Norman wrote: ↑Thu Aug 24, 2017 12:20 am
It's only 3-4 poles guys. Hardly breaking the bank here.
Quite true.
The real problem is this: if we are talking of building a whole network though, that's a couple of billion dollars. (Projects always end up overspent). Thus, if we are going to spend a couple of billion, the difference between good practice and average practice might be $20m per kilometer. So, do we let ourselves drift into average practice, sub-par Citadis from Madrid? More centre islands? Expensive track? Unnecessary signalling? Low speeds? And all for more money than we need to pay?
The difference in cost alone would pay for an extensive bikeway network of world class, for example, and the trams would be faster and more comfortable.
Sure, for a piddly 1km extension, it's not worth the heat. But each little extension, each future Citadis we buy, we just bake these inefficiencies into our system. Then when it comes time to spend our billions, so too will that baked in inefficiency hurt us.
SA Government should send a team to look at Germany, Poland, Switzerland and the Czech Republic to see how it's done. The others, France, the UK, the USA, are all like us, re-inventing the wheel.
Edit: I would add that in applying to the Federal Government for part funding, a demonstration that SA had done a lot of investigation into the best value for money track and trams and construction techniques, so that economic analysis was robust, would go a long way to getting approval. How SA could do that investigation without looking at overseas best practice beats me.