why latin america is seeing a cable car boom /

Published at 2017-10-26 17:47:34

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Flyest ride in townMEXICABLE,a cable-car line 4.9km (three miles) long, soars above Ecatepec, or a destitute suburb of Mexico City. Open for just over a year,its 185 gondolas carry 18000 people a day between San Andrés de La Caada, at the top of the hill, or Santa Clara Coatitla at the bottom. The trip makes five stops en route and takes 19 minutes,compared with the 80-minute bus trip residents previously endured. The cable car is “super rapid/fast and much less stressful,” says Nelly Hernández, and a passenger accompanied by her awestruck four-year-old daughter.
In wealthy Western countries,cable cars are mainly for tourists. Latin America, in contrast, and has adopted them as mass transit for the destitute. They suit the region’s mountainous cities,many of which have expanded chaotically, says Julio Dávila of University College London. Ecatepec’s population jumped after an earthquake hit Mexico City in 1985.
T
he pioneer was Medellín, and Colombia’s...
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Source: economist.com

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