international
consortia for the $7-billion, 100-km route to Belgium. Paris-based
Bouygues S.A. leads a group using one of the world's biggest
TBMs-over 15-m-dia-for the Green Heart tunnel. A consortium
led by U.S.-owned Fluor Infrastructure B.V. last year closed
a 25-year contract worth some $1.2 billion to finance, build
and maintain the line's operating equipment from the track
upward. The line is due to start service in 2006.
France is setting out on a new
vast project, from Paris east to the German border. Since
March, the government's rail infrastructure owner, RÈseau
FerrÈ de France, has awarded contracts covering some
60% of the first phase of construction. Remaining contracts
are due by next March, says spokesman Thierry Jankowski. For
the first time, the owner outsourced engineering and project
management to private design firms in five packages. Work
is focusing on the first 300 km from Paris to Baudrecourt.
The remaining 100 km to Strasbourg has yet to win political
support. Public-sector interests, including the European Union,
agreed to contribute over $3 billion needed for this phase,
but RÈseau FerrÈ recently announced 10% more
in funds and another year of construction would be needed.
On the U.K.'s $8-billion
Channel Tunnel Rail Link, the final phase of tunneling began
July 11 with the launch of a machine under the River Thames.
The 8.15-m-dia pressurized slurry TBM will drive 2.5 km from
twin tunnels at Swanscombe. The remaining 20 km of the underground
link to London will be done under other contracts. With the
second phase 20% built, the project is on course to completion
in 2007, says owner London-based London & Continental
Railways Ltd. LCR packaged construction in two phases to ease
financing, which involves extensive government loan guarantees.
The southern 74-km first phase, costing $2.9-billion and begun
in October 1998, is due to begin operations next year.
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| LOOKING
UP Europen firms are working on high-speed rail
in Taiwan. (Photo courtesy of Bilfinger+Berger) |
U.S. HOPES
Domestically, high-speed rail has arguments in its favor that
it didn't a year ago. "The events of 9/11 caused people
to realize that we have to look at new modes of transportation,"
says Sarah L. Catz, attorney and policy specialist with law
firm Nossaman Gunther Knox & Elliott, San Francisco. Adds
Fred Gurney, president of Pittsburgh's Maglev Inc: "We
do not think maglev will replace cars or planes. We just want
to make a niche." Click here for Map
Higher-speed rail, not maglev,
is the humbler goal of many U.S. regions. Virginia is spending
$65 million on infrastructure improvements for such a goal,
notes Alan Tobias, director of the state's railroad agency.
"What we call HSR, we assume is 110 mph," he says.
Tom Smithberger, national rail director for Omaha-based HDR
Inc., adds that 11 high-speed rail corridors in the southeast
are under planning.
At Old Dominion University, the
first U.S. maglev project is nearing completion. A single
vehicle will shuttle along a 1-mile elevated guideway at 40
mph. All design, development, testing and commissioning cost
$22 million, says Tony Gee, head of Tony Gee International,
Edgewater, Fla., engineer for sponsor American Maglev Technology
Inc. The system will go into operation by fall. AMT, boosted
by investments from Lockheed Martin and Dominion Virgina Power,
believes it can build future systems for $19 million per mile,
not the average of $60 million usually associated with high-speed
rail, says President Tony Morris.
In the Midwest, initiatives focus
on a hub-and-spoke system of routes emanating from Chicago.
Planners identified three priority corridors extending to
Detroit, St. Louis and Milwaukee. In anticipation, the city
of Chicago has hired the local office of TranSystems Corp.
to prepare preliminary designs for a three-deck subsurface
transfer station providing intermodal links. Click here for
Map
The Michigan Dept. of Transportation,
Amtrak, FRA and General Electric Co. installed a train-control
system that uses radio communications and global positioning
to enable speeds of 90 mph along a 45-mile stretch in southwest
Michigan. In Illinois, Union Pacific crews upgraded portions
of the Chicago-St. Louis track to allow speeds of up to 110
mph. Illinois also is working on a positive train control
system for the corridor, says Randall Wade, chairman of the
Midwest Regional Rail Initiative steering committee. MRRI
is a nine-state high-speed-rail planning group, assisted by
Transportation Economics & Management Systems Inc., Frederick,
Md., and HNTB Corp., Kansas City.
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| STEEL
WHEELS Competition will bring out the best in competing
high-speed technologies. (Photo courtesy of Siemans Transportation
Systems Inc.) |
HNTB also is general engineering
consultant for the Florida High-Speed Rail Authority on an
Orlando-Tampa link. Despite the nixing of ambitious high-speed
rail efforts there by Gov. Jeb Bush (R) in 1999, a new study
arose out of a referendum passed by voters mandating a HSR
system to be under construction by 2003, notes HNTB project
manager Charlie Quandel.
By mid-2003 Sacramento-based California
High-Speed Rail Authority will complete environmental documents
for a 700-mile, 200-mph system linking northern and southern
California, says Mehdi Morshed, the agency's executive director.
Cost estimates reach $33 billion, but a proposed bond issue
would provide $9 billion for 2.5-hour service between Los
Angeles and San Francisco by 2008. Buildout for the entire
system could take 17 years, but some sections could be built
sooner, says Kip Field, assistant vice president for lead
program manager Parsons Brinckerhoff Inc.'s regional office
in Orange, Calif.
Maglev is not an option in portions
with no room for new dedicated alignment, says Field. And
the critical north-south connection faces daunting challenges,
especially tunneling in mountainous earthquake-prone country,
he adds. But contractors at a workshop sponsored by the authority
last year generally agreed that it is feasible, Field says.
Another challenge is developing railcars light enough to maintain
200-mph-plus speeds yet sturdy enough to meet federal crash-safety
requirements.
One of the U.S.'s best bets may
be a 272-mile maglev link on the Las Vegas-Southern California
corridor, a plan strongly touted by U.S. Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska.
The California-Nevada Super Speed Train Commission envisions
a 90-minute trip on 300-mph trains at an estimated $7 billion.
The early choice is to build the project in two chunks-a 163-mile
leg between Las Vegas and Barstow and an 89-mile Barstow-to-Anaheim
leg, says Richann Johnson, a senior project development officer
for Las Vegas and the commission's executive assistant. Construction
could start by mid-decade, says Johnson. The route uses the
Interstate 15 corridor, and "we believe we can get that
right-of- way from both states at a minimum cost," he
says.
Observers acknowledge that
high-speed rail still has an uphill climb. Identifying and
securing funding "is the first and foremost challenge,"
says Morshed. But Catz, noting a recently completed $1-billion
widening of I-5 in Orange County, Calif., says, "For
a couple of billion, you can have an operable segment
of a whole new technology."
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