Moderated by Tom Sabulis
One of our guest opinion columnists has an out-of-the-box idea for a transportation experiment in the city – a maglev line running from MARTA’s Arts Center station to the Atlantic Station area. What do you think?
Commenting is open below.
By Dave Henson
After the failure of the metro Atlanta transportation referendum last year, Gov. Nathan Deal said it “slams the door on further expansion of our rail network any time soon.” Despite this understandable sentiment, I think commuter rail can get back on track.
It’s important to remember that the governor supported the referendum to the end, nobly going down with the rickety ship he inherited. The business community was grateful for his support, but other pro-transit groups undercut him by loudly opposing the plan. I believe a business-backed rail initiative could still pique Deal’s interest.
In addition to benefiting the business community, new rail would have to serve a large number of potential riders and come with a low price tag. All of the above can be had with a demonstration line from the MARTA Arts Center Station to the state-owned property at 17th Street and Northside Drive, which is being eyed for future Amtrak and Greyhound stations.
The rail line — state-operated, by the Georgia Regional Transportation Authority — could form the spine of a “transportation innovation zone” in the progressive, up-and-coming West Midtown/“Westoma” (west of Midtown Atlanta) area. Many cutting-edge startup companies are based here, and AT&T is scouting the vicinity for one of its acclaimed Foundry innovation centers. Ridership would not be a problem.
As for low cost, the answer might lie with American Maglev Technologies, a Marietta company that builds magnetic levitation (maglev) transit propulsion systems. Maglev vehicles travel on a magnetic field, about a centimeter above elevated guideway rails, and are propelled by small onboard, electronic, emission-free engines. Unlike those found in conventional maglev systems, American Maglev’s guideways have no moving parts and require only a 5-foot-wide footprint.
Based on American Maglev’s per-mile projections, building the 1.2-mile demonstration line would cost $30 million to $35 million, a relatively low amount compared to other rail options. Currently, the company is bidding for commuter projects in Colorado and Florida. Seeing futuristic maglev trains streaking across the Downtown Connector could make a grand impression here as well.
Although maglev transit systems aren’t eligible for federal construction funding, they are covered under the recently passed “America Fast Forward Financing Innovation Act,” which offers a federally backed, low-interest loan program and a unique bond program that provides annual tax credits to bond investors in lieu of transportation agency interest payments.
Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed seems to have a fairly amicable relationship with President Barack Obama and might just have a shooter’s chance at landing one of those America Fast Forward loans or bonds for the maglev project.
It would be a win for the business community, and a win for Gov. Deal.
Dave Henson is a digital marketing executive and founder of Georgia Policy Solutions.
37 comments Add your comment
Retired Vet
March 5th, 2013
7:56 pm
@Robert
March 5th, 2013
3:56 pm
Would you prefer to fly on a private airline with terrorists armed with box cutters? Stop generalizing
Retired Vet
March 5th, 2013
7:51 pm
Would you prefer to fly on a private airline with terrorists armed with box cutters? Stop generalizing.
DeborahinAthens
March 5th, 2013
7:30 pm
Dream big. Why not a maglev from the Atlanta airport from Athens?
Joy
March 5th, 2013
6:30 pm
The South will always be the South: Narrow minded, backwards and behind.
trolleyfolly
March 5th, 2013
5:07 pm
30 to 50 million Gee only a third of the cost of the Edgewood Avenue trolley presently underway. Another wise choice of our politicians when given the opportunity to improve mass transit in Atlanta
ATL Backwards
March 5th, 2013
4:44 pm
Charlotte is expanding rail service to UNCC and Atlanta’s haters can’t even fathom a ONE mile test line. Atlanta Backwards
dc
March 5th, 2013
4:21 pm
always love the statement “Ridership would not be a problem” with no data to back it up. Sure, let’s spend $50Mil + based on that.
Robert
March 5th, 2013
3:59 pm
There’s no need to go 300mph for a 1.2 mile line. Get real. I’ve ridden the Shanghai Maglev…paid for by the government of China but mostly a tourist-attraction demonstration of Chinese capability.
An express trolley service already runs from the Midtown MARTA station to Atlantic Station. What’s the problem with that?
Robert
March 5th, 2013
3:56 pm
The biggest problem with “public” transportation is that anyone can use it, including homeless bums and criminals.
Dumb and Dumber
March 5th, 2013
3:46 pm
I’m thinking that we could just rent out jet packs at the Arts Center Station to fly to Ikea.
Won’t need to buy the right-of-way. The state is never going to build a multi-modal station on their 17th Street property anyway.
Let’s face it — we have all of the transit options this town will ever have. Sad state of affairs.