This is my imaginary island country of Regalia.What kind of transportation would be feasible on this island? I imagined the country as a British colony settled in the early 18th century and gaining its independence after WWII. The population is around 1.8 million, though the overwhelming majority live in the twin cities of Kingsport and Arkham. The interior of the main island is sparsely populated and mountainous, with a few dormant volcanoes.I'm trying to imagine the rail lines connecting all the cities on the south coast, and the ferry system between Kingsport and Arkham.
Here's my first draft of the country flag.
Where Regalia is located in the northwestern Atlantic.
>>2020443ridin ur momalso bicycles and pedestrianism
>>2020443>Kingsport and ArkhamAt that distance, just make a bridge.
solar powered walking vehicle
>>2020450They’re about 5 km apart. A bridge that size would be very expensive.
Impossible to say really without a look at the topography and geographic conditions of the island in more detail. Where are the natural resources? Rivers? When you say sparsely populated and mountainous, is that borderline inhospitable all over like Iceland or relatively mild with few but landscape-defining natural barriers like New Zealand?If the majority of the population is centred around the Kingsport-Arkham bay, there needs to be a real driver for transportation links to be established to those outlying towns - be it for agriculture, mining, etc.
Maybe they have an abundance of coal and use steam trains, traction engines and steam cars.
>>2020460Would there be coal on a volcanic island in the northwester atlantic?
>>2020443I'd look for inspo in Iceland and Norway, but an offshore island like that is going to have the most absolutely dick flattening soul crushing weather you can imagine. I'd picture mostly squat single story buildings (more resistant to noreasters and offshore winds) and keep in mind that anything like coal, lumber, fresh produce or oil would probably have to be imported. Why did the British colonize the island in the first place? Cod perhaps, or maybe your rivers host runs of Atlantic salmon. Were there indigenous peoples surviving beforehand? Pretty much any transportation would probably need to be imported and their fuel as well. Maybe there's a colonial-era steam locomotive that runs from one city to the other which was built by the British, with a few branches perhaps to fjords which have salmon runs. The train might only run out to the forks a couple times a year to collect harvests of preserved fish and bring supplies and mail. Or maybe mail is brought inland via dogsled in the winter. It looks nice to have cities scattered all across the coastline but think about why they exist there, what resources are they exploiting? The large cities could have geothermal plants.Sorry, I think I got a little lost and went off-topic.
>>2020443can you add a shadow map(height map) or some gradient lines?Im thinking it has a old railway line that is no longer in service, that has been replaced by an asfalt road connection to Dunwich followed by a dirt road to columbus sound.Some neighbouring towns may have dirt roads also, not drawn.main transportation is by boat. And most work in fishing or fishing adjacent ventures.Exept Dulwich.Being ex crown the rest of its economy is financial services, again not including Dulwich.
>>2020443Occupied by Russia since 2014. President Putin has a palace near Wyndham. Other than for his domestic servants, no travel is needed nor allowed in order to suppress potential uprisings. Upon presenting one's propiska, transportation will be provided by the military.
>>2020443highly frequented blimptrain network
>>2020453plenty of bridges that are far longeri mean, this exists in fucking bangladesh: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rupsha_Rail_Bridge
>>2020495Bruh that makes zero sense.
>>2020443what's the topography
Jet ferries
>>2020497YES THE BLIMPTRAIN AGAIN
>>2020549Prob identical to NF&L or NS
>>2020491>an offshore island like that is going to have the most absolutely dick flattening soul crushing weather you can imagine.Would the gulf stream make it a bit more pleasant?
>>2020493>Being ex crown the rest of its economy is financial servicesIndia is ex-crown and its economy is sort of shit both literally and metaphorically
Pretty much every populated island like that has a coastal road
>>2020600I think he means ex-crown colony, which are usually settler colonies like the Thirteen Colonies or the Falklands.Crown colonies referred to slightly different things throughout history but British India was never a crown colony.
>>2020443Based on >>2020493RailwayMetric gaugeMost of the lines follow the coast.The Lines in red have decent service, orange are mostly freight with some passenger trains and yellow is freight only.Thinking about it, the line Innsmouth-Rozel should not existBlue is for boats.
Would it make more sense for Dunwich to be a mining town or a farm town?
how is Dunwich a remotely feasible spot for settlement? no water access and in the middle of a tropical island, so it’s probably high up a mountain or at least higher elevation than the rest, and possibly in a jungle. It would need water supplied to it constantly (unless there’s a spring that we’re assuming is there), why bother settling there at all?
>>2020746>no water access and in the middle of a tropical islandIt's in the middle of the Grand Banks. It's going to be wet and cool (but not cold). The climate is pretty easy to predict, especially once we know what OP proposes for topography.
>>2020746resourceslike a peat bog or something
>>2020746OP here.I was leaning towards Dunwich being a farming community taking advance of the fertile soil enriched by the nearby volcanoes (though eruptions on Regalia are rather infrequent).
>>2020445Bruh your island will be cold and windswept. No one would live there.
>>2020828They farm eldritch horrors there
>>2020828How many volcanoes on the island?
>>2020973I'm not sure yet. Maybe 3 or 4. I still need to come up with their names. I took most of the city names from H.P Lovecraft, Attack on Titan and Berserk.
>>2021050Have you ever looked at a map of the world's fault lines before deciding that your island will have 3 or 4 active volcanoes?
>>2021127Hawaii has active volcanoes and it isn't anywhere near a plate boundary.
>>2021129You're right. I guess I just find it hard to believe that an island which is basically just Newfoundland 2.0 would have active volcanoes.
>>2021050So most of the volcanoes are near Dunwich where eldritch horrors are farmed before being transported to Vritannis to be shipped out to the outside world.We still need that topography of the map OP.
Is this for NationStates? I'm glad I'm not the only turboautist who does out-of-game LARP
>>2021165No. This is gonna sound weird but this whole project started when I was fucking around google maps and noticed a section of the continental shelf jutting out with nothing on it, and really felt like there should be land there.My autism did the rest.
I was thinking of putting a U.S Navy base near Red Hook.
>>2021445Too exposed to the sea and the local german subs in WWII ,the base would be inside the bay.
>>2021557Would it make sense for the Nazis to try and capture Regalia in WW2?
>>2021562No, it's out of question.UK would make Regalia prime estate by putting an airfield on the island to increase air coverage during the battle of Atlantic.
Would it make more sense for Regalia to import its rail equipment from the US or UK?They probably wouldn't have the resources for their own erecting shop.
>>2022274It depends who built them first. Railway standards are completely arbitrary.
>>2020443I think having a major city on both sides of a megabay like that is unrealistic. One side would take hold as the dominant city and grow exponentially larger, while the other one would dwindle out
>>2020443Realistically there probably wouldn't be any rail at all except for maybe a mile of tourist trolley down some waterfrontBermuda, Jamaica, Barbados all had rail for both sugar and passenger transport but let their rail infrastructure rot. Look it up it's pretty interesting
>>2022300I'd imagine they would keep some form of rail transit in the bay area specifically.
can i put this shit on my game one day?
>>2022300>Realistically there probably wouldn't be any rail at all except for maybe a mile of tourist trolley down some waterfrontDepends on all sorts of things, but particularly population, industry and history (did they have rail in the past, perhaps in the 19th century, and did they get rid of it).
>>2022623no
>>2022636Standard gauge rail would be perfect for the bay area and the south shore of the main island.
>>2020443Your city names are steampunk tier cringe. Maybe everyone should ride around in blimps which they will call "airships" and wear monocles
>>2023661How are they steampunk? I took most of the city names from H.P Lovecraft, Attack on Titan and Berserk.
Dunwich is the boring Midwest landlocked city, but it could have the most epic transit hub in the country. Like Bologna in Italy basically.
>>2022638bumpcizade. i don't want this thread to be deletedi don't care. i'll put this shit on my game one day anyways. i have bookmarked this thread alreadyget fucked, bozo
>>2021050>>2021129>>2021155Volcanos only appear outside of plate boundries when there's a "hotspot", a magma plume from the deep mantle. Hawaii is a chain because the plate has moved while the plume just pushes through regardless. Hotspot volcanism isn't super rare, but it's only possible through younger crust. The Canadian Shield which your island is on the border of, is a chunk of the earth's surface known as a "craton". Cratons are super old chunks of land that are so dense that vault lines and volcanos can't break through, which is why that part of NA has no volcanos today, same for Austrailia and south africa. in summary: Volcanos are pretty much impossible there, much less 4 of them
>>2025787>vaulttypo, faultAs for the climate, for the same reasons mentioned prior, there would be very minimal mountain formation, definitely nothing permanent snow. Think Whales or Newfoundland for analogous terrain
>>2025787>>2025788Wasn't Bermuda formed by an extinct volcano?