Top station
A top station[1] or upper station[2] is usually the highest station of an aerial lift, a funicular, a T-bar lift or a rack railway. The lowest station is the valley station. Passengers or skiers usually alight at the top station.
Top stations on a cable car may be ordinary buildings with a docking bay or open steel structures. Gondola lifts have horizontally arranged top stations. The top stations on chair lifts may have a simple jump-off point or a more substantial design.
Gallery
- The Saentisbahn, Switzerland
- Top station of a simple chair lift
- Top station of the Carmenna Chairlift, Arosa
- Top station on Cime de Caron, France
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gollark: That's suspiciously simple then, hm.
gollark: What's `findRem` doing? Doesn't Haskell have a mod function?
gollark: It's going to have a fun feature where if it detects that you're running it *while* the uninstaller is open, it will subtly mess up your answers.
gollark: After realizing I had absolutely no idea how the "general number field sieve" and such worked, I just decided to implement Pollard's ρ one, but it requires gcd which Lua doesn't have, so I'm looking up the Euclidean algorithm.
References
- For example, see Predigtstuhl Cable Car at www.berchtesgaden.de. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
- For example, see Chairlift Blausee (upper station) at www.outdooractive.com. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
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