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Transrapid in the context of urban and regional transport planning

Transrapid in the context of urban and regional transport planning. Long-Wave-Theories and Infrastructures. Actual Developments on globalized markets. Settlement Structures in Europe. Vision of a maglev network for Germany. Why maglev?. 1800. 1850. 1900. 1950. 2000. 2050.

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Transrapid in the context of urban and regional transport planning

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  1. Transrapid in the context of urban and regional transport planning • Long-Wave-Theories and Infrastructures • Actual Developments on globalized markets • Settlement Structures in Europe • Vision of a maglev network for Germany • Why maglev?

  2. 1800 1850 1900 1950 2000 2050 Long-Wave-Theories and Infrastructures Growth Canals 1836 Rails 1891 Roads 1946 Air 2002 Maglev? 2060 10-15 years 10-15 years 10-15 years 10-15 years Wave I 1805 Steam/Mechanics Trade Wave III 1920 Electricity/Chemistry Energy Wave V 2020 Nuclear Power/IT Knowledge Wave II 1865 Coal/Steal Traffic Wave IV 1970 Oil/Electronics Communication Linking specific cities Linking regions (national) Covering Areas (decentralization) Linking Metropoles (international)

  3. Long-Wave-Theories and InfrastructuresConclusion • There are regular cycles of economic growth. • There are regular cycles in the development of infrastructures. • There is a correlation between infrastructure and economic development. • Each transportation system answers a specific economic requirement and itself has an impact on economic development and settlement structure.

  4. Actual Developments on globalized markets • Increasing spezialisation and complexity of organisation in networks or project companies. • Shiftfrommassproduction (Fordistic) to flexible, individualizedproduction (Post-Fordistic). • Demographicchangesandincreasingimportanceof innovative clustersandregions. • Spatialandinteractionalexpansionofeconomicareasandconcentration on metropolitanareas due toGlobalization. • Temporal distance, not spatial, isthedeterminingfactor.

  5. Settlement Structures in Europe England France Germany

  6. Hamburg Bremen Berlin Hannover Magdeburg Leipzig Dortmund Kassel Dresden Cologne Francfort Nuremberg Stuttgart Munich Vision of a maglev networkfor Germany • 4.255 km (2,644 miles) • 50 DB stations • 10 P&R stations • 14 airport stations • av. 34% time saving to actual systems (~ 1h) • connects smaller regions to metropolitan areas • support of decentralized concentration

  7. Why maglev? • 70th: new systems needed to reach HighSpeed • 90th: railways with 300 – 350 km/h (180 – 215 mph) • Airtravel is adequate system to link metropolitan regions in globalized markets. • Maglev is to bring short international trip times by airtravel into the regions. • Maglev strengthens smaller regions and links them to international markets.

  8. Maglev is the future of modern high-speed transportation. • Which region will give the major impulse for the implementation of this innovative transportation system? • Europe? Asia? America?

  9. Requirements for future transportation infrastructures • Available and flexible • Short trip times despite intermediate stops • Safe and reliable • Low costs • Ecologically consistent • Fit to regional settlement structure. • Interconnect flexible and innovative clusters and regions in a network.

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