this post was submitted on 19 Oct 2023
25 points (96.3% liked)
art
630 readers
1 users here now
Wecome to the art community of solarpunk, where we host any and all forms of art related to solarpunk!
Remember to follow the instance rules when interacting, and also:
-Cite the author whenever possible, or state it as unknown when unsure.
-This is an art community, for other aesthetic related things, check out our sister community /c/aesthetic.
-Keep it SFW.
Hope you enjoy your time here! :D
As a last thing, kindly reminder that solarpunk is not just a form of artwork/aesthetic, but also a mindset and a movemet. For more on this, you can check our community /c/solarpunk.
Icon artwork by tk-sketches
Banner artwork by 六七質
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
@JacobCoffinWrites check out https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forsby-K%C3%B6ping_limestone_cableway
I never used it but there was a time this was open for tourists. I used to drive on a road under it quite often and thought it looked really cool.
The great thing about it was that it didn’t need to follow roads but could go straight across lakes and rivers to get to the destination as easy as possible
That's really cool! I knew they'd been used for industrial purposes, I hadn't realized some already existed that covered such long spans. Thank you for sharing this! And I agree, I really like how comparatively low-impact these are - coming from a place where old train tracks run straight through some lakes, cutting them in half, roads cut through innumerable wetlands, and having seen the special cog trains they had to build to climb mountainsides, ropeways seem comparatively easy. They can go right up mountains and over all kinds of spaces that can't or shouldn't be built on otherwise.
And the article contains some numbers,