A “poor man’s carriage”: system building and social interactivity in UK urban tramway development, 1860–1890 (original) (raw)

ATTITUDE OF LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES TO TECHNOLOGIES IN URBAN RAIL TRANSPORT BASED ON THE EXAMPLE OF SELECTED MORAVIAN AND SILESIAN TOWNS BETWEEN 1860 AND 1914 1

THE PROCESS OF CREATING SOCIAL NETWORKS, THEIR SIGNIFICANCE AND ROLE DURING THE FORMATION OF MODERN SOCIETY, 2018

This paper is focused at interaction between individual interest groups which could have intervened and, as it was proven, they had intervened in the agenda of urban rail transport. It analyzes the process from the perspective of its participants-municipal self-governments and other interested parties. Our research is based on an example of selected Moravian and Silesian towns at the turn of 19th and 20th century with necessary time overlaps. The study concentrates primarily on the issues of how local self-governments approached tenders for urban rail transport providers. Also it looks at the type of information they preferred, how they obtained it and how the information acquired this way enabled them to respond to modern technologies, i.e. mainly electricity. At the same time the study takes into account other processes which were shown in the Cisleithanian part of the Habsburgh Monarchy at this time. It concentrates at the importance of development in municipal self-government and also at other, mainly national, aspects of these processes. The aim of our paper is to answer the question if, even in the case of urban rail transport, connections between its participants can be characterised as 'networks' or rather as 'information nodes.'

The quest for publicness: political conflict about the organisation of tramways and telecommunication in Sweden, c. 1900–1920

Scandinavian Economic History Review, 2016

This article explores political conflicts about the organisation of public services in Sweden c. 1900-1920. The authors argue that political decisions play a vital role in shaping the political economy of public services. The case studies analysed are the political debates about the communalisation of the tramway system in Stockholm, and the nationalisation of Sweden's last private telephone company. In both cases, the transfer of the service to public organisation was a lengthy process, ending in the late 1910s. This is explained using the concept of publicness. Drawing on three discursive chains, the argument is that the political development was affected by the politicians conception of the political community, the form of organisation and by perceptions of values such as equal access and modernity. In the case of the tramways, public organisation was seen as the best option to defend the public against corruption and self-interest. In the case of the telephones, free market competition was seen as a guarantee for an efficient and costeffective service. The reason for this difference, is argued, was that the debate on the tramways articulated a clearer notion of publicness, where equal access and public opinion carried larger weight.

Tramways in Europe :A success story of Straus Bourg

The paper examines the up surge in the role of LRTs and trams in enhancing urban mobility in Europe aafter their fififty years of marginalization due to emergence of heavy metros.Modern tramways have the capability to meet the urban mobility demands at one fourth of the cost ,with quality attributes of service which are at par with expensive metros .Trams also provide a much better integration of road and rail and ensure last mile connectivity

Trams in the countries of real socialism of the 1960s and 1970s: from crisis to impetus.

Architecture, City and Environment, 2021

After the Second World War, the reconstruction and development of the tramway system in the European countries of real socialism was, at the very least, hesitant, and quite different. Both in the West and in the East, the road became the universal means of transport and the Modern Movement triumphed in urbanism, so that the tramway system was seen as an outdated and unsuitable means of transport. However, the industrial development and strong urban growth since the mid-1960s meant that in the countries of real socialism was necessary: the development of tramway infrastructure and new models of rolling stock, as well as the coordination of their operation in urban-suburban transport system. The aim of this article on urban and transport history is to account for the period of tramway revival in the Europe of real socialism during the 1960s and 1970s, with its contradictions and problems, and to explain the implementation of the rapid tramway in its cities. To this end, the theoretical and practical approaches and the development of the tram itself are analysed in two different case studies: the Czech city Ostrava and the Russian city Yaroslavl. It is concluded that in the European communist countries there was a considerable diversity both in urban public transport policy and in the solutions of interrelation between transport and city. This research offers a barely studied topic that allows a better understanding of socialist urban planning, as well as its differences and similarities with the Western European experience.

Public transport, urban form and urban structure: the example of Brisbane's tram system

The form and structure of a city are strongly influenced by its transport system, although this influence is mutual rather than unidirectional. This paper explores the historical interactions between Brisbane's urban form and urban structure on the one hand and its tramway system on the other hand. The paper identifies a number of financial, institutional, political and related factors that determined the development trajectory of the tramway system from its start in the 1880s; but similar factors led to its eventual demise in 1969. By showing how Brisbane's tramways developed and the intimate connections of this system to the changing shape and structure of the city the research reinforces the importance of understanding the links between transport and land use, as well as highlighting the potential role of transport technologies in shaping more sustainable cities.

”The quest for publicness: political conflict about the organisation of tramways and telecommunication in Sweden, c. 1900–1920”, Scandinavian Economic History Review 65:1 (2017), pp. 70–87.

This article explores political conflicts about the organisation of public services in Sweden c. 1900–1920. The authors argue that political decisions play a vital role in shaping the political economy of public services. The case studies analysed are the political debates about the communalisation of the tramway system in Stockholm, and the nationalisation of Sweden's last private telephone company. In both cases, the transfer of the service to public organisation was a lengthy process, ending in the late 1910s. This is explained using the concept of publicness. Drawing on three discursive chains, the argument is that the political development was affected by the politicians conception of the political community, the form of organisation and by perceptions of values such as equal access and modernity. In the case of the tramways, public organisation was seen as the best option to defend the public against corruption and self-interest. In the case of the telephones, free market competition was seen as a guarantee for an efficient and cost-effective service. The reason for this difference, is argued, was that the debate on the tramways articulated a clearer notion of publicness, where equal access and public opinion carried larger weight.

Territorial opportunities of tram-based systems: a comparative analysis between Nottingham (UK) and Valenciennes (FRA)

Town Planning Review, 2014

Within the European project « Sintropher », this paper focuses on a comparative analysis between two tramway systems in Nottingham (UK) and Valenciennes (FRA). The aim is to understand how these tram-based systems were successfully integrated in the urban areas. Firstly, we describe the national contexts concerning assessments of urban public transport policies. Secondly, we analyse these tram projects, and especially their territorial dynamics. Thirdly, we have a look at urban transformations that occurred around their terminal stations in Hucknall and Denain.

Waiting for Godot - A qualitative investigation into Sydney's rail expansion policy process from 1998 to 2010

2011

For the last half century, public transport has stood in the shadow of the private car. Growing acknowledgement of the challenges presented by urban growth, traffic congestion and carbon emissions vividly depict the importance of public transport within major cities. In the last 12 years, the NSW Government has consistently failed to deliver on its rail expansion policy. This thesis explores the policy process that surrounded the many and varied rail expansion policies announced and attempted by the government. Policy theory argues that process is a central element in the work of government; this research has sought to determine if process was a contributing factor in policy failure. The rail expansion policy process involved organisations which had significantly different goals, and were unable to arrive at an agreeable platform of mutual understanding. Premiers and ministers were heavily affected by their pre-existing biases, and actively undermined good policy practice in order to accelerate what they envisaged would bring tangible progress. While rail expansion policy initially suffered political neglect due to its perceived low importance, the re-ordering of political priorities instead led to increased politicisation, which along with the rapid leadership change in the NSW Government post-2005, led to continuous policy failure. This thesis argues that good policy process should be as great a concern to policy makers as good planning principles. The interaction of organisations in policy development plays a crucial role, and it cannot be hurried or overcome by top-down political pressure. Attempts to make policy through exclusion of troublesome organisations are unlikely to yield the desired results. Long-term policy, such as transport policy, is incompatible with short-term reactive policy-making, and effective progress in this area needs consistent government commitment and foreword thinking.