"Cé hé sin" (michael-m-mouse)
09/23/2018 at 11:09 • Filed to: Hospital, Swedish | 0 | 6 |
This word in bold.
St. Erik’s Eyesickhouse.
More straightforward than whatever we call it in English. Ophthalmic hospital?
itranthelasttimeiparkedit
> Cé hé sin
09/23/2018 at 13:40 | 0 |
I see you
facw
> Cé hé sin
09/23/2018 at 15:38 | 0 |
That looks nice and fancy. Meanwhile in Boston, we are buying these starting this year:
(obviously the non-mockup version will be longer)
I especially disappointed that we’re here in 2018 and they haven’t figured out the flat floor thing every other city can seems to be able to manage.
Also, while hopefully they’ve changed it, last I heard, they still want everyone at street-level stations to have to come up to the front (which again is only reachable by stairs) in order to swipe your card at the driver’s fare box. Really does not work well at rush hour when these are packed with people.
Cé hé sin
> facw
09/23/2018 at 16:09 | 1 |
The picture was actually taken in an articulated bus, but yes still a flat floor.
This is a stock picture, but it could have been this actual bus.
Cé hé sin
> facw
09/23/2018 at 16:17 | 0 |
I’m a
bit surprised by that tram. Is it new? If so couldn’t
they
just
have bought some off the shelf? Siemens, CAF and Bombardier all do them, all with flat floors,
and I expect there are other suppliers world wide as well.
facw
> Cé hé sin
09/23/2018 at 16:22 | 0 |
They are buying new buses too (they need them), but I bet they won’t be as nice.
Here’s a (bad) interior shot from a new non-articulated bus from the same manufacturer.
facw
> Cé hé sin
09/23/2018 at 16:27 | 0 |
Yep brand new trains from CAF. I have no idea why they went with what they did, it might just be inertia of saying “design me what I have but more modern”.