
Aerial tramway suspended on two track cables with an additional haulage rope.

An aerial tramway in Italy.
An
aerial tramway or
cable car (
British English) is a type of
aerial lift in which a cabin or other conveyance is suspended from a fixed
cable and is pulled by another cable.
Because of the proliferation of such systems in the
Alpine regions of
Europe, the
French and
German language names of
téléphérique and
Seilbahn are often also used in an
English language context. "Cable car" is the usual term in British English, as in British English the word "tramway" generally refers to a railed
street tramway. Note also that, in American English, "cable car" is most often associated with surface cable car systems, e.g.
San Francisco's cable cars, so careful phrasing is necessary to prevent confusion. It is also sometimes called a
ropeway or even incorrectly referred to as a
gondola lift (a gondola lift has the cabin suspended from a moving cable, and is not to be confused with a
gondola).
Overview
An aerial tramway consists of one or two fixed
cables (called "track cables"), one loop of cable (called a "haulage rope"), and two
passenger cabins. The fixed cables provide support for the cabins. The haulage rope, by means of a grip, is solidly connected to the truck (the wheel set that rolls on the track cables). The haulage rope is usually driven by an
electric motor and being connected to the cabins, moves them up or down the mountain.
Aerial tramways differ from
gondola lifts in that the latter use several smaller cabins suspended from a
circulating looped cable.
Two-car tramways use a
jig-back system: A large
electric motor is located at the bottom of the tramway so that it effectively pulls one cabin down, using that cabin's weight to help pull the other cabin up. A similar system of cables is used in a
funicular railway. The two passenger cabins, which carry from 4 to over 150 people, are situated at opposite ends of the loops of cable. Thus, while one is coming up, the other is going down the mountain, and they pass each other midway on the cable
span.
Some aerial trams have only one cabin, which lends itself better for systems with small elevation changes along the cable run.
Many aerial tramways were built by
Von Roll Ltd. of Switzerland, which has since been acquired by Austrian lift manufacturer
Doppelmayr. The German firm of
Bleichert built hundreds of freight and military tramways .
An
escape aerial tramway is a special form of the aerial tramway that allows a fast escape from a dangerous location. They are used on
rocket launching sites in order to offer the launch staff or astronauts a fast retreat. The tramway consists of a rope which runs from the launch tower downward to a protection shelter. On the launch supply
tower several small cabs can be occupied by the launch staff or the
astronauts. After a barrier is loosened these roll downward to the protection shelter. An escape aerial tramway exists on
launch pads 39A and 39B at
Cape Canaveral.
Some aerial tramways have their own
propulsion, such as the
Lasso Mule or the
Josef Mountain Aerial Tramway near
Meran,
Italy.
Telpherage
The original version was called
telpherage.Smaller telpherage systems are sometimes used to transport objects such as tools or mail within a building or
factory.
The telpherage concept was first publicised in 1883 and several experimental lines were constructed. It was not designed to compete with railways, but with horses and carts.
[Lusted, A., 1985: The Electric Telpherage Railway. Glynde Archivist 2:16-28.]The first commercial telpherage line was in
Glynde, which is in Sussex, England. It was built to connect a newly-opened clay pit to the local railway station and opened in 1885.
Double deckers

Shinhotaka Ropeway
There are aerial tramways with double deck cabins. The
Vanoise Express cable car carries 200 people in each cabin at a height of over the Ponturin
gorge in France. The
Shinhotaka Ropeway carries 121 people in each cabin at
Mount Hotaka in Japan.
In mining

Ore bucket on the aerial tramway leading from the Mayflower mine, near
Silverton, Colorado, USA
Tramways are sometimes used in mountainous regions to carry
ore from a mine located high on the mountain to an ore mill located at a lower elevation. Ore tramways were common in the early 20th century at the mines of the
San Juan Mountains of the US state of
Colorado.
Records
List of accidents
- August 29, 1961: A military plane splits the hauling cable of a cabin railway on the Aiguille du Midi in the Mont Blanc massif: six people killed.
- 1963: Cabin of the renovated PKB crashes at the valley station, one person killed, several injured.
- December 25, 1965: Power failure on the aerial ropeway at Puy de Sancy in central France causes abrupt cabin halt, cabin wall breaks. 17 people fall, seven killed.
- July 9, 1966: A cable breaks on a cabin railway at Aiguille du Midi in the Mont Blanc massif: three cabins fall, four people killed.
- December 6, 1970: Five people killed at Meran, Italy.
- August 1, 1971: Four people killed in a mid-air collision between two gondolas in Alagna Valsesia Italy.
- October 26, 1972: During a test at an aerial tramway at Les Deux Alpes in France, two cabs collide, nine people killed.
- July 9, 1974: Hauling cable breaks on the aerial tramway at Ulriken, Norway. One cabin fell, four people killed.
- March 26, 1976: Damage to the carrying rope leads to crash of multiple cabs of the aerial tramway at Vail, Colorado, USA. Four people killed, five injured.
- April 15, 1978: In a storm, two carrying ropes of the Squaw Valley Aerial Tramway in California fall from the aerial tramway support tower. One of the ropes partly destroys the cabin. four killed, 32 injured.
- February 13, 1983: Two cabs collide in Champoluc, near Aosta (Italy), 11 dead.
- January 13, 1989: Eight people killed during a test of the French aerial tramway Vaujany in the Alpe d'Huez area.
- June 1, 1990: 15 people killed after a rope break in Tbilisi, Georgia.
- February 3, 1998: U.S. military aircraft severs the cable of an aerial ropeway in Cavalese, Italy, killing 20 people. (See Cavalese cable-car disaster)
- July 1, 1999: 20 people killed at the crash of an aerial tramway at the Bure observatory in the French alps.
- July 6, 2000: Entering the middle station of Nebelhornbahn, a cabin fails to brake. 23 people injured.
- October 19, 2003: Four were killed and 11 injured when three cars slipped off the cable of the Darjeeling Ropeway.
- October 9, 2004: Crash of a cabin of the Grünberg aerial tramway in Gmunden, Austria. Many hurt.
- November 14, 2004: Empty cabin of tramway in Sölden, Austria, falls after becoming entangled with rope. No casualties, 113 people rescued from other cabins
- April 18, 2006: New York's Roosevelt Island Tramway experiences a power failure, leaving 69 passengers in two trams stranded over the East River for approximately seven hours, just eight months after a similar incident in which trams were stranded for 90 minutes. No injuries or fatalities occurred in either incident.
- October 31, 2007: The Flaine lift Les Grands Platieres or DMC broke down for six hours and was evacuated.
Future
Some cities are currently looking into the possibility of aerial tramways as a viable option for
Public Transport. In the city of
Haifa,
Israel there is a plan to use an aerial tramways as an important way of solving the city's traffic problems. (See
Haifa Cable Car)
Gallery
Image:cablecar.zelllamsee.500pix.jpg|Cable car at Zell am See in the Austrian Alps.
Image:PortlandTramCar3.jpg|Portland Aerial Tram car descends towards the rising South Waterfront district in Portland, Oregon.
Image:SandiaTram.jpg|Cable cars pass mid-stream on the Sandia Peak Tramway in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Image:TitlisGondol.jpg|The rotating construction of the Titlis gondola provides passengers better view
Image:HoldAndPull.jpg|The construction of the aerial tramway. The lowest cable is used for pulling. The middle (thickest) cable supports the weight of gondola.
Image:Åre kabinbana.JPG|Cable car in Åre (Sweden)
Image:Klein Matterhorn - Zermatt - Switzerland - 2005 - 01.JPG|Klein Matterhorn cable car, the highest in Europe.
Image:TelepheriqueAigMidi.jpg|Aiguille du Midi cable car (Chamonix, France)
Image:Table_mountain_cable_car_2006-01.JPG|Table Mountain Aerial Cableway, Cape Town, South Africa.
Image:Telecabina.JPG|Telecabina in Romania, Carpathians, at Balea Lake in Sibiu county.
Image:Kulltaubane.jpg|Retired coal tramway in Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
Image:Bergen02.jpg|Ulriksbanen in Bergen, Norway.
Image:Telefericodemerida.jpg|The Mérida Aerial Tramway in Venezuela
Image:SnowBird-Tram.JPG|Snowbird Tram service
Cableways in Fiction
See also