(by Peter Hartman)
Sao Paulo is big. Shanghai-Tokyo-New York Big. Flying in at
dawn, over the fertile highland plains below crisscrossed with tilled fields,
grazing pastures and rain forest, over the Serra do Mar SP suddenly bursts into
view, a forest of gleaming white high rise towers – over 5,600, third highest
in the world - dominating the landscape to the far horizon.
Twenty million and counting in the metropolitan region.
Brazil's business, industrial and cultural center throbs with life, swept along
by the crowds on the street, crawling in traffic along the city's extensive
freeway system, flying overhead in the world's largest private helicopter
fleet, or packed underground in one of the most impressive metro systems I've
seen.
The metro consists of four primarily underground lines that
crisscross the central city in all directions. Although limited to central Sao
Paulo the metro is complimented by nine lines
of the interlinked regional CPTM aboveground train network that reaches
most of the peripheral areas in the city as well as many suburbs. The system
carries over 5 million passengers daily. The state has plans to extend the
network to the poorer precincts on the eastern periphery, where a human tide of
4 million ebbs and flows into the central city for work each day.
I was finishing up a day of wandering through Sao Paulo's
brand-new fourth (!) CBD in the SW, stretching along Av Faria Lima from the
Pineiros district into the Itaim Bibi district. Exhausted from marvelling at
hundreds of sleek new commercial and residential high-rises and dozens of
construction sites I followed an after-work crowd figuring they were going to
some major transit connection that I could use to get back to my hotel.
Sure enough, I found myself in the V Olympia CPTM station as
the crowd serged in from the surrounding streets. I bought a special CPTM
ticket – a transit guard said my regular metro “Unitario” tickets weren't good
on this system, but still the same price of R$3.00, about US$1.50 – and went to
the embarcation platform which filled up fast in the approx. three minutes
between trains in my direction.
I squeezed in and rode back to the Pinheiros CPTM station at
the north end of Faria Lima where I had begun my trek wondering if I could
transfer to the #4 Yellow Line metro at its station also named Pinheiros
although about two blocks from the CPTM station. The transit maps which I
scrutinized in the station didn't show a transfer between the two.
I flowed with the crowd off the train at Pinheiros, up an escaltor
and down a wide passageway where I saw a sign that said “Metro.” Looks good.
Moving with the growing crowd, I continued over and above a couple of streets,
shuffling slowly, shoulder-to-shoulder, as more people joined from the sides.
Then I saw it below – the brand-new Pinheiros metro station.
More people were coming in through the gates from the street and as we flowed
down the escalator I realized that we
remained seamlessly in the paid area. Then we turned, and descended
another level to turn on another level and descend again. Now the crowd had
grown to completely pack two escalators going down each level, while equally
packed escalators ascended across from us. The movement up and down was
constant, although no one individual could budge. People flowed down, up, past
each other, each one unable to move, standing still while moving with the flow.
I was completely immobilized during my descent and lost all count of the
levels. Maybe six. Maybe eight. We kept going down in a dizzing procession. Mesmerized
by the constant motion I felt as if Giovanni Piranesi, fresh from his fever
dreams of ruined ancient Roman carceri, had designed this marvellous 21st
century transit station.
Finally hitting bottom at the metro platform and feeling
disoriented – just why was this so deep anyway? - I jostled my way forward
through the railings that funneled the crowd into doors of the arriving trains
and crammed myself in. I changed again at Paulista into another equally jammed
train on the #2 Green Line, extracating myself at the Paraiso station near the
hotel.
This trip was reprised in part two days later when I elected
to take public transit to the airport for my 10 pm flight back to the US, again
during the evening rush hour. I fought my way on the #1 Blue Line with my bags
and was feeling very self-satisfied until I changed to the #3 Red Line at Se.
As I approached the platform my heart sank. I may never have seen so many
people spilling over a platfrom and swarming each arriving train. I joined the
scrum and pushed and shoved my way forward until finally reaching the edge of
the platform after at least five or six trains - at one minute headways - had
stopped, loaded up and left. At least my fellow passengers were in good
humor with their new up-close-and-personal neighbors on the ride. Hard to
imagine just how the system can increase capacity. Maybe as the city extends
ever upwards the metro can keep extending down.
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