Berlin: Tram Or Maglev? A Real Debate
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A strange transit showdown is brewing in Berlin: build a practical tram that stitches together everyday trips, or elevate a sleek maglev that sprints between a handful of stations. Louis spent the day on the ground from Spandau to the former Tegel Airport, walking the corridors, riding the buses, and mapping where people actually live, work, and wait. What he found is a city on the cusp of major growth with Urban Tech Republic rising at TXL and a vast new neighborhood at Gartenfeld, while current buses already strain under midday crowds.
Politics heats the debate, CDU and AfD push maglev, while SPD, the Left, and Greens favor the tram. The tram comes in around €120 million with strong federal co-funding; the maglev is already spending €80 million on a study and test track, with line estimates of €300–500 million and fuzzier funding. We also revisit Berlin’s brief M-Bahn maglev from 1989–91, and consider a gondola wildcard: useful in spots, but not a backbone for Spandau’s all-day demand.
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