Can TriTrack be deployed in cities that are not flat and have significant barriers to travel?
Texas is generally a boring and flat place but the beginning seeds of the triangular track concept was based on a beautiful bluff that overlooked the Lower Colorado River. (Does not connect with the Colorado River) I was looking to buy some land on which to build my eventual retirement home and I found a rare untouched piece of land half way between Austin and Houston that was more like Colorado in terrain. I was researching what it would take to build a house on that piece of overlooked, preserved nature. When I looked into the damage that I was going to have to do to the land to get a house up on the bluff I was disappointed. Between getting a road up a steep hill and having the power company do their damage the best parts of the natural setting were going to be destroyed. I was toying with the idea of making a track that could climb the hill without switchbacks that would not need to kill all the trees in its path. The TriTrack track came from my desire to get to that piece of land.