Skip to main content

VIDEO: It’s a bird? It’s a plane? No, it’s a…..bus!

It’s not a new idea, the straddle bus. It dates back to the 1960s. But if a prototype bus in a pilot project in China is successful, highway engineers working on urban roads may have to throw out their design templates. Recent Chinese reports have said a prototype is being built in the city of Chengzou for a pilot project being set up on the streets of Qinhuangdao, a coastal city about 300km east of Beijing, by the end of this summer. The bus’s main body glides above the road surface at 60kph on a
May 27, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
It’s not a new idea, the straddle bus. It dates back to the 1960s.

But if a prototype bus in a pilot project in China is successful, highway engineers working on urban roads may have to throw out their design templates.

Recent Chinese reports have said a prototype is being built in the city of Chengzou for a pilot project being set up on the streets of Qinhuangdao, a coastal city about 300km east of Beijing, by the end of this summer.

The bus’s main body glides above the road surface at 60kph on a set of rails and straddles two vehicle lanes. Also called a land-air bus, it is being built by Beijing-based Transit Explore Bus. The bus will glide over vehicles that are less than 2m high.

“The biggest advantage is that the bus will save lots of road space,” Song Youzhou, the project’s chief engineer China’s government-backed news agency Xinua. He said the articulated buses will carry up to 1,400 people and – importantly – would be constructed for only 20% of the cost of similar systems carrying that many passengers, in particular underground trains.

One land-air bus could replace 40 conventional buses, he said.

Related Content

  • India’s road to safety
    September 5, 2012
    India's growth rate is the envy of the world, and its infrastructure is rapidly improving, but its road safety record is the world's worst. Patrick Smith reports on a conference aimed at finding answers to the problems Ambling through the gardens and marble magnificence that is the Taj Mahal or gazing down on the city of Jaipur from the hilltop Jaigarh Fort is far removed from the world outside.
  • Tertu’s T40 guardrail passes Chinese certification
    April 19, 2018
    Tertu reports that its T40 guardrail is the first European steel-backed timber safety barrier to be certified to Chinese standard JTG B05-01 -2013 (level A) The T40 barrier recently passed a crash-test programme at the Beijing Shenhuada laboratory. This certification is an essential step for the development of the company’s business in China, according to the French manufacturer, which will be at Intertraffic in Amsterdam this month. The barrier system consists of two half-logs 22cm in diameter and ei
  • Show me the money at Australian Summit
    September 4, 2012
    The question of how to finance and fund major road infrastructure projects in Australia – including the potential role of user-pays charging as a funding solution – was top of mind at the recent Roads Australia National Summit in Sydney. The two-day summit, organised by peak national body Roads Australia, is the largest and most influential annual gathering of industry decision-makers in the country. This year’s summit was held against a backdrop of concern over the future of a raft of major road projects t
  • Times they are a changing
    July 23, 2012
    Construction in China still appears to be on course for growth even with the gloomy economic outlook, as it enjoys "a strong budgets position." Patrick Smith reports One thing is certain in the current global economic climate: nothing is certain. And while China has not been unaffected by the economic events of recent months it has, according to Robert Zoellinck, president of the World Bank, a very strong current account and budgetary position. For some years, the nation has enjoyed double digit growth (the