Futuristic travel in Milngavie
The Glasgow suburb of Milngavie isn’t somewhere where you would think to find a plaque to commemorate the trial site of a railplane. But here it is.
Inventor George Bennie envisaged a bullet-shaped transportation system that would link Glasgow to Edinburgh. Bennie believed his railplane cars had the capability of traveling up to 120 mph (193 km/h) and would offer a “fast passenger and mails and perishable goods service”. Slow and heavy goods freight and local passenger services would continue on the traditional rail service below. Each car could carry a maximum of 48 people. If you have traveled to Japan or China, you will know how amazing their high-speed train system is, so this would have been wonderful.
A similar, but slower, idea can be found in Wuppertal in Germany. Known as the Schwebebahn (suspended railway)
Mrs Foodie was here on a school trip and loved it, but unfortunately doesn’t have any photos as this was old school proper film time.
The plaque in Milngavie marks the site of where the Bennie Railplane prototype was built in 1930, on a trial stretch of track over a 130-yard (119-metre) line at Milngavie. Bennie could not obtain the financial backing he required and he was bankrupt by 1936. The prototype railplane lay rusting in a field at Milngavie until it was sold for scrap in 1956. The original shed where the carriage was built can still be seen and is a timber merchant.
Where
Transport
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The post Bennie Railplane first appeared on Glasgow Foodie Glasgow Food Blog.