• @expatriado
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    674 months ago

    you guys getting sidewalks?

    • @[email protected]
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      574 months ago

      So many places in the US don’t have sidewalks and it’s a real tragedy. It sends the message that not only is this community not walkable, it is also hostile to pedestrians and children.

      Seeing new housing developments being built without sidewalks is so disheartening.

      • @[email protected]
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        344 months ago

        The worst is when there’s no sidewalk and the community is really sprawly, yet there are desire paths in the grass. It shows that even though the odds are stacked against walking, a bunch of people still do.

      • @[email protected]
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        124 months ago

        My grocery store is literally 0.7mi from my house, but there’s no sidewalks along the two 6 lane roads I’d need to follow to feet there.

      • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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        114 months ago

        not only is this community not walkable, it is also hostile to pedestrians and children.

        The ones with the pedestrian path painted in the road are even worse I think, almost like the designers actively decided not to build a pedestrian path there

      • @[email protected]
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        4 months ago

        The only plus about where I live is I believe sidewalks are mandated on new developments. This is great, but it results in a lot of sidewalk - grass - sidewalk - grass. Eventually we’ll get there, I suppose…

        • @[email protected]
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          24 months ago

          In Italy we have a similar problem: new developments must have cycle paths, but that means that we have many useless cycle paths in the middle of nothing,

          Maybe one day, maybe…

    • @NegativeInf
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      224 months ago

      Love how Texas sidewalks just have ADA compliant ramps that just lead to… The grass. As if that helps anyone.

  • @Phegan
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    444 months ago

    Make them wider, add more trees, add protected nike lanes.

      • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
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        204 months ago

        Honestly I’d take it at this point, anything to get safer and more walking spaces. Maybe getting in bed with big shoe could work and we can always spray paint over the logos later

        • @Brickhead92
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          94 months ago

          Until you walk down a street with a nike lane on one side and Adidas lane on the other. Nothing safe about that.

      • @Phegan
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        174 months ago

        God damn it.

      • lnxtx
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        74 months ago

        Nike lanes sponsored by the Chevron or Ford. Imagine that.

      • @werefreeatlastOP
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        34 months ago

        This lane bro ght to y u by coc ola…

  • ᕙ(⇀‸↼‶)ᕗ
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    304 months ago

    but where drive suv and trucks in city when scared and no big street???

    (surely some boomer somewhere)

  • @[email protected]
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    34 months ago

    And we didn’t have flipping joggers either! Ban them to parks only! Make them run in the street! /s

  • @[email protected]
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    -124 months ago

    It was also a single lane originally built for horse and carriage. As more people got cars, more road space was needed. To get those size sidewalks back, they would have to narrow the road which would cause congestion and more sporadic traffic patterns

    • @[email protected]
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      374 months ago

      This is working from the premise that cars belong on these streets in the first place, which I don’t agree with.

          • @[email protected]
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            104 months ago

            I’m aware what community I’m in, and I’m trying to have a conversation with someone that has an opposing view to mine. If you think my intention is to be disrespectful or play the “gotcha” game, I’m not. Legitimately curious of your view and opinion

            • Lightor
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              174 months ago

              I believe the stance is more public transit.

              • Optional
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                124 months ago

                Walkable cities, more trees, public transit. Like, I can deal with it, man.

            • @Nefara
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              74 months ago

              Cars are a completely unnecessary luxury in a place like the intersections that are used as examples in the article. When the foot traffic is so heavy that 15,000 people are in the area crossing through there in an hour, cars should simply not even be in the picture, let alone given the majority of the space. The roads should be used for trams/trolleys and pedestrians at that point. Cars are point to point transport or through traffic, and they should either have been parked elsewhere or rerouted around the area with the highest traffic.

            • @[email protected]
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              34 months ago

              You can read ‘Movement’ by Thalia Verkade if you want an insight into this community.

              If you’re not a book kinda person, look through YouTube channels @NotJustBikes and @AdamSomething

    • @rockSlayer
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      4 months ago

      Most multilane roads are wider than they need to be for the speed limit, and a 2 lane bidirectional road with roundabouts can move the same amount of vehicles as a road with 2 or more lanes in both directions and a stop light. We have a ton of space in our streets needlessly dedicated to cars.

      • @[email protected]
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        -54 months ago

        You mean supply and demand? Very aware of it. But induced demand in reference to roads only shows the idea of road expansion and more people take the road. What about alleviating congestion in another part of the city due to road expansion? What about travel time? What about travel distance?

        • @yes_this_time
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          4 months ago

          Very little of the demand is demand to drive a car. It’s mostly demand to travel as effectively as possible.

          When you build out road networks you make traveling by car more effective, increasing demand on that specific mode.

          When you build out transit networks you make traveling by transit more effective, increasing demand on that specific mode.

          When you have well designed cities, you reduce the demand for travel, period.

          Higher population centers have favorable economics for transit vs. Personal vehicles. And are more impacted by pollutants.

          Low population centers have favorable economics for personal vehicles vs. Transit. And are less impacted by pollutants.

          That’s a description of the dynamics anyway.

          I imagine vast majority of people would agree that folks that live in the densist cities need transit, and those living in a forest need a personal vehicle. The debate occurs somewhere in between of the extremes.

          Personally I’m of the opinion that we skew too far towards cars, because the true costs/externalities are harder to see, so what seems like favorable economics is actually just socializing the costs.

          • @[email protected]
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            54 months ago

            If you don’t mind, I’d like to take some time to do my own research and get back to you. Is that ok?

            • @yes_this_time
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              54 months ago

              For sure, happy to open up the conversation again later

              • @[email protected]
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                14 months ago

                Hey still working in time to read all the things. I haven’t forgotten about you. I got a busy life

          • @[email protected]
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            -24 months ago

            It’s a great sentiment, but most poems don’t impact society, unfortunately. Advancement and monetary gain do. Horse and carriage were no longer as profitable than motorized vehicles, so historically, pedestrians got the short end (figuratively and literally). Now we’re in a society that is dependent on cars. And I’m in no way trying to criticize your opinion on saying “fuck cars”, but it’s a harsh reality of what society is right now. If we did away with cars and trucks, then it would shut trade down inside and outside a country. The economy would take a massive dip, and (IMO) would either be the start of another depression or would make the trade market bad enough to destabilize to the point where it’s irreparable. Yes, some trade markets are not exactly necessary, but there would just be someone else to replace the merchants.