Here's another of those cunning plans dreamed up by architects in need of a bit of publicity. Though in this case they are being a bit coy - its public launch was last Friday, but PLP's own web site only mentions briefly its preview in March.
This is from the Guardian:
A tube for cars? Proposal to bury London's traffic says it's 'next best thing to teleportation'
The proposed CarTube supposedly reclaims streets for people by moving cars on to a underground network of automated tracks. But do these transport ideas mean the ‘smart city’ is going backwards or forwards?
The CarTube vision for London proposes greening over the Embankment and putting cars underground. Photograph: PLP
I've seen quite a few of these attempts to combine the high capacity of public transport, off the roads in the case of railways, with the door-to-door convenience and speed of private cars. And some of them are not down to Uber.
Unfortunately some of the details are vague, and don't seem to have been well understood by the audience. The Guardian's report talks about actual conveyor belts - which I just can't believe (was he really there?). It makes nonsense of some of the other features (and that graphic), so I suspect it's more a matter of "as if".
So PLP claim higher capacity than Crossrail, but to do that you have to trust synchronised automatic electric cars to whizz along a couple of metres apart at 50 mph, joining and leaving at junctions as they go. Now, rubber tyres have more grip than steel ones, but not that much, so it relies on all braking together ... or never having to brake. But of course if you can safely assume that, what can you do with a railway? And when there is a crash, the access is ... oh dear. Maybe we'll have to forget the tiny tunnels bit of it.
Here's a couple of other reports,
one from autocar with different bits of PLP stuff , and
one from inhabitat with a video (of sorts).