Venice in the sky? Proposal envisions aerial gondolas in DC

This artist rendering provided by ZGF Architects LLP shows the proposed ski resort-style gondola system over the Potomac River connecting Washington and Virginia. The system is technically feasible and would cost $80 million to $90 million to build, according to a study released Thursday, Nov. 3, 2016. (ZGF Architects LLP via AP)
This artist rendering provided by ZGF Architects LLP shows the proposed ski resort-style gondola system over the Potomac River connecting Washington and Virginia. The system is technically feasible and would cost $80 million to $90 million to build, according to a study released Thursday, Nov. 3, 2016. (ZGF Architects LLP via AP)

WASHINGTON — A proposal to build a ski resort-style gondola system over the Potomac River connecting the nation's capital to nearby Virginia is technically feasible and would cost $80 million to $90 million to build, according to a study released Thursday.

The bottom line: the aerial gondola project isn't some fanciful, futuristic idea or a tourist gimmick, and it's an option for commuters that's "cool and feasible," said Joe Sternlieb, the president of the Georgetown Business Improvement District, one of the groups that paid for the study.

The study said if officials want to move forward, getting the necessary state and local approval to build the project would take three to four years, and construction would take two years. The system of enclosed cabins would likely have a weekday ridership of 6,500 and just under 2 million riders a year.

The proposal envisions a 4-minute ride with cabins coming every 20 to 60 seconds. Each cabin would hold eight to 12 people, Sternlieb said.

Similar urban systems carry passengers in Portland, Oregon, and New York City. The Portland system opened in 2007 while a tram system in New York has been taking passengers to Roosevelt Island since 1976.

In Washington, the idea is for the system to be an extension of the region's Metro train system, with riders using their Metro card, Sternlieb said. It would link Virginia with Washington's Georgetown neighborhood, which does not have a Metro stop.

Mary-Claire Burick, the president of the Rosslyn Business Improvement District, another group that helped pay for the study, called the project an affordable transit solution.

"Our roadways are already at capacity. Our bridges and tunnels are already at capacity," she said, adding that putting in a Metro stop is "cost prohibitive."

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