Monday’s Friday Reads – 23 August 2021

Leicester installs bee-friendly green bus shelters (CitiesToday)

Travelling on Trains & Tubes art show (MallGalleries)

The psychological benefits of commuting to work (Atlantic)

Canada invests more in first Indigenous railway (RenewCanada)

The musician operating New Zealand’s underground lift (Guardian)

New Shinkansen train design for Nagasaki extension (SoraNews24)

The collapse of Amazon’s drone delivery dream (Wired)

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3 comments

  1. If I were a member of Amazon’s drone development team I think I’d be quietly chuckling at having got 5 years’ employment out of something that was surely at best going to be a niche operation in extremely limited situations.

  2. @Aleks

    It’s one of 7 Canadian wilderness passenger railways, connecting isolated towns and hamlets, fishing and hunting lodges, and mining towns through hundreds of miles of trees, bush, hills, and/or sometimes muskeg. The others are shown on this map.

    Montréal – Jonquière/Chicoutimi/Lac-St-Jean
    Montréal – Senneterre (branches off the Jonquière train)
    Cochrane – Moosonee (the Polar Bear train) to James Bay, the southern bit of Hudson’s Bay
    Winnipeg – Churchill on Hudson’s Bay
    Keewatin – spur off Hudson’s Bay line, First Nations owned.
    Algoma Central – northwestern Ontario

    Most Canadians aren’t even aware of these trains, and few Canadian railfans have taken them. I’ve only taken a couple of them the first few hours, to visit family in farming communities.

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