• Wispy2891@lemmy.world
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    5 天前

    Does this actually work? It seems a massive waste of money, you just need a heavy truck to pass on the road to have a pipe leak and break the whole system

    Not to mention the energy cost to keep it over 0° C for all the winter

      • tetris11@feddit.uk
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        5 天前

        what’s the norwegian word for feeling bad for someone else’s shame?

    • Deme@sopuli.xyz
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      5 天前

      I regularly walk through a pedestrian area that has such heating here in Helsinki. Most of the time it works, but when it gets cold enough and there’s a lot of new snow, the snow just turns into a wet slush that people walk through until it freezes into a horrible icy mess dotted with deep footprints. It’s quite a contrast to the nice and relatively even packed snow around the place at such times. Drainage is important, as is keeping the power level adequately high. Half measures will fail if the conditions get bad.

      If they also plow the bulk of the snow off when it’s fresh, then it could work nicely.

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        5 天前

        I could see this being worth the cost on some especially busy streets that are critical for commerce or for using around emergency services. Maybe outside where the snow plow are too, lol, how else would they plow out?

        • TheRealKuni@midwest.social
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          4 天前

          In this case, the people who will benefit most are probably pedestrians trying to access the walking bridges over the Grand River. This is a small part of Lyon street wedged between Monroe Avenue and the Grand River.

        • desktop_user [they/them] @lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          5 天前

          where I am (Alaska) this is mostly used around buisness everyone hates and where there are a lot of walkers to prevent lawsuits; as for snowplows and critical roads, just use giant snowblowers and accept the need to repair the road annually.