Totally in need of a caffeine rush today (just before rush hour)!
On the go caffeine rush
http://tiffanywan.com/blog/2012/04/on-the-go-caffeine-rush/
A Different Reflection on the MTR
http://tiffanywan.com/blog/2012/04/a-different-reflection-on-the-mtr/
Just another ride on the MTR
http://tiffanywan.com/blog/2012/04/just-another-ride-on-the-mtr/
MTR Help line
http://tiffanywan.com/blog/2012/04/mtr-help-line-2/
MTR restrictions
The train speeding by in the background is a good reason why these warnings exist. Also, don’t forget the ‘big brother’ announcement: “no eating or drinking in the paid area of the subway”!
http://tiffanywan.com/blog/2012/04/mtr-restrictions/
Rainy smile
http://tiffanywan.com/blog/2012/04/rainy-smile/
East rail line: rails
Textured handrails on the east rail line. Liking the texture contrasts. And inviting you to hang on..
http://tiffanywan.com/blog/2012/04/east-rail-line-rails/
bike sharing vs. bike sales
I saved notes for this post back in Sept 2010! Wow, I am so behind. Here’s a quick recap and a few thoughts:
Beijing may not have bike sharing, but they sure sell bikes at very reasonable prices. At the beginning of the typical school year, September, I added 500RMB to my phone card at China Mobile and received a bike as a gift! A Phoenix bike, to be exact. I was told by my roommate at the time that the brand is supposedly rather well known, and retails at over 400RMB. Downside: advertisements on the bike.
Compare this plethora of bikes in Beijing with Copenhagen:
Already one of the most bike-friendly cities in the world, Copenhagen is used as the setting for an interesting conceptual bike sharing system. Termed “Bicyclus” by Italian designer Stefano Marchetto, the new eco-friendly plan would reuse some 8,000 bikes that are abandoned every year and further facilitate easier commutes for residents through the city. via PSFK
Other biking cities could probably learn a thing or two with collecting abandoned bikes. I’m sure things have changed, but when I was in the Wudaokou neighborhood of Beijing, there were certainly piles of bikes next to the subway station. Forgotten, lost, or abandoned.
http://tiffanywan.com/blog/2012/04/bike-sharing-vs-bike-sales/







