this post was submitted on 08 Dec 2023
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There's no point to allowing private cars in cities anyway. Just ban the lot of them.
The only exception i can think of are people with impaired movement that are fit to drive though. But for this we dont need full cars.
There are a few others I can think of but most of those revolve around rare events like moving in or out or buying furniture.
So - how do they get in and out of the cities?
Park and ride- I'm struggling to remember if it's called that in English. They set up a bus line between a car park on the outskirts of the city and the city centre. So you just have to park and then jump on the bus. More specifically to The Netherlands trains and bikes are usually workable options as well.
Amsterdam actually has quite a few of these options dotted around the outskirts of the city, with trainstations and tramlines connecting them to the city.
They work well in the UK for people visiting a city. Iโm not sure they work for residents. Parking for around 2 million vehicles surrounding London would be โฆ something. Even 1 million
If you're living in a city you shouldn't need, and thus have, a car. Cars are for people living in the middle of nowhere but still needing to get around in a way that isn't covered by collect taxis, for everyone else there's public transport and a rental once in a while.
As someone who cycles to work and uses public transport where possible, there are still plenty of occasions where a car is very useful and a rental wouldnโt cut it.
Then public transport infrastructure isn't good enough. Also things like shop locations, e.g. noone is going to haul beverage crates in a tram so there's got to be stores with a proper selection within handcart to cargo bike or bike trailer distance, same goes for parcel pickups. And the roads have to be designed so that people feel safe using those methods.
I'd even go so far that in the vast majority of cases where you'd need a motorised vehicle you then want a van, not a car.
Agreed. Once weโve changed shop locations, redesigned the roads, revolutionised public transport Iโll definitely look into it.
Honest question, does London have intercity trains or busses? I mean 2 million sounds like a number for this public transport thingy people sometimes talk about
Yes it does. So lets have a look. Let's say I want to take my family of four down to Devon to see my folks this weekend. On trainline, the cheapest return fair is ยฃ239, at not very convenient times. Better times brings the price to ยฃ362.
Add in the price if tube and bus at either end and you are looking at about ยฃ400 (a bit over $500) to get down there for the weekend. It's expensive? Yes it is - and partly because of the limited capacity on rail.
Now that could absolutely could be improved with additional rail infrastructure - but not by this weekend.
Of course, if I was travelling by myself - that's about ยฃ66 return and I have done that in the past rather than driving
Not related to banning cars but at one point they were talking about making a metro line to connect the airports in chicago with the only stops being to intersect with the ends of the other metro lines and having a large parking structure built about half way between. Man I wish they had done that. Sorta a parking super structure to park and go to the airports or downtown.
Public transport?
Man, what an extremist you are
Massive parking lots at the edge of the city. At least this was the recommendation of the Berlin Autofrei initiative.
Park and Ride mass transit in. It's the only compromise that can be made, really. No cars beyond allowing registered work vans/trucks and emergency vehicles.
One way or the other it's inevitable. We either voluntarily (sic) shut down inner cities to any traffic other than the aforementioned due to obvious reasons, or, if AI can ever actually drive us, than we go all iRobot where humans just physically can't keep up with the speeds and the windows blacken out.
Schiphol airport is also a train terminal.