The invention relates to an overhead collective people mover installation having vehicles running on carrier cables and stations for the people to embark and disembark, at least one of the stations, situated in an urban environment, presenting a location for stopping of the vehicle located in elevated manner above the street, said stopping location being transversely offset with respect to an access location for the people situated at ground level.
In urban cable car installations, the tracks on which the vehicles run are generally installed at a height, above the level of the urban traffic, in the middle of the street, and the vehicles stop in front of platforms themselves located at a height along the edge of the track. Access to these platforms requires stairways, lifts, escalators, . . . and walkways thereby requiring a considerable infrastructure.
In urban transport, each terminal is confronted with an issue involving a twofold optimization—on the one hand the volume and transparency for enhanced insertion in the urban fabric and on the other hand the ground occupation so as to encroach as little as possible on the road system, in particular on the sidewalks.
The urban cable car tracks are thus located above and in the middle of the roadway, laterally at a distance from the sidewalks where the users of the overhead installation normally walk.
The object of the present invention is to provide a simplified station devoid of loading and unloading platforms at the level and at the edge of the stopping location of the vehicle.
The installation according to the invention is characterized in that an automatic mechanism transfers the people from the access location at ground level to the elevated stopping location of the vehicle and that the automatic mechanism is installed in an access area for the people on the sidewalk and comprises elevator means in conjunction with means for performing transverse movement.
The people who want to embark step into a car of elevator type, that is at a standstill at the access location, advantageously at the edge of the roadway on the sidewalk. In synchronism with arrival and stopping of the vehicle in the station, the elevator means, for example formed by a jack, lift the car up to the level of the vehicle, and the translation means, for example in the form of a telescopic support platform, move the car to a position where the latter is in abutment against the vehicle. The car, in usual manner, has a door opening at the same time as the door of the vehicle so as to enable the people to step out from the car into the vehicle. In inverse manner, the people can disembark from the vehicle and step into the car, and after the doors have been closed, can be taken to ground level by means of a reverse operation.
The assembly is fully automated and the car can also constitute a chamber for controlling the load of the vehicle, performing control of entry into the car according to the number of persons already present in the vehicle and those disembarking from the vehicle. It is easy to see that the ground occupation of the station is limited to the size of the car and that any passenger safety or guiding barrier is quite unnecessary. The components of the automatic transfer device are well known as such, for example a mechanism with a hydraulic lifting jack and a telescopic support platform control jack. In the lowered position of the car on the sidewalk, the mechanism is advantageously retracted in a pit arranged in the sidewalk.
When the car is located at the edge of the sidewalk, it compulsorily comprises two doors, one on the side which is to abut with the vehicle and the other on one of the sides facing the sidewalk, according to the access conditions.
According to an alternative embodiment of the invention, the car of elevator type is supported by the end of a horizontal arm fixed via its other end to the axis of the lifting jack. This telescopic axis is arranged in such a way that the extension and therefore elevational movement is accompanied by a swivelling movement of the arm and therefore by a transverse movement bringing the car up against the stopped vehicle. A single door of the car can in this case provide access to the ground and passage to the vehicle.
According to another alternative embodiment, the automatic transfer mechanism takes up the vehicle, which has previously been disconnected from the cables, and moves the latter transversely and then vertically down to ground level on the sidewalk. A telescopic platform is slid under the vehicle to extract it from the track and to move it into line with the sidewalk. The lifting jack then moves the vehicle down onto the sidewalk. Removal of the vehicle from the track clears the latter totally for the passage of express vehicles not stopping in this station. The passengers disembark at ground level in perfect safety on the sidewalk and others embark directly in the vehicle which, by means of a reverse movement, is lifted up to the level of the track and then moved transversely so that it is in line with the track, to which it is reconnected. This embodiment requires a real transfer machine, in the case of a heavy vehicle, but the sidewalk is completely cleared in the absence of loading and unloading operations.
According to another alternative embodiment, the automatic transfer mechanism is broken down into two. One, as in the previous embodiment, takes up the vehicle, previously detached from the cables, and moves it transversely, and the other, in synchronized manner, lifts a car of elevator type vertically to the level of the vehicle. Said car has a door opening at the same time as the door of the vehicle to enable people to transfer from the car to the vehicle and vice-versa. After closing of the doors, the car is moved to ground level to unload the passengers at the same time as the vehicle is moved transversely to come in line with the track, to which it is reconnected. This alternative embodiment essentially has the advantage in its operation of transfer time saving, and in its design of handling the vehicle in minimal manner over a short distance to move it transversely away from the main track and to use a standard elevator car for vertical movement of the passengers over a relatively large difference of level, concluding in an equivalent transfer time of the two movements. Finally this alternative embodiment, like the previous embodiment, releases the main track of the installation enabling express vehicles not stopping at said station to pass.
Other advantages and features will become more clearly apparent from the following description of particular embodiments of the invention represented for example purposes only in the appended drawings in which:
In
The device according to the invention is completely automated and operates in the following manner: car 8 is normally at ground level and the entrance door (not represented) is open. A number of people 2 allowed to enter is controlled by a load control device according to the number of passengers present in vehicle 1 and to the number of passengers stopping in this station. Vehicle 1 approaching station 7 triggers the transfer operation by closing of the door of car 8, raising of the car by jack 12, abutment of car 8 with vehicle 1, by extension of telescopic support platform 13 and opening of the doors for passage from car 8 to the stopped vehicle 1. Transfer takes place in perfect safety and car 8 can be completely closed. Car 8 is taken down to ground level by a reverse operation. The mechanism for performing movement of car 8 is installed on the sidewalk at the edge of roadway 5. The infrastructure of station 7 is simplified and does not comprise any fixed part at the level of the overhead track. The ground occupation is limited to the size of car 8.
In the following figures the same reference numerals designate similar or identical parts to those of the previous figures.
The line is in general a two-track line and the station is then equipped with a second mechanism on the opposite sidewalk.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1003767 | Sep 2010 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR11/00514 | 9/21/2011 | WO | 00 | 3/12/2013 |