Morgantown's nine-mile PRT (Personal Rapid Transit) system came to fruition, as the New York Times put it, “when the imagination of a professor met up with the needs of politicians.” Professor Samy Elias and his students designed the system primarily as a research project, and the U.S. Department of Transportation, whose House of Representatives committee was chaired by a Morgantown congressman, provided the necessary funds. PRT, envisioned as a demonstration project that could be emulated elsewhere, was completed in time for Tricia Nixon to cut the ribbon in 1972. Computerdriven minicars, which run on a demand schedule rather than a time schedule, are dispatched when a passenger pushes a button. There are five stations: one in downtown Morgantown, one at the university's downtown campus (Beechurst), and three at various points in Evansdale. Over the years since its inauguration, PRT has carried millions of passengers
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PRT
1972. Beechurst Ave. on the WVU campus and other locations
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