Energy Sharing and Harvesting

Using swing motion to store, redistribute, and generate energy across a mobility network.

Swing-based mobility is not just movement. It is an energy system. Every arc stores and releases energy, and every rider is a generator. If you design the network to capture that energy, you turn transit into a distributed power source.

The Basic Energy Cycle

A swing moves by converting potential energy into kinetic energy, then back again. Losses happen at pivots, ropes, and air resistance. But the motion is consistent and predictable, which makes it easier to harvest.

You can collect energy at key points:

The energy collected is modest per swing, but large networks multiply the effect.

Regenerative Braking

A controlled stop is an opportunity to capture energy. A braking mechanism can:

This makes stations partially self-powered and reduces operational costs.

Energy Sharing Between Riders

A network can route energy where it is needed. For example:

This creates a sense of shared energy rather than isolated movement.

Local Microgrids

Swing hubs can act as microgrids. Power harvested from motion can supply:

You can also integrate solar or wind with these hubs, creating hybrid energy nodes.

Measuring and Incentivizing Energy

A network can display energy contributions in real time. This creates a feedback loop:

This turns transport into a visible sustainability practice rather than an abstract goal.

Practical Limits

Energy harvesting does not replace a city power grid. It supports local systems. The value is not only in total power, but in resilience and visibility. In emergencies, local energy can keep stations lit and functional even when the grid is down.

Design Implications

If energy matters, you design routes to optimize it:

The network becomes both a transit system and a power-aware infrastructure.

The Cultural Effect

When you generate energy through movement, you feel the relationship between effort and output. That is rare in modern transit. The system teaches you that movement is not just consumption, it is contribution.

This makes energy visible and local. It encourages participation and a shared sense of responsibility. That social effect may be as valuable as the electricity itself.

Part of Swing-Based Mobility Networks