Sunday, June 17, 2012

Space Requirements in anywhere


This is an electric power transmission that can find in any country. In my own opinion especially in a developing country, one should be placed this high voltage electric cable underground. The reason behind of this is although it requires high cost of installing it and for maintenance, but if it placed underground, the percentage of cable to being damage is much lower. The cable installed just like any other underground telephone or internet cable which the risk of damage by snow or tree are lower.

The research found out that a new evidence of power lines can cause cancer to peoples which meant that this power transmission installed nearby housing area, peoples around the area will faced with long-term effect of radiation. Based on the article by Paul Brown at Rense.com stated that making particles of pollution stick in people's lungs has been uncovered by a team from Bristol University and the rest of the evidence that support the title of the research at http://www.rense.com/general3/pwoerlines.htm





The next best example will be the train station. Train station can do built underground just like some subway in the United States. So from both of these pictures as above, the conclusion of it will be it can install underground as it can as for a developing countries, more spaces are required to boost the economic purposes such as used up the space to build more corporate buildings or more housing development. I found it in a creative way of mine as in a new idea as an example to avoid heavy traffic congestion in the city. Some of the traffic congestion happened around us it's all because of the width of the road. When we can safe more space, we can widen the width of the road instead of building more flyovers around it to confuse the drivers and cause the cars on the road unable to move smoothly.


References :
Google Image. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/4a/Romanian_electric_power_transmission_lines.jpg
Google Image. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.etcs.ipfw.edu/~hack/Malaysia/PhotoSite/originalimages/KUL%20Kuala%20Lumpur%20old%20train%20station_b.jpg

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