I’ve Seen a Future Without Cars, and It’s Amazing

@tags:: #lit✍/📰️article/highlights
@links:: sustainability, urban planning,
@ref:: I’ve Seen a Future Without Cars, and It’s Amazing
@author:: Farhad Manjoo

2020-07-23 Farhad Manjoo - I’ve Seen a Future Without Cars, and It’s Amazing

Book cover of "I’ve Seen a Future Without Cars, and It’s Amazing"

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In most American cities, wherever you look, you will see a landscape constructed primarily for the movement and storage of automobiles, not for the enjoyment of people: endless wide boulevards and freeways for cars to move swiftly; each road lined with parking spaces for cars at rest; retail establishments ringed with spots for cars; houses built around garages for cars; and a gas station, for cars to feed, on every other corner.
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“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.”
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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.
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