The Standard (St. Catharines)

Musk says his futuristic transporta­tion tunnel is disturbing­ly long

- PETER HOLLEY

It seems to go on forever, snaking beneath suburban Hawthorne, California, like an undergroun­d waterslide.

This weekend, billionair­e inventor Elon Musk claimed he walked every inch of his Boring Company’s nearly finished “test tunnel,” which is being used for the research and developmen­t of public transporta­tion systems.

Musk’s assessment: the tunnel is “disturbing­ly long” but nearly ready for an opening party next month and public tours shortly thereafter, as he noted while posting a video of the tunnel on Twitter.

Despite appearing longer, the tunnel begins in a parking lot at SpaceX headquarte­rs and continues undergroun­d for up to two miles, the Boring Company said.

The test tunnel is the first step of a much more ambitious goal: building a new type of high-speed public transporta­tion system that would move as many as 16 passengers per shuttle underneath Los Angeles. Moving at 150 m.p.h., one stretch of the electric transporta­tion system known as the “Dugout Loop” would shuttle someone from downtown Los Angeles to Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport in eight minutes, the company claims.

The company says the route would be particular­ly useful during special events.

“Initially, Dugout Loop will be limited to approximat­ely 1,400 people (approximat­ely 2.5 per cent of Stadium capacity) per event,” the company says on its website.

“Based on City and community feedback, it could be possible to increase ridership per game to 2,800 per game or event (5 per cent of Stadium capacity). Between games and events Dugout Loop would transport 250,000 people per year.”

The tunnel isn’t limited to shuttles.

Elevators would take pedestrian­s, cyclists or cars from streetleve­l stations to undergroun­d tunnel stops.

The cost of a ride: $1.

“This is the only way we can think of to address chronic traffic issues in major cities,” Musk said at an informatio­n session in May. “Almost every city in the world has severe traffic issues, and there don’t seem to be any solutions that are right around the corner.”

The futuristic plan, which doesn’t have a proposed timeline, is not limited to Los Angeles. The Boring Company has discussed tentative plans for tunnels along the East Coast and Chicago as well.

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