Tom Scott: Amazing Places

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2023
2023x1
The "architecture graveyard" is alive and well
Episode overview
Poly Canyon, at Cal Poly, is an experimental architecture laborator. And it's open to the public:
2023x2
I took a ride on a moving radio telescope
Episode overview
The Parkes Radio Telescope, Murriyang, part of CSIRO, is one of the most famous telescopes in the world: and it's got a unique way of getting equipment up and down from the central section.
2023x3
Google gave the Shweeb $1,000,000.
Episode overview
At Velocity Valley in Rotorua, New Zealand, there's the Shweeb: a pedal-powered monorail. It's a fun ride: but in 2010. Google gave it a million dollars as a potential "future of transit".
2023x4
This cafe sends food through pneumatic tubes
Episode overview
C1 Espresso, in Christchurch, New Zealand, has a set of pneumatic tubes. But that's not enough on its own to keep a business running.
2023x5
The city with a hundred private cable cars
Episode overview
Wellington, in New Zealand, has more than a hundred private cable cars. I found out why.
2023x6
Things are changing at the world's oldest hotel
Episode overview
Nishivama Onsen Keiunkan is not just the world's oldest hotel, but the world's oldest still-operating business. Or at least, that's one way of looking at it. But things are changing here, just like they always have.
2023x7
This bus transforms into a train
Episode overview
The DMV, or Dual Mode Vehicle, on the Asa Coast Railway in Shikoku, Japan, is a hybrid bus and train. And I rode it.
2023x8
I rode the world's fastest train
Episode overview
I thought maglev trains were a dead-end technology: but it looks like I was wrong. At JR Central's Yamanashi Maglev Test Track, I rode Japan's new maglev.
2023x9
The military base where you drive over the runway
Episode overview
Meiringen Air Base, in Switzerland, has an unusual feature: two public roads that go straight over the runway. How do they keep it safe? And, as a side note, just how loud is it when you're standing next to a fighter jet?
2023x10
The world’s cleanest railway
Episode overview
At CEA-Leti, in Grenoble, there's a "funicular" that not many people get to ride: because it's between two clean rooms, and getting to it requires quite a lot of preparation.
2023x11
The people who get paid to get sick
Episode overview
I went inside the former hotel where, for science (and money), people are volunteering to get colds, flu, and RSV.
2023x12
Shake tables are way more complex than I thought
Episode overview
At the University of California San Diego, there's the Shake Table: an earthquake simulator with the heaviest payload capacity in the world.
2023x13
This is an excuse to show you a really good tunnel
Episode overview
The Catesby Tunnel, in the UK, is an old Victorian railway tunnel that has a new use: a secretive car testing facility, like a wind tunnel but in reverse. So rather than just show it to .. show full overview
2023x14
No-one knows how explosions work (yet)
Episode overview
The first few moments of an explosion can't be simulated yet. But there's a team at the University of Sheffield working on it.
2023x15
I had to throw out my script about this submarine simulator
Episode overview
In an old mill in a remote corner of Italy, sits the Bathysphere Project at Explorandia: a submarine simulator that explores an actual, small pond. It might be the best homemade project I've ever seen.
2023x16
The cable car that you pedal by hand
Episode overview
Through the mountains of Slovenia, there are manual cable cars: some historic, some more modern. There aren't many left. I was able to try one, and to talk to the person who still maintains it.
2023x17
The first jungle gym was meant to hack kids' brains
Episode overview
Well before the first climbing frame was patented as "jungle gym", mathematician Charles Hinton thought they might be able to teach kids four-dimensional thinking.
2023x18
I thought this rotating house was impossible.
Episode overview
Near San Diego, California, there's a rotating house: and somehow, all the utilities, the electricity, gas and water, work even on the rotating part. How's that possible?
2023x19
Storing dead people at -196°C
Episode overview
In Switzerland, there's a new cryonics company: and they invited me to have a look around. I had questions: legal, practical, and ethical, and I want to be clear: this is not an endorsement. I just wasn't going to turn down that invitation.
2023x20
This town banned cars (except tiny electric ones
Episode overview
Zermatt, in Switzerland, bans all private cars and all gasoline cars. But if you run a business, you might be able to buy one of the special, tiny ones that are built right there.
2023x21
This town throws pennies at people. They hurt.
Episode overview
The Honiton Hot Pennies ceremony is the result of 800 ears of tradition: from when rich people would entertain themselves by throwing scalding-hot pennies onto the poor people below. These days, it's a bit less dangerous... but only a bit.
2023x22
This man built his office inside a lift
Episode overview
The Bata Skyscraper, in Zlin, Czechia, is a landmark of architecture. And the office of Jan Antonin Bata...is an elevator.
2023x23
Spherical houses weren't a great idea.
Episode overview
The Bolwoningen, in Den Bosch, in the Netherlands, are experimental architecture: the surprising part is that people still live there.
2023x24
I finally rode the weird, curved German lift.
Episode overview
At the New Town Hall, the Neues Rathaus, in Hanover, there's a strange lift where the track curves unevenly. For years, people from Germany have been emailing me about it: well, I finally visited.
2023x25
These tiny ships have a serious purpose
Episode overview
At Port Itawa in Poland, pilots and captains of massive ships train on 1-to-24 scale ship models: and I got to drive one.
2023x26
A robot just swapped my electric car's battery
Episode overview
Nio is a Chinese auto maker that offers an alternative to charging: just swapping out the whole battery whenever you need it. I borrowed one of their cars.

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