tl;dr:
Subways are stupidly expensive, and they only make sense in places where population density makes it impractical for surface roads to accommodate the required traffic. Don't complain about couple hundred million a year road maintenance costs if you're spending multiple billions a year subsidizing your rail industry that cost over ten times as much to build in the first place than similar lengths of road.
Autotaxis outcompeting subways: This won't happen - once all the commuters who previously used public transportation use autotaxis, the streets will be so crowded during the rush hours that the subway will be faster once more.
@Cost of building subways: Streets need to be built too, you know...
I don't know where you live, but personally, the nearest subway to me is roughly fifty miles away and I'd have to drive on a five lane freeway to get to it.
remember that the autotaxis are electric powered. That does reduce their range a bit.
Yes, at present
100 to 150 miles of range, which means 3 to 6 hours of operation. By comparison, the LA metro rail is
87 miles long. Which means they would have
better range than subways.
Also, remember you don't own these vehicles. They're taxis. There would be nothing stopping you from getting out of one and into another. Whereas a rail line physically ends, and once you reach the end...you're done. Taxi clearly beats rail here.
Streets need to be built too
Common sense would tell us that a road is
vastly cheaper than a subway. If common sense fails, let's look up numbers.
http://money.cnn.com/2012/05/31/news/economy/nyc-subway-construction/"$4.5 billion for the first mile-and-a-half segment. With three stops and a new entrance to an existing station, the cost of construction is more than a billion dollars a stop."http://pedestrianobservations.wordpress.com/2013/06/03/comparative-subway-construction-costs-revised/ *
"Singapore Downtown MRT Line: S$20.7 billion for 42 km: $493 million/km." *
"Sao Paulo Metro Line 6: 7.8 billion reais for 15.9 km: $250 million/km" *
"Mexico City Metro Line 12: $1.8 billion for 26.4 km. After PPP conversion, this is $90 million/km. *
"Barcelona Sants-La Sagrera tunnel: built 2008-11, €179.3 million for 5.8 km: $39 million/km."So, routinely hundreds of millions per kilometer, and the cheapest one on the list is dozens of millions per kilometer.
How expensive are roads?
http://www.artba.org/about/transportation-faqs/#20Construct a new 2-lane undivided road – about $2-$3 million per mile in rural areas, about $3-5 million in urban areas.
Construct a new 4-lane highway — $4-$6 million per mile in rural and suburban areas, $8-$10 million per mile in urban areas.
Construct a new 6-lane Interstate highway – about $7 million per mile in rural areas, $11 million or more per mile in urban areas.
Subways are between one and two
orders of magnitude more expensive than roads. Also, multiply that by 1.6 because miles are longer than kilometers.
Not to mention they need require maintenance per year
No.
http://www.orange.nsw.gov.au/site/index.cfm?display=329376"It is currently estimated that the average life span of a Road Pavement is approximately 39 years"http://www.brighthubengineering.com/concrete-technology/45858-concrete-roads-vs-asphalt-roads/"Concrete roads have a long service life of forty years, whereas asphalt roads last for ten years. "As for actual costs:
http://www.sacog.org/mtp/pdf/MTP2035/Issue%20Papers/Road%20Maintenance.pdf"Caltrans is spending $2.4 billion statewide for state highway maintenance and rehabilitation this year"2.4 billion/yr to maintain the highways for the
entire state of californiahttp://www.dot.ca.gov/hq/tsip/hpms/hpmslibrary/hpmspdf/2010PRD.pdfCity streets: 75,207 miles
County roads: 65,166 miles
State highways: 15,159 miles
So, 2.4 billion dollars a year to maintain 15,159 miles of highway. In comparison:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_the_United_Kingdom"The National Rail network of 10,072 route miles (16,116 km) in Great Britain"http://dataportal.orr.gov.uk/displayreport/html/html/bfee944f-5d61-42ee-a4ad-df41d02ef567"Government subsidy towards the railway industry in 2012-13 was £5,060 million (£5.1 billion),"So Great Britain is paying 5 billion/yr for 10,000 miles of rail, and California is paying 2.4 billion/yr for 15,000 miles of highways.
Yes, this is not a perfect comparison. The population of Britain is about 65% higher than california. And, different countries. Some things are likely to be different. But California is spending roughly half as much money subsidizing 50% more length of road as Britain is subsidizing rail. Also at less than one tenth the initial construction costs, and with vastly more route flexibility.
If you want a same state comparison:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expansion_of_Bay_Area_Rapid_Transit#San_Jose_subway_extension_.28Phase_2.29"The originally-planned complete extension from Fremont to Santa Clara was projected to cost $6.1 billion, but the VTA estimates the extension to Berryessa (Phase 1 only) would cost just $2.1 billion"That's
eight billion dollars for approximately 11 miles of track. For the cost to build 11 miles worth of San Fransisco rail, we could have maintained all 15,000 miles of California state highways for over three years.
If you're in Tokyo, yes...robot taxis might have a difficult time replacing subways. But we're talking about the US, and here they make vastly more financial sense than rail.