Los Angeles Times

It’s just a car tunnel

- — Paul Thornton, letters editor

Contrary to the fan mobs on Twitter and fawning media coverage over the years, many of our letter writers have long been skeptical of Elon Musk’s grand pronouncem­ents about cheap mass-produced electric cars and futuristic transporta­tion panaceas. So you can imagine their reaction to the less-than-grand unveiling of his prototype tunnel in Hawthorne Tuesday.

This isn’t to say readers are always dismissive of ideas for ending congestion in Los Angeles that involve unlikely feats of engineerin­g. Among the more common suggestion­s on the L.A. Times’ letters page, for example, has been a monorail system running down freeway medians.

But when a billionair­e with a lot of fans and even more swagger suggests the intractabl­e problem of moving millions of people around Los Angeles every day can be solved by his vision and impatient drive, our letter writers tend to be unimpresse­d.

David Impastato of Los Angeles wonders why tunnels are the answer:

Has Musk thought about the long line of cars that would be waiting to enter his future tunnel system? Even if cars can launch every 30 seconds and there are, say, 100 cars lined up, that’s already about an hour of waiting.

Plus, emerging from the tunnel into the usual mass of cars will further impact tunnel flow.

It's perplexing that Musk does not suggest something closer to his own logic: selfdrivin­g vehicles that can enter a centrally controlled system that uses existing streets and freeways, allowing for maximum speed, safety and efficiency. At the rate Musk is perfecting the self-driving paradigm, such a system could be only a decade or two away.

Brian Bennett of La Verne believes the solution is better planning:

Musk’s vision of a web of car-transporti­ng tunnels is hardly ready to blast off the pages of a comic book. Putting aside a very long list of technical concerns, it would be wise to ponder the consequenc­es of a future world with a maze of cars below ground as well as above.

The blessing of the automobile has also become one of modern society's most stubborn curses; with its convenienc­e and privacy we have also gotten sprawl, isolation and an inefficien­t transporta­tion system.

Would it really be wise to put the automobile on steroids in the quest for an easy fix? Or should we instead take on the hard work of better urban and transporta­tion planning?

Jon Hartmann of Los Angeles is one of our most Muskskepti­cal readers:

A Tesla car in a tunnel carries up to five people at about 45 mph. A Red Line subway train carries hundreds of people at 65 mph. Unlike the Tesla, Red Line trains have not demonstrat­ed they are at risk of catching fire and possibly injuring their occupants.

Musk’s idea is so stupid that only certain urban planners at USC and tire retailers could support it.

 ?? Robyn Beck Pool Photo ?? A TESLA enters the Boring Co. test tunnel in Hawthorne, which took about 18 months to build.
Robyn Beck Pool Photo A TESLA enters the Boring Co. test tunnel in Hawthorne, which took about 18 months to build.

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