I curse the Fing things, but speed bumps.Our city loves building long, straight and wide roads. Then they wonder why street racing incidents keep happening on these roads.
After spending a week in Tucson for Thanksgiving this tracks. The street design and the way you people drive there...and then over here when you visit.
Man I was there in April of 2023 and thought it was amazing compared to OKC. I could actually safely cross streets without going a mile out of my way.After spending a week in Tucson for Thanksgiving this tracks. The street design and the way you people drive there...and then over here when you visit.
This isn't surprising. Having visited my in-laws in Tucson many times (and again soon), Tucson has made sure that the only "safe" way to get around is personal automobile. Nice, big parking lots in front of all strip malls, wide roads to encourage speeding, and fairly crappy biking and walking infrastructure.After spending a week in Tucson for Thanksgiving this tracks. The street design and the way you people drive there...and then over here when you visit.
I remember a few times going to NJ for work, near where some of the pharma HQs are. Hotel looks like it's <5 minutes walk from say, a Starbucks or Dunkin for breakfast: forget about walking, because there was no safe way to do that. Absolutely ridiculous.I remember going to Houston for the first time for work back in like 2008. I have never been scared being a pedestrian in NYC - where a lot of these yahoos from the south think it's anarchy and also probably scary as fuck to walk in due to cars - well, the first time I'd been really scared as a pedestrian was in fucking Houston lol I was like wtf is going on - this is frightening.
Coming out of Long Island on the Long Island Expressway around rush hour when you get up near the city and the yahoos and OG wannabes come flooding onto it was always like a really bad Urban Mad Max video game.American car culture has done so much damage to this country, both with time, money, and health. Excessive deaths and injuries, way too much time spent in traffic which is both a drain on folks personally as well as highly inefficient economically, a shitty mass transit system, cities designed around the wrong priorities. It's terrible.
I remember going to Houston for the first time for work back in like 2008. I have never been scared being a pedestrian in NYC - where a lot of these yahoos from the south think it's anarchy and also probably scary as fuck to walk in due to cars - well, the first time I'd been really scared as a pedestrian was in fucking Houston lol I was like wtf is going on - this is frightening.
Yes a lot of the jersey burbs/larger towns are not pedestrian friendly. Pretty common in burbs all over the country.I remember a few times going to NJ for work, near where some of the pharma HQs are. Hotel looks like it's <5 minutes walk from say, a Starbucks or Dunkin for breakfast: forget about walking, because there was no safe way to do that. Absolutely ridiculous.
This isn't surprising. Having visited my in-laws in Tucson many times (and again soon), Tucson has made sure that the only "safe" way to get around is personal automobile. Nice, big parking lots in front of all strip malls, wide roads to encourage speeding, and fairly crappy biking and walking infrastructure.
It never occurred to me till I read your post, but I've never seen a public transit bus around here. I would have to assume that's because there really isn't anywhere to go.We have a pretty mediocre public transit system here. The “normal” bus route from Ocean Shores into Hoquiam/Aberdeen takes about 2 hours. ( 25 miles) They run a couple of “direct” routes daily…about 45 minutes. Around town…we have a small (one or two mini-vans) owner-operated cab service.
There's some routes like that around here! The bus ends up going through some lovely countryside but you're thinking "what ah heck is getting off here?"It never occurred to me till I read your post, but I've never seen a public transit bus around here. I would have to assume that's because there really isn't anywhere to go.
My fellow Americans completely lack imagination and have terrible status quo bias. They love to visit these great, walkable places abroad (and even in the US, like Disney), but then refuse any measures that could enable those things in their own communities. I think a big part is actually too much "community input". The benefits flow to a nebulous group of people who may or may not yet live in the area, and the people that think they will be harmed by new development (eg, incumbent landowners) complain loudly, and are over-represented: thus, nothing changes.There's a reason I live in Madrid 9 months a year. America has completely surrendered the public domain to the automobile and everything it entails, and in doing so has created a a landscape that is mostly inhospitable to human life on foot. There's a reason why the most expensive places to live in the US are also the most walkable. At least zoning and minimum parking laws have become to be more relaxed in the past decade, but the majority of America is really just subdivisions separated by 6 lane roads with the same 30 stores every 3 miles. Everywhere looks the same.
I think a big part is actually too much "community input". The benefits flow to a nebulous group of people who may or may not yet live in the area, and the people that think they will be harmed by new development (eg, incumbent landowners) complain loudly, and are over-represented: thus, nothing changes.
Still can't get my head around the fact that the only person who made any serious effort to take on the petrolhead lobby in London was Boris "Spaffer" Johnson. Khan has been annoyingly timid in comparison.
Johnson was a "curate's egg" as mayor (in contrast to the utter disaster he was as PM). Of course the origin of the term "curate's egg" kind of emphasizes the original point (that got lost when the expression became a common idiom) that an egg that's "good and bad in parts" is effectively all-bad.
I guess only a toff with the overweening arrogance that goes with that identity, had the self-confidence to take on the Mr Toad lobby. Khan probably feels too insecure, with being not only not-a-toff, but also up-against-it as an ethnic minority and Muslim, to risk picking fights with the petrol-head mob and their apparently limitless sense-of-entitlement.
Motorists have been pandered-to so relentlessly for so long now that they've just come to take it for granted that they are more important than anyone else.
Tiger attacks have been reduced significantly.Zooming in:
View attachment 112843
Note the high intensity enforcement zone and the dearth of serious accidents! Note that this stretch of road really is subject to intense traffic law enforcement and it isn't just a couple signs. But… there are almost no pedestrians there anyway as on one side of the road is an airport enclosed in razor wire topped fencing and on the other side are mostly fenced vacant lots or industrial businesses that offer nothing to would be pedestrians. The stretch of road to the west with the bicycle and pedestrian injuries and fatalities is lined with apartment complexes, restaurants, and other consumer oriented businesses. No traffic enforcement zone for you! The stats look great for the enforcement zone so I guess that's a win.