Appalachian Wonder -the WVU PRT





Headed down to West Virginia. This state West Virginia in the Appalachian and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United States. It became a state when it broke away from Virginia during the American Civil War. Bordered by Virginia to the southeast, Kentucky to the southwest, Ohio to the northwest, and Pennsylvania and Maryland to the northeast.  

For me, this was my 46th US State,..,....only 4 US States to go!!  I wonder how many states the average American has visited? Anyone know?

West Virginia is a mountainous forested state...very pretty. Its also economically one of the more struggling states with the second weakest economy of any state in the USA.


My trip took me to Morgantown, West Virginia  so I could ride the PRT operated by West Virginia University.



 Why the fascination? I am a train geek and this represents a truly unusual system. Its an automatic people mover system which transports people on demand between stations. Think of it as subway meets taxi.  Have a look at my movie of the trip (NB it is not a Monorail but I liked the song!)


Built 1970-1979 and opened in two parts:  1975 and 1979. It has operated continually and economically with no incidents since then with a 98% reliability rate..far higher than most other transit systems!  
The Morgantown PRT has about 14 kilometres (8miles) of track covering a distance of 6 km (3.6 miles) with five unstaffed stations:
  • Beechurst Avenue - main downtown West Virginia University campus stop (where I boarded the system-also access to a lovely riverside walk)
  • Walnut Station (downtown Morgantown)
  • Engineering  - College of Engineering and Mineral Resources and Student Rec Center
  • Towers- Three Residential buildings for WVU students
  • Medical- covering the Hospital


The PRT has 73 cars resembling mini-buses just under 5 metres long, 3 meters and 2 metres wide with automatic doors on both sides.  Each car can carry eight seated and 12 standing passengers.The record?  97 students in 2000 squeezed into a car during the annual PRT Cram when students from campus groups compete to set a record.

We rode Car 10 first of all (10 is my favourite number so was doubly pleased!)

There were two things I was surprised at:
  1. how rusty everything is- the system drips with rust (see pic below). Like most US infrastructure, maintenance is probably minimal. In Europe they would be finding ways to keep it gleaming! 
  2. how bumpy the ride was-its not a smooth ride. It was not uncomfortable but you could not easily drink a hot coffee on board





The cars run on rubber tyres in a  concrete guideway that has power and signal rails along the inner walls.  Both front and rear wheels steer so the tight turns on the track can be negotiated.  Each car has a guide wheel on each side. They can reach 50km/h (30mph) with average speed of 24km/h (14mph).  Sections of the track are at ground level and some are on viaducts. The concrete guideways feature embedded piping to melt snow and ice. More info on the system and the engineering behind it is here
After pressing a button at the Station entrance to call a car  a car is activated to transport the person to destination they have chosen. When a car approaches a station it can either bypass the station, or the wheels can turn and follow the  rails into the station.
On weekends and after hours,  the cars stop at every station.


The Morgantown Personal Rapid Transit (PRT) system is one of five automated urban "people mover" systems in the USA
  • Downtown People Mover (DPM), Detroit, Michigan ( I rode this 2008)
  • Skyway in Jacksonville, Florida (I rode this 2005)
  • Las Colinas Peoplemover (APT) IN Irving, Texas (not open to public)
  • Metromover in Miami, Florida (yet to ride it)
There was one at Duke University Medical Center Patient Rapid Transit in North Carolina but it has now been closed and is being dismantled.

Thanks to my friend Cody for showing me round and being an excellent guide. Finally to finish heres a fun ad for PRT





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