by gg3 » Wed 07 Mar 2007, 03:57:26
Terrapin, excellent analogy about launching the lifeboats in an orderly manner.
However that is also a high-syntropy solution because it has a high embodied information content: everyone has to behave in an orderly manner, rather than insisting on partying on deck until the ship is about to capsize and then clawing & scratching their way to the front of the line for the lifeboats. The greater the degree of syntropy, the lower the probability, so I still think it's more likely that the fertilizer will hit the ventilator.
---
Transport will end up requiring an increasing degree of individual ingenuity, and different vehicles for different purposes.
Someone might have a bicycle for their local errands, and an electric bubble car such as the Zap Xebra for local runs involving multiple passengers or bulky cargo. They would be a member of a car-sharing club for occasional access to a biodiesel/hybrid for longer trips to destinations that were not practical for bus or rail. They would tend to use public transport for repeat trips such as commuting, and intercity rail or bus for leisure travel. Air travel would be reserved for emergencies such as visiting someone in the hospital or going to a funeral.
Tradesworkers would still have their minivans and pickup trucks, but these would be biodiesel plug-in hybrids or electrics. (I have just started looking into the issue of how to get my local client site visits back on 2 wheels again, havng tried it years ago and found it not feasible at the time; we'll see if it works this time...) Tradesworkers who don't need to carry tools & materials to sites, e.g. after having deposited same on site on the first day of a multi-day project, could use motor scooters or bicycles depending on distance.
What's needed badly is something very much like the Twike pedal/electric hybrid, except a) mass-produced at lower first cost, i.e. under $10k, b) thin-film flexible PV material permanently applied to the roof for supplementary daylight charging, c) replace the tiller with a steering wheel or handlebars so you can balance against inertia on turns (tillers are OK in slow delivery vehicles, see also the classic "S&D Freighter" of the 1920s), d) enable it to run on pedal power only, which is not possible with the Twike as presently designed, and would extend range considerably on flat ground.
What's also needed is to get people over the idiotic idea that a mode of transportation has to resemble a living room. A cushioned seat, an enclosed compartment in which to sit, fresh air ventilation and perhaps heat for the winter, and a radio for essential information on the road, are sufficient in most cases. In hot climates, air conditioning, as a disability-access feature, on prescription, for those who have relevant health conditions.
---
Schools underground: Yes, but windowless rooms, no. What you do is build the classrooms around a central courtyard that is exposed to the sky (perhaps with a glass roof?), or you use earth berms to get the needed thermal benefits in above-ground construction.
Homes: ditto. However, in residential construction, unlike in commercial & institutional buildings with fulltime professional maintenance staff, we need methods for waterproofing and damp/moistureproofing that can last the life of the structure.
---
About tradesman bicycles.
The problem is carrying tools.
First of all, large backpacks are ruled out due to issues of muscular/skeletal health impact. Weight belongs on wheels, that's what wheels are for.
Second, only small light loads on the handlebars due to steering safety issues. However, a container up front could be used for carrying a lunchbox if needed, and should be built like an automobile glove compartment (solid walls, bottom-hinged door facing the rider).
Third, the standard rear rack is insufficint in terms of a) weight capacity and b) position. Half of it is practically below the seat, and loads hanging over the rear are a no-go due to weight distribution.
Fourth, side panniers are OK but need to be made of solid material, fabric panniers are a bad joke for tradesman applications. Intelligently-designed panniers (creationists can go eat poo, we engineers own that phrase dammit!) should be rectangular and have access from the sides as well as from the top (hinged top & side panels, lockable). With panniers attached, having top surfaces flush with those of the carrying rack, a wider load could be placed on the rack. This should still be a relatively light load and not too large.
The design concept I'm presently working on would involve side panniers and a light folding handcart designed to easily mount the panniers to it whilst on client sites.
One pannier for the usual telco tool kit (more than rugged enough to handle bumps etc.), plus one to hold a knapsack with a laptop (a thousand bucks of delicate electronics bouncing around on the road, eek!). That leaves the other laptop (yes we carry two: one PC, one Mac) in a knapsack on my back, which is an unacceptable design compromise longterm but could be tolerated short-term.
The folding hand cart would basically need to be a frame with wheels, having brackets designed to hold the panniers; it would be strapped to the rear rack above the panniers while on the road. Thus the bike could be locked on the street, and all of the gear hooked onto the handcart to take up to the client's site. Though, what I'm actually going to do here is contact all my bikeable clients and have them ask their building management about the rules re. bringing bikes on the elevators, since leaving a bike on the street around here is asking for it to be vandalized or worse.
Better of course would be a detachable bike trailer that could actually function as a hand cart on its own, though again, the issue arises as to "what to bring on site" vs. "what to lock up (and risk) on the street."
BTW the Extracycle mod won't work for me, it makes the bike too long to get on elevators. And speaking of elevators, scoping out the elevators at the BART (underground/subway) stations in the relevant areas is also an issue that has to be solved up front: the bike has to go in the elevator with both wheels on the ground.
I'll post something around here somewhere when I have results to report....