Maglev, wonder of creation
Shown here is the Maglev train in Shanghai, hailed as a marvel of engineering, and indeed it is. Yet due to some poor foresight by the city planners, Shanghai’s magnetic levitation rail system is completely useless.
The maglev was designed and sold as a way to cut travel time to and from Pudong Airport, which in a taxi usually takes about 90 minutes or so. On the maglev, it was and is still claimed, that trip would be reduced to seven minutes, by traveling at speeds of up to 435 km/hour (270mph). Sounds great, right? Except that the location chosen for the “downtown” station is nowhere near downtown. It’s in Longyang, which is still a good hour from the city center by subway. Which means that after you take the super-fast maglev (and pay the 50 kuai ticket), you then have to take the regular metro line or grab a taxi. Yoyo and I did it once, for the experience. Never again.

So how much time did you lose when you took this superfast train?
Comment by Serendipity — June 16, 2006 @ 4:10 pm
I’d say it took us about the same time to get home as it would if we’d simply hopped in a taxi. And we saved about 30 kuai. But the inconvenience of transfering from one train to another and then taking a short taxi from the subway to our home just makes the maglev pointless. Hardly innovative.
Comment by The Portfolios — June 16, 2006 @ 4:19 pm