Tuesday, August 29, 2006

London: best transit system in the World

August 29, 2006 - According to a recent survey, tourists have voted London, UK to have the best transit system in the World! Others in the top 5 include New York City, Hong Kong, Paris, and Washington D.C.

Comment: well not a huge surprise there - Having been on four of the five listed (never been on D.C.'s transit system), London's tube system is efficient and gets you where you need to go without delay and incident (except for the random weekend shutdown). Sure it could improve, but compare to a lot of other systems out there (think Toronto) it's still magnificent. What's kinda neat is that these cities, particularly NYC and London, are defined by their transit system. As in their subways are kinda an attraction in itself. I mean, who wouldn't want to at least ride the Tube at least once in London, or take the subway across Manhattan? It's part of their city's icon.

Read the full article here.

Monday, August 28, 2006

Trans-Atlantic Tunnel


August 28, 2006 - As most of my friends already know, I'm really into infrastructure and engineering projects. So while surfing the Discovery Channel website today, I came across this really really cool proposal to construct a tunnel across the Atlantic Ocean, from New York City all the way to London!! Named the "Transatlantic Tunnel Project", the tunnel will be raised above the ocean floor (so technically it's more like a tube in the Atlantic than a tunnel, since tunnels are dug out from beneath the ocean floor) and will stretch over 5000 km long. The tube will be a vacuum tube, so that mag-lev (magnetic levitation) trains could travel through the tube without air resistance and friction at up to 5000 mph (8000 km/h) faster than a bullet fired from a gun. Travelling time between NYC and London would be reduced to just an hour!! (by comparison, it takes more than an hour to go from downtown Toronto to suburban Markham!) So you could technically have dinner in New York, take the train and eat dessert in London!

The idea sounds awesome though I doubt I will actually get to see it in my lifetime (costs estimates are at around 12 trillion dollars!). However, the idea of vaccum tube trains is not exactly new. As far back as the 1910s, there have been proposals to build transcontinental vacuum tubes across the US to help reduce travelling time (i.e. Boston-NYC in 10 minutes, NYC-Los Angeles in less than an hour). Today, many cities already have mag-lev trains (the first line opened in Shanghai) - so vacuum tube trains may not be that far off, provided that the huge construction costs are covered somehow...

Friday, August 11, 2006

It's off to Queen's Park I go

August 11, 2006 - And so it's off to Queen's Park I go! Today, I was officially offered the position of Policy Specialist/Senior Policy Advisor at the Ministry of Public Infrastructure Renewal. I'm definitely excited about this new opportunity: not only would it be a promotion (more money!!!) but it would also give me a chance to work on more planning-related projects. Though of course, it would be sad to leave my current branch. The people I currently work with are simply amazing (well most of them anyway), and where else can I work flex hours, watch tv during lunch, and be steps away from a supermarket and the world's best dollar store?!

But all good things must come and to an end and I guess it is time to go (I can kinda feel it I guess). I am so grateful for all the opportunities that I had over the past year and 3 months. Hopefully the people at my new branch will be just as great (though I doubt it will surpass the people I currently work with) and I'll be able to learn lots...

Looks like this Fall would be really busy and a lot of "firsts"!

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

New York trip wrap-up

August 8, 2006 - After another 12 hours on the bus (3 of which were stuck in rush hour traffic in Philadelphia for no apparent reason - I'm sorry, but go around the Liberty Bell Plaza on a big tour bus at 7 am in the morning is not my idea of sightseeing), I'm back in T.O. The trip was lots of fun - it was great spending so much time with my friends - esp. since we don't really hang out that often anymore. Here are some pictures from the trip as a wrap-up.




Monday, August 07, 2006

New York, New York - Day 2


August 7, 2006 - A brutal wake up call at 5:30 am reminded us that we have to make it to the lobby by 6:30 am to meet our bus. No one should be late, we were told by our tour guide last night - and I didn't want to be the last one back on the bus!

So I got ready in record time (in less than 20 minutes!) and we were back on our bus once again. It was still dark but the sun was slowly starting to come out. As we make our way to New York City, our tour guide gave us some weird facts about New Jersey. I was too tired to pay attention, plus I was distracted by the New York skyline in the distance.

After going through the Lincoln Tunnel, we were in Manhattan! It was like entering a different world - skyscrapers, cars, cabs, buses, garbage were everywhere. Our first stop was the United Nations building, on the east side of the island. We drove past many famous landmarks: Grand Central Station, 5th Avenue, Central Park - but our schedule was so tight that we didn't have time to stop. The UN building was deserted when we got there. We didn't even get to go in: we were given 10 minutes to snap pictures, and then back on the bus we went. Having said that, from what I remember from my previous trips to NYC, the UN building is probably one of the most boring attractions. We did have fun snapping pictures though.

Next we went to Rockefeller Centre - one of the many places in NYC that I haven't been to. We got there just in time for the live weekend broadcast of the Today show, so that was neat (no Matt Lauer though). We walked around the block to Radio City Music Hall, 5th Ave, and the NBC studios. Streets were deserted, there was hardly anyone around - but then again, it is 8 am on a Sunday morning.

The next stop was Times Square - there's nothing like seeing the world's most famous intersection at 8 am on a Sunday morning! like Rockefeller Centre, there was hardly anyone around, all the stores were closed, and the streets were actually fairly clean. I was just so impressed (and distracted) by all the billboards and signs. We decided to walk along 42nd street - and came upon Bryant Park and the New York Public Library. There's just something about the streets of New York - the tall buildings on both sides, the exceptionally beautiful architecture. It's definitely every planner's dream.

We didn't walk too far - we had to make it back to our bus again. We were shipped to the other side of the island (en route passing by 34th street, Empire State building, Wall Street) for our 1 hour cruise along the Hudson River. Since Amy and I have both seen the Statue of Liberty many times, we took the time to relax, chill and enjoy the sights. It was really funny to see all of my fellow travellers fighting for the best spot to take pictures.

The Intrepid Museum was next. The museum features mainly WWII aircrafts on display, which was definitely really neat to check out. Personally though, I think it would have been much neater to visit the American Museum of Natural History or MoMA or the MET.

The Southside Seaport was our lunch stop in NYC - after a quick lunch and more shopping, we were back on the bus en route to see the former World Trade Centre.

We didn't actually go to the viewing pavillion that they built - instead, our tour guide took us across the street where we were given a great view of the construction work that's currently going on a ground zero. I was amazed to see how big the site is. It was hard to imagine that thousands of people died at this site. Construction work for the new Freedom tower has already begun - we could see the foundation being built already.

Half an hour later, we were back on the bus to Atlantic City. So in total, we had only spent 9 hours in NYC.

The Atlantic City part of the trip is the highlight of the whole tour - we were given the entire night to explore the town on our own. We stuck closely to the world famous boardwalk, visited a couple of the casinos, and went into stores that we normally would never go into (I went into Gucci, Louis Vutton, Coach, Burberry, and Tiffany's all wearing shorts and sneakers!). The town has changed a lot since my last visit (back in 1999) - it has definitely gotten a lot more Vegas-like (though still not as showy or flashy). We sat by the beach, had beer and cocktail (and then coffee) and laughed through out the night - like I said before, it doesn't matter where we go, as long as we have fun doing it that's all that matters. That part certainly did not disappoint me.

Tomorrow though, we were told, would be another long day of travelling.

New York, New York - Day 1

August 7, 2006 - In the end, the whole trip was really a 20+ hour bus ride.

This past weekend, my friends and I went on one of those "Safeway bus tours" to the Eastern USA. The trip was supposed to cover three American cities: New York, Atlantic City and Philadelphia. Not that I'm a stranger to bus tours - I've actually done a 1 week bus tour around Alberta a couple of years ago in addition to the Eastern Canada tour that pretty much every Chinese in Toronto has been on, but personally I have never been a fan. The early wake up calls, the rushed sightseeing, the gross Chinese buffet meals are not things that I want to remember a trip by. However, because my friends and I decided to go pretty last minute, there wasn't enough time (nor money) to really plan out a decent trip. The bus tour, which cost us only $190/person for three days, was the best and cheapest way to go.

So on Saturday morning, at 6:30 am, I joined hundreds, if not thousands, of mainly Chinese tourists at the First Markham Place parking lot, waiting for our bus. There must have been at least 50 buses that morning, going to all sorts of places: Mt. Tremblant, Ottawa/Montreal/Quebec City, Orlando, Boston, NYC - the list goes on. We found our bus fairly quickly and was greeted by our guide, who gave us our numbers and our seats. Once everyone was on board, we were told the bus ride to NYC would take at least 10 hours.

Along the way, we made several rest stops. We also stopped just outside Rochester at an outlet mall (no trip to upstate NY is complete without a stop at an outlet mall!) for lunch and for some quick shopping. Though I didn't go nuts (mainly due to my financial situation), the high Canadian dollar plus the dirt cheap prices made buying things really tempting. An hour or so later, we were back on the bus. The scenery was starting to get boring, the guide didn't do much to help alleviate our boredom, so what was there to do beside sleep?

We made it to New Jersey at around dinner time. We pulled into this strip mall where our buffet restaurant was located. My friend Freeman quickly pointed out the Pizza Hut and McDonalds just around the corner. Why pay 16 USD for gross Chinese buffet when we could spend half of that on pizza? So Freeman marched up to our guide, demanded a refund, and off we went to Pizza Hut. Another hour of really quick eating later, we were back on the bus - on our way to our hotel in Jersey.

We made it to our hotel in New Jersey shortly after 9 p.m. In the end, we didn't see NYC the whole day - we actually barely did anything that day. It was just a long long bus ride. I was pretty disappointed - mainly because I vaguely remember that on my previous NYC bus tour trip almost 7 years ago, we actually managed to get into the city (and saw a few attractions) before it was dark - so why did it take us so long to get to New York this time around?

Tomorrow, we were promised - we would see the city.