• @fidodo
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    4510 months ago

    A walkable city means everything is closer for everyone, so if you have mobility issues you can just use a slower, safer, more efficient vehicle like a scooter or a cart that still suits your needs since you don’t have to go as far as to need a car.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
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      1110 months ago

      I think the part that is often lost on people who don’t live in large cities but have to visit them for doctors appointments and specialized shopping and whatnot is that in such a walkable city would involve parking once in a municipal lot then walking a shorter distance to what they’d currently have to walk when parking in every business’s private lot and move between parking lots

    • @Treczoks
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      -910 months ago

      That’s why I always have a cart in my pocket for my handicapped wife. Just in case we have to go to the city to access resources not available elsewhere. /s

      I am all for walkable, bikeable cities with good public transport. The next city, though, is just gutting accessability by car without doing the necessary changes to make it more accessible by other means.

      • @CheeseNoodle
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        2110 months ago

        Sounds easier to fit in your pocket than a 2 ton vehicle. Cars are only seen as convenient due to their ubiquity.

        • @Treczoks
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          410 months ago

          Yes, but with a car I could actually reach the city and get somewhere there. Using a golf cart or similar vehicle would require that those were available in the city, so I could get to the city by e.g. public transport, and continue the way in such a cart. Sadly, the public transport there is f-ed up, and there is no golf cart rental there, anyway.

          I do support bike- and pedestrian friendly cities, but they have to actually work, and that’s were things simply fail.