One last thing before I start the pitch. I’d like to throw out some background info on Los Angeles’ traffic woes and how I came to the decision to try to implement the form of public transportation I’m suggesting.
Here in sunny L.A., we have a local paper called the L.A. Weekly ( www.laweekly.com ). It was here that I read an article about City Councilman Eric Garcetti of the Temple-Beverly District. You can find a bio on him at http://www.lacity.org/council/cd13/c13bo1a.htm and I’ll post the article soon. The issue that stood out to me the most was his comment on the region needing to lay down a better public-transportation infrastructure. I couldn’t agree more. But I also couldn’t get the question out of my head of where exactly are we supposed to put it?
Let’s face it…we’ve just simply run out of land to develop new roads on. We’re already bulldozing houses and businesses to make room for our pollution-spewing cars. Garcetti indicates that we’ll be adding the population of two Chicagos within the next two decades. Where are we going to get the space for all these highways and vehicles and parking lots? I know that it’s in our power to figure something out. If there’s one thing Los Angeles is known for, it’s our reputation as one of the most liberal and progressive cities. Especially when it comes to transportation, as our carpool lanes and stoplights at on-ramps to regulate the freeway merging process can attest to.
But now we’re sandwiched between the two greatest obstacles to any proposal: budget and safety. One proposed solution is to take out massive Federal subsidy loans to pay for more light rails and subways. Another is that we double-deck the 101 freeway. Yes, double-deck a major highway. On an earthquake fault line. This is being seriously bandied about as an alternative, that’s how desperate the situation is becoming. Can you imagine the carnage of 50,000 motorists crushed to death? I have to believe that there’s a better system. I have to.
So the region needs to lay down a better public-transportation infrastructure…
Well, what a lot of people don’t realize is that one is already 75% completed. An infrastructure already exists that’s proportionately expandable (something that the current bus/subway and freeway systems can’t claim). One that’s relatively inexpensive to implement and to maintain. That boasts a safety record that current systems only aspire to. That’s 100% environmentally-friendly. And this infrastructure has the potential to move a comparable amount of people as the subway system (in the tens of thousands). But nobody has taken steps to utilize it…yet.
I believe that I have a picture of the future of Los Angeles. I refer to this system as “retro-revolutonary” because I plucked it straight from the past and modified it to help alleviate some of our current and future transportation woes.
To see the future, all we have to do is look to the horizon, to the Skyline…

I believe that a system of rigid airships could be implemented to ease some of our traffic stress. A fleet of these vehicles, each capable of carrying 100 passengers, could make jaunts between converted rooftop stations around the city. The “Metro Skyline” could travel much further and faster than buses could, and move a comparable amount of passengers as the Metro Transit Authority’s Red/Green/Blue Line subway system (which it is modeled after in practice). You enter the station, use the escalator/elevator to get closer to the platform, buy your ticket, pass through a turnstile, board the craft and exit at your destination. Of course, this is all modified for this unique mode of travel…
I’ve no doubt that cost, safety and feasibility issues are already bubbling in your mind. I heartily welcome an open dialogue about the system, its implementation and its pros/cons. What I ask is that if you have any questions, please private message me with them for right now so that I can incorporate them into the FAQ I’m putting together on the Metro Skyline. I’ll be posting the FAQ shortly, just after the official pitch.
Offhand, I can tell you that what I’m putting together is a demonstration video of what it’s like to walk into a building, take the elevator to the roof, get your tickets, go through the turnstile, wait for the airship with fellow patrons, board it, have an incredible flight with an awe-inspiring view & arrive safely and on time at your destination. This will incorporate live video footage as well as photorealistic computer graphics of the airships in service over the Los Angeles cityscape. And that’s where you awesome CG artists come in! I’d also like to put together a few sample TV spots to help demonstrate an advertising strategy that the MTA could employ.
Again, I’m very excited to get this project underway and hope to work with you all soon. For now, I’ll leave you with a quote that inspires me every day:
“There shall be wings! If the accomplishment be not for me,
'tis for some other. The spirit cannot die; and man, who
shall know all, shall have wings…”
-Leonardo da Vinci-




