That was back in 2012... wonder how its all working now. I think it would be cool to have a small community where you live in a building, take a pod to the mall, take a pod to the office building, kids take the pod to school and back, take the pod to the park... anything else, take it to the parking lot where you can drive some place else. Cool.
Last used it just before COVID lockdowns struck in February 2020. It was fine. Looks a bit shabbier inside the pods, which given that they're 10 years old now is not surprising. But it all worked fine.
Doreen S This PRT system isn't the only system of it's kind. Masdar City, U.A.E. has this fully built & installed under the city. Also, West Virginia University has this system for their students.
Yeah thats right and Dr Bertelsen of Aeromobile who was was an inventor in the 1950's was working on a similar hovercraft system the Aeromobile Aeroduct system which could be still taken up today but never was taken up by cities, total shame that
The PRT system in Morgantown WV went online in 1975 and still operates at 98% reliability. Cars seat 8, can carry up to 20, and have bigger windows. Works great, especially for WVU students (I was one, in the mid-1980s). The Morgantown PRT tracks are heated in winter to prevent snow and ice buildup, so there is no need for a special snow-removing car. Then again, the cars aren't battery-powered and cannot operate when not in contact with the power rails. Still, the grandfather of all PRTs.
Love the idea of merging automation in cities with the ability to also drive it when you leave town. That just feels like the right balance of optimization and freedom. Brilliant!
You don't vote Liberal enough we must eliminate you. (CIA sends one of their trained hackers to crash your self driving car in a catastrophic accident blamed on Muslims,right wing nut job or Russian agents) depending on who is in charge of the narrative.
That's a very interesting system. Reminds me of a prototype light-rail system that has a test track in Sydney. That involved small rail vehicles with capacity for about 15 people. The idea was at peak times it would operate like a scheduled rail service, but off-peak you could use them as an on-demand taxi style service. That seemed like a great idea. But this obviously has some additional advantages to it...
Kudos to our cousins across the pond for this implementation of the 'Pod.' I don't mind the trains in the airports here, that I have ridden- but that looks much more relaxed and fun! And provides a glimpse of what may be part of our future- thanks for another wonderful episode, Robert. I wonder how the influx of visitors for the Olympics have regarded this airport transportation? Do I go there...okay- gold medal for the Pod!
Sadly that shows how badly I must described it. They are cars, with wheels and tyres and they steer themselves, no rails. They come when you call them, take you where you want to go. There's no scheduled service like a train, you don't have to wait until it arrives, press the button, get in, choose your destination and it takes you there.
. By far your most futureistically relevant vid. Keep em coming. What's more is these things are far more efficient than conventional public transport since they transport a person in a light vehicle from exactl where they want. No bus stops. No heavy buses cruising around sub-capacity- think about the waste in energy in hauling around a huge bus or tube//train in hours outside of rush hourr.
This vehicle was taken straight from Minority report and it's awesome. Also, I'm surprised these videos don't get more views. I could imagine seeing this as a programme on Discovery or something.
a monorail is in effect similar and over some distance probably often faster than these pods but this system can have the advantage of always being ready. it's always there waiting for you to go as opposed to a monorail which comes in intervals. they are robotic taxis and I think that can be a very good public transport model. I have advocated such for places like New York as well. or London for that matter as that is even more congested than New York.
I wish they had built the German Cabintaxi system decades ago. It had been completely planned but canceled at the last minute. The user interface back then was literally a rotary dial identical to what phones at the time used, there would be a map where you looked up the number of your destination system and you dialed it in, I believe it also printed a punch card boarding pass. As to future versions, likely autonomous cars but if they do a public transit version again or even an Uber or Lyft version, the interface would be your cell phone not a touch display at the station or in the pod.
yes, i got to this idea too. but what else to use? lithium-iont batteries would last about 5 years too... and the lead batteries can be recycled quite well.
A German firm is trying to develop a complete system to connect towns. It got rails, works on battery ans is very forward-thinking. You should have a look at it.
Wonderful video Robert! I'm late to this, are these pods still running successfully? If car batteries are being used, does that make them lead acid? What are the recharge and recycle/disposal processes compared to Li Ion? Love the idea of connected infrastructure where you drive yourself in the suburban environment, then the networked system takes over into the city.
Fred, You weren't paying attention! What PRT offers that simple EV tech can't is organised and autonomous journeys. So, you have all the benefits of EVs (sustainability, 'fuel' efficiency, no tail-pipe emissions etc) but no traffic jams and increased safety by relieving humans of the need to drive the vehicle!
I'm a huge fan of fully charged show. I watch all episodes and it is so so amazing coz when I watch this show, i feel like I'm acting for a green n clean world .. great ideas and impressive technologies that can change the world.
If you only want to try it out it is free. You could ride to the car park and back again. You just need to get to the airport first and that might be hard to do for free. ;)
it doesn't look like it can handle a lot of people in a short time. if 400 people arrive on a 747, how long will the last person have to wait? I thought that's why these systems are usually train based mass people movers.
This system is from the carpark to the terminal. So if a plane load of people arrive they will have had to collect bags & clear immigration to spread them out.
Nice as a small version on a low-sized area, but did you ever visit some train logistic station? I've been to the headquarters of the Berlin S-Bahn and they really have a lot to do just by coordinating a few trains (especially when some crash happens). Another con is the lose of "your private vehicle", the nice feeling to already be at home in your car, having fun driving home or just around... I personally prefer individual electric cars...
we have one of the first prt here for the university. I think it was built in the 80s. it's full electric so theres no batteries and it's a bumpy rough ride as it bounces from side to side on the track. just like old things it does brake down and sometimes it seems more then it should. the old 80s computer that runs it when there's a problem it shuts everything down. it would be nice to see them upgrade to something like this as its heavily used to transport college students from dorms and parts of the campus. if they could upgrade and expand I believe this could be a great future for city's and do away with buses crowding the small town streets and improve parking.
Hi Dan, There are a few frames in the video (apparently) showing the batteries they are using - Exide DrySafe 50Ah 12V with 5000 cycles at 25% discharge (500 at 75%) according to Excide's blurb. It looks similar to the Optima with the 'spiral cell'. If they are operating them at the 25% DOD level then the DrySafe are probably better value for money than LiFePO4 but not for long the way Li chemistry prices are falling. See you back over on the EVDL again soon? MW
Because those are the parameters they are designed to work in. You could make one that could do more, but it would need a more powerful motor, more energy storage and would therefor cost a lot more.
This is great, but he's banging on about point to point and passenger choice where and when to board... The Heathrow pods only go from A~B. [for the executive car parking lot]
So how much do you think taxes would have to go up to buy back all the cars? What if people want to keep their cars? You would force them to sell? Most people would not pay much extra for this tech, nor should they have to if they don't want to. I agree that it would be good in cities, although that totally depends on cost. If you don't mind me asking, how do you get to work/shops/friends/etc?
I didn't think about that. Well, what about to make the mobile app of rating of a car? Every time you log in to car, you can rate the overall car status. When you find something wrong, it will go to cleaning itself and you take another car. I don't know. You can always find some solution. I like the idea of The Venus Project. There's an advanced transport system (local, short, long, extra-long distances) which I think could work quite well.
Well, yes, but the Morgantown cars are not completely autonomous in that they get their motive power form rails in the 'guideway'. Also it runs in 3 different modes according to overall demand and none of them is as flexible as ULTra. ULTra is more reliable (but then, it is a lot newer) and average waiting time for a Pod is 10 seconds against Morgantown's 5 minutes or more.
Been waiting for a good detailed review of the system for a long while. Thanks for the review. Do you have any information on the capacity of this system, like how many passenger per station it can handle? How many passengers per hour can it move around on a single lane of traffic? I hear they are implementing this system on a larger scale in Amristar, India. I am not sure how many years they will take to complete. I cant seem to get enough information of it. :)
Hi Robert, brilliant episode, I loved the Pod. On an unrelated note, some time ago I suggested that you do an episode featuring the Better Place Center in Copenhagen. You wrote "What a brilliant suggestion, I'm on it". I'd like to ask, is that in the pipelines, or have you forgotten/decided not to do it?
I think it's interesting they chose a lead-acid battery instead of Lithium-Ion. I suppose it was studied as to which would be more economical under the circumstances. It appears they made a good choice as it works well.
City Pod would seem like the next logical step to me. It would be like a tram service that goes where you like when you like and could replace the bus and even the taxi. Mercedes are very close to a system that would work on the road in traffic. A road network with only driverless cars on it would have a much better safety record that putting people in charge. And what about automatic cargo transport? :D
I hope they would replace the bus traffic with this in Sweden! Not having to adapt to the bus schedules and so on!.. Then i might start to go to work with pods instead! Bus traffic today is simply not working with 1 hour between the rides..
Morgantown PRT cars move faster, carry more people, and give much better outward visibility. The system works great (98% reliable) and provides an invaluable service to WVU students (for whom it is free). 'duckjock' was just saying (and I agree), it should be mentioned more often. It's true the Morgantown system only operates as a 'true PRT' _sometimes_, but it was the first and only one operating -- for decades.
Most cars can do more than 25mph and go up hills of more than 20% gradient. These are a good idea for applications like airports or in large factories or retail parks. But to think they are a perfect fit for all transport is a bit daft.
On the other hand - for example - I don't need to own the car. I just need it to trasport anywhere - then park it and - maybe - someone else can use it. It's much more useful, effective, enviroment friendlier and I don't need to buy a new car every 10 years - it's changing itself all the time.
lifepo would probably last 5-10 times as long, maybe more. it would seem like the obvious choice. Calb grey cells seem particularly obvious these days as a simple effective choice
Yeah, once they are ready for large scale city driving, Pod's are going to absolutely devastate public traffic of today, especially busses and taxis are going to suffer. Trains will be a bit better off since they can transfer bigger numbers of people. But on the bright side, we'll be on time and going where we want to go. :D
Projects like ULTra PRT are the foundations of tomorrow's transportation systems. I look forward to the day this system is looked on as quaint and old-fashioned by users for whom intelligent electric vehicles are the norm.
What ULTRa has done is fantastic, but I always hate how in these interviews they completely ignore Morgantown, West Virginia; their Personal Rapid Transit system, built by Boeing, has been running for almost 40 years there.
Roads were built for transport and are already in place. The environmental damage of building a purpose built track system would be huge (all the concrete/steel etc.). The tracks would be an eyesore. In most major cities there is already a transport system in place (underground/ trams etc.) surely it is better to improve these than build more rubbish. If all cars were automated road deaths would fall dramatically. Not to say they wouldn't work in new city builds though!
I like these PRT's but I prefer the ULTra ones. They are more versatile and less expensive. And, Morgantown PRT's are not really true PRT's because they are not Personal. They carry people you may not know as well.
That was back in 2012... wonder how its all working now. I think it would be cool to have a small community where you live in a building, take a pod to the mall, take a pod to the office building, kids take the pod to school and back, take the pod to the park... anything else, take it to the parking lot where you can drive some place else. Cool.
Last used it just before COVID lockdowns struck in February 2020. It was fine. Looks a bit shabbier inside the pods, which given that they're 10 years old now is not surprising. But it all worked fine.
@@simonmoore2380 Interesting. Do you know whether the PRT at Heathrow will be removed when (if?) they build the third runway?
what about now, its gotta have improved?
Doreen S This PRT system isn't the only system of it's kind. Masdar City, U.A.E. has this fully built & installed under the city. Also, West Virginia University has this system for their students.
Yeah thats right and Dr Bertelsen of Aeromobile who was was an inventor in the 1950's was working on a similar hovercraft system the Aeromobile Aeroduct system which could be still taken up today but never was taken up by cities, total shame that
This little device would work very well at Schipol (Amsterdam) airport, which is simply vast.Everything is 3 miles from everything else.
The PRT system in Morgantown WV went online in 1975 and still operates at 98% reliability. Cars seat 8, can carry up to 20, and have bigger windows. Works great, especially for WVU students (I was one, in the mid-1980s).
The Morgantown PRT tracks are heated in winter to prevent snow and ice buildup, so there is no need for a special snow-removing car. Then again, the cars aren't battery-powered and cannot operate when not in contact with the power rails.
Still, the grandfather of all PRTs.
Love the idea of merging automation in cities with the ability to also drive it when you leave town. That just feels like the right balance of optimization and freedom. Brilliant!
Howard Price à
At WVU in Morgantown WV, USA. We move close to 15,000 people a day along 16 miles of guideway on our PRT. We have a fleet of 73 vehicles total.
Nice but why is the front and rear windscreen blocked by a large wall would it not be nice with a window there?
Design I think, would've been cool to have windows though.
In case of breakdown, all driverless vehicles are designed so that you can push down the front and/or back and step off onto the track.
This show has become my favourite. I really look forward to each episode.
it's essentially the precursor to the self driving car
You don't vote Liberal enough we must eliminate you. (CIA sends one of their trained hackers to crash your self driving car in a catastrophic accident blamed on Muslims,right wing nut job or Russian agents) depending on who is in charge of the narrative.
What about Morgantown,wv...
That's a very interesting system. Reminds me of a prototype light-rail system that has a test track in Sydney. That involved small rail vehicles with capacity for about 15 people. The idea was at peak times it would operate like a scheduled rail service, but off-peak you could use them as an on-demand taxi style service. That seemed like a great idea. But this obviously has some additional advantages to it...
Kudos to our cousins across the pond for this implementation of the 'Pod.' I don't mind the trains in the airports here, that I have ridden- but that looks much more relaxed and fun! And provides a glimpse of what may be part of our future- thanks for another wonderful episode, Robert. I wonder how the influx of visitors for the Olympics have regarded this airport transportation? Do I go there...okay- gold medal for the Pod!
That is interesting, it's not what we see in the UK. Are you watching in North America?
We need these from Melbourne city to Melbourne airport
Sadly that shows how badly I must described it. They are cars, with wheels and tyres and they steer themselves, no rails. They come when you call them, take you where you want to go. There's no scheduled service like a train, you don't have to wait until it arrives, press the button, get in, choose your destination and it takes you there.
does it stop at any drive-thru fast-food restaurant?
Can you tell the train driver to stop at any fast food restaurant? Then it's still not exactly personal.
Yes but it's airline food.
A Keystone XL Pipeline advertisement preceded this video.
They have no shame.
So, I clicked it. You're welcome *****
So if it's sitting at a terminal does it plug in, charging up until the next customer?
. By far your most futureistically relevant vid. Keep em coming. What's more is these things are far more efficient than conventional public transport since they transport a person in a light vehicle from exactl where they want. No bus stops. No heavy buses cruising around sub-capacity- think about the waste in energy in hauling around a huge bus or tube//train in hours outside of rush hourr.
these would be great around a city centre
This vehicle was taken straight from Minority report and it's awesome. Also, I'm surprised these videos don't get more views. I could imagine seeing this as a programme on Discovery or something.
a monorail is in effect similar and over some distance probably often faster than these pods but this system can have the advantage of always being ready. it's always there waiting for you to go as opposed to a monorail which comes in intervals.
they are robotic taxis and I think that can be a very good public transport model. I have advocated such for places like New York as well. or London for that matter as that is even more congested than New York.
I travelled on something similar at Birmingham airport,brilliant!
this is some amazing tech! :O
They need a system like this at the airport in Atlanta.
I love how people are for this idea! I would LOVE to get into one of these awesome pods! I wonder how much the fare is for one-way trips and so forth!
Salome Lau Its free !
I wish they had built the German Cabintaxi system decades ago. It had been completely planned but canceled at the last minute. The user interface back then was literally a rotary dial identical to what phones at the time used, there would be a map where you looked up the number of your destination system and you dialed it in, I believe it also printed a punch card boarding pass. As to future versions, likely autonomous cars but if they do a public transit version again or even an Uber or Lyft version, the interface would be your cell phone not a touch display at the station or in the pod.
yes, i got to this idea too. but what else to use? lithium-iont batteries would last about 5 years too... and the lead batteries can be recycled quite well.
A German firm is trying to develop a complete system to connect towns. It got rails, works on battery ans is very forward-thinking.
You should have a look at it.
Wonderful video Robert! I'm late to this, are these pods still running successfully?
If car batteries are being used, does that make them lead acid? What are the recharge and recycle/disposal processes compared to Li Ion?
Love the idea of connected infrastructure where you drive yourself in the suburban environment, then the networked system takes over into the city.
Fred, You weren't paying attention! What PRT offers that simple EV tech can't is organised and autonomous journeys. So, you have all the benefits of EVs (sustainability, 'fuel' efficiency, no tail-pipe emissions etc) but no traffic jams and increased safety by relieving humans of the need to drive the vehicle!
Morgantown University had PRTs back in the 70s, still does
I'm a huge fan of fully charged show. I watch all episodes and it is so so amazing coz when I watch this show, i feel like I'm acting for a green n clean world .. great ideas and impressive technologies that can change the world.
Excellent episode, thank you very much! Love the pods!!
we need those here, urban and rual
Would be interesting to see it done. Rail network has 10,000 mile of track, vs 2.5 for this. About 4000 trains vs 21. Might be a bit more complicated.
How do they work in snow?
is it free? and can you catch a pod from the car park TO the terminal?
*****
oh ok, so its kind of like business class flights then haha.. thnx for the answer
If you only want to try it out it is free. You could ride to the car park and back again. You just need to get to the airport first and that might be hard to do for free. ;)
absolutelly agree. As I would say (and Jacques Fresco would say aswell :-), we need access
Bring this the USA. It will definitely make this nation great.
it doesn't look like it can handle a lot of people in a short time. if 400 people arrive on a 747, how long will the last person have to wait? I thought that's why these systems are usually train based mass people movers.
This system is from the carpark to the terminal. So if a plane load of people arrive they will have had to collect bags & clear immigration to spread them out.
The pods also hold 4 people at a time, which decreases wait time.
Nice as a small version on a low-sized area, but did you ever visit some train logistic station? I've been to the headquarters of the Berlin S-Bahn and they really have a lot to do just by coordinating a few trains (especially when some crash happens). Another con is the lose of "your private vehicle", the nice feeling to already be at home in your car, having fun driving home or just around... I personally prefer individual electric cars...
we have one of the first prt here for the university. I think it was built in the 80s. it's full electric so theres no batteries and it's a bumpy rough ride as it bounces from side to side on the track. just like old things it does brake down and sometimes it seems more then it should. the old 80s computer that runs it when there's a problem it shuts everything down. it would be nice to see them upgrade to something like this as its heavily used to transport college students from dorms and parts of the campus. if they could upgrade and expand I believe this could be a great future for city's and do away with buses crowding the small town streets and improve parking.
What shows have you done on TH-cam and on the TV?
Hi Dan, There are a few frames in the video (apparently) showing the batteries they are using - Exide DrySafe 50Ah 12V with 5000 cycles at 25% discharge (500 at 75%) according to Excide's blurb. It looks similar to the Optima with the 'spiral cell'.
If they are operating them at the 25% DOD level then the DrySafe are probably better value for money than LiFePO4 but not for long the way Li chemistry prices are falling. See you back over on the EVDL again soon? MW
Because those are the parameters they are designed to work in.
You could make one that could do more, but it would need a more powerful motor, more energy storage and would therefor cost a lot more.
This is great, but he's banging on about point to point and passenger choice where and when to board... The Heathrow pods only go from A~B. [for the executive car parking lot]
Your description, and the video, was fine. It's quite obvious how this is not like a monorail.
How come they do't have this inn america?
That's exactly the same look that Kryten had when he told the joke to Dave in the DNA episode on Red Dwarf show :D
So how much do you think taxes would have to go up to buy back all the cars? What if people want to keep their cars? You would force them to sell?
Most people would not pay much extra for this tech, nor should they have to if they don't want to.
I agree that it would be good in cities, although that totally depends on cost.
If you don't mind me asking, how do you get to work/shops/friends/etc?
I didn't think about that. Well, what about to make the mobile app of rating of a car? Every time you log in to car, you can rate the overall car status. When you find something wrong, it will go to cleaning itself and you take another car. I don't know. You can always find some solution.
I like the idea of The Venus Project. There's an advanced transport system (local, short, long, extra-long distances) which I think could work quite well.
They're really fun to go in. They are very convenient. I really wish that this tech expands.
Well, yes, but the Morgantown cars are not completely autonomous in that they get their motive power form rails in the 'guideway'. Also it runs in 3 different modes according to overall demand and none of them is as flexible as ULTra. ULTra is more reliable (but then, it is a lot newer) and average waiting time for a Pod is 10 seconds against Morgantown's 5 minutes or more.
Thumb up for this video as always! Interesting topic about podcars! Thank you!
WOW that's new futuristic and I fill like they shall expand it toward the other terminal
Been waiting for a good detailed review of the system for a long while. Thanks for the review. Do you have any information on the capacity of this system, like how many passenger per station it can handle? How many passengers per hour can it move around on a single lane of traffic?
I hear they are implementing this system on a larger scale in Amristar, India. I am not sure how many years they will take to complete. I cant seem to get enough information of it. :)
Hi Robert, brilliant episode, I loved the Pod. On an unrelated note, some time ago I suggested that you do an episode featuring the Better Place Center in Copenhagen. You wrote "What a brilliant suggestion, I'm on it". I'd like to ask, is that in the pipelines, or have you forgotten/decided not to do it?
How much does it cost?
can you "carpool"? seems like you could if they get the software right.
how much for a journey??
Well - obviously - there is a snow plough pod! (I don't know really, but why not?)
Maybe, the problem is the sides of the track which makes it hard for snow to be removed...
That's so cool 😎
I think it's interesting they chose a lead-acid battery instead of Lithium-Ion. I suppose it was studied as to which would be more economical under the circumstances. It appears they made a good choice as it works well.
City Pod would seem like the next logical step to me. It would be like a tram service that goes where you like when you like and could replace the bus and even the taxi. Mercedes are very close to a system that would work on the road in traffic. A road network with only driverless cars on it would have a much better safety record that putting people in charge. And what about automatic cargo transport? :D
I think I'd still want a seatbelt (conspicuously absent in the Pod) and airbags!
That is the future! We need more of this
I hope they would replace the bus traffic with this in Sweden! Not having to adapt to the bus schedules and so on!.. Then i might start to go to work with pods instead! Bus traffic today is simply not working with 1 hour between the rides..
I want the whole world podded!
I like how the delay announcement must be used so frequently that they printed out the script to use and put it on the wall behind them.
They need to have little robot drivers like the Johnny Cabs from the original Total Rekall :)
The best thing going for PRT is that it is a hybrid system, private then public.
0:55 Bloody hell Robert! That's frightening and hilarious!
extending it will help LHR greatly :)
Morgantown PRT cars move faster, carry more people, and give much better outward visibility. The system works great (98% reliable) and provides an invaluable service to WVU students (for whom it is free). 'duckjock' was just saying (and I agree), it should be mentioned more often.
It's true the Morgantown system only operates as a 'true PRT' _sometimes_, but it was the first and only one operating -- for decades.
My dad kept going to Heathrow and I would ask him if the pods were working and he kept saying no. They were delayed by something like 2 years. Hmmm.
Question before i comment on that, did you ever had your own car? (not leased or owned by parents?)
Most cars can do more than 25mph and go up hills of more than 20% gradient.
These are a good idea for applications like airports or in large factories or retail parks. But to think they are a perfect fit for all transport is a bit daft.
I tried the pod it's so fun and cool 😄😄😄😄
You can still have both. I like driving cars on quiet, fun, twisty b roads. I hate driving cars in town and in traffic.
On the other hand - for example - I don't need to own the car. I just need it to trasport anywhere - then park it and - maybe - someone else can use it. It's much more useful, effective, enviroment friendlier and I don't need to buy a new car every 10 years - it's changing itself all the time.
I think pods can replace much bus traffic and make trains more effective.
Morgantown, WV
No more traffic problems!! Now that I would like to see!!
How is this really different to a monorail?
lifepo would probably last 5-10 times as long, maybe more.
it would seem like the obvious choice. Calb grey cells seem particularly obvious these days as a simple effective choice
Yeah, once they are ready for large scale city driving, Pod's are going to absolutely devastate public traffic of today, especially busses and taxis are going to suffer. Trains will be a bit better off since they can transfer bigger numbers of people.
But on the bright side, we'll be on time and going where we want to go. :D
2015? we already have this in the netherlands for a couple of years now...
Love the music!
*BUT* what if it snows?
+Huey Freeman there is one with a tiny plow in front of it ;)
Projects like ULTra PRT are the foundations of tomorrow's transportation systems. I look forward to the day this system is looked on as quaint and old-fashioned by users for whom intelligent electric vehicles are the norm.
Enormous potential for "roadless" property development.
A system like this has already been operational for about 10 years in Capelle aan den Ijssel in the Netherlands ...
i want one in sky-blue : )
Cute pod addiction lol .
What ULTRa has done is fantastic, but I always hate how in these interviews they completely ignore Morgantown, West Virginia; their Personal Rapid Transit system, built by Boeing, has been running for almost 40 years there.
Roads were built for transport and are already in place. The environmental damage of building a purpose built track system would be huge (all the concrete/steel etc.). The tracks would be an eyesore. In most major cities there is already a transport system in place (underground/ trams etc.) surely it is better to improve these than build more rubbish. If all cars were automated road deaths would fall dramatically. Not to say they wouldn't work in new city builds though!
They should expand this tech to improve the rail networks in some way.
I like these PRT's but I prefer the ULTra ones. They are more versatile and less expensive. And, Morgantown PRT's are not really true PRT's because they are not Personal. They carry people you may not know as well.