ONCE upon a time, there was an unconventional US entrepreneur who devised a revolutionary mode of transport that would send people hurtling through narrow tubes at high speeds.
Not Elon Musk, who this week unveiled a system designed to put Los Angeles within 30 minutes鈥 reach of San Francisco (see 鈥Hyperloop: Musk unveils high-speed pneumatic transport鈥), but Alfred Beach, whose Pneumatic Transit briefly carried people under New York in 1870.
Several 鈥渁tmospheric railways鈥 also operated in the UK around that time, including one built by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. And many shared Beach鈥檚 dream of a pneumatic age, in which everything from mail to meals whizzed around cities.
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But the dream rapidly faded as the technology proved expensive and fiddly 鈥 though it still has its uses today (see 鈥Newmatics: antique tubular messaging returns鈥).
Musk鈥檚 Hyperloop is far more sophisticated. But whether it will prove any more viable remains to be seen. Mass-transit systems need government support, and high-speed rail is contentious in the US. On the other hand, a flamboyant scheme might be just what鈥檚 needed to spur interest. Perhaps Beach鈥檚 dream will belatedly come true after all.