• @[email protected]
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    517 days ago

    Yeah, but it’s not that special. Heated surfaces like this are ungodly expensive, both to construct and run.

    Source: I priced doing this for my driveway.

    • @[email protected]
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      117 days ago

      west michigan IS that special. you either clear the roads, or you don’t use them.
      and there are a lot of roads and a limited amount of plows… downtown in a larger city like GR, it makes perfect sense.
      for the record, Lake Michigan generates it’s own clouds and snow, and the wind is constantly blowing west to east… it snows a lot more than you think… and very suddenly

    • @[email protected]
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      017 days ago

      Sure, but does your driveway have traffic on it day and night? Do you have to pay $50+ per hour to clear snow from your driveway? Will several vehicles and people and potential pedestrians be injured if a car slides in your driveway? What about maintenance costs associated with fixing potholes in your driveway?

      I think the many added logistics associated with removing snow from a road in a downtown urban area makes the cost of a heated bed much more lucrative than if you’re just heating a driveway

      • @[email protected]
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        117 days ago

        These are all good points, but I’m still quite skeptical. I’d need to see an actual projected cost breakdown, and then a followup 10 years later to review actual costs and savings.