Should We Plan For a Future With Fewer Cars?

DEAD7

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Should We Plan For a Future With Fewer Cars?


Automobiles are not just dangerous and bad for the environment; they are also profoundly wasteful of the land around us, taking up way too much physical space to transport too few people... And cars take up space even while they're not in use. They need to be parked, which consumes yet more space on the sides of streets or in garages. Cars take up a lot of space even when they're just looking for parking... New York's drivers are essentially being given enormous tracts of land for their own pleasure and convenience. To add to the overall misery of the situation, though, even the drivers are not especially happy about the whole deal, because despite all the roadway they've been given, they're still stuck in gridlock...

"The one thing we know for sure, because we understand geometry, is that if everyone drives, nobody moves," Brent Toderian, the former chief planner for the city of Vancouver, British Columbia, told me. Even if you're a committed daily driver, "it's in your best interest for walking, biking and public transit to be as attractive as possible for everyone else — because that means you're going to be able to drive easier..." Instead of fighting a war on cars, Toderian told me, urbanists should fight a war on car dependency — on cities that leave residents with few choices other than cars. Alleviating car dependency can improve commutes for everyone in a city...

At the moment, many of the most intractable challenges faced by America's urban centers stem from the same cause — a lack of accessible physical space. We live in a time of epidemic homelessness. There's a national housing affordability crisis caused by an extreme shortage of places to live. And now there's a contagion that thrives on indoor overcrowding.

Given these threats, how can American cities continue to justify wasting such enormous tracts of land on death machines?
 

Rice N Beans

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Too much sprawl in the USA for it to ever happen, as well as the dumb ideological stuff from THAT group of Americans. Then there's the work aspect of needing a vehicle. Some people definitely need the space and vehicle type. A lot don't though.

Wish more people adopted lower speed motorcycles/mopeds as personal transport. Much more space efficient.

With walkability, how many suburbs are going to reform into walkable locations? Will places like Houston suddenly get the idea too? I don't think so. They should probably dedicate spaces JUST for cars and force walking or other transport to the destination. Examples are like how you walk from a parking garage to a mall, or how certain places in Europe disallow cars in a public center.

To solve space issued with parking currently, you could have a law or something where there's an underground or ground level parking structure under any new buildings, if there isn't an appropriate garage already. I see them on the north side of Chicago and they're not bad for handling the parking and density issue.
 
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