The cities where I live where obviously designed for cars, are there any proposals on how to transition cities built to favour cars over to other forms of transportation or examples of cities that have done so? I know it’s probably possible but my imagination is limited.

  • @pingveno
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    32 years ago

    Portland where I live seems to be in a weird spot where the people at the top are trying to push towards transit, bikes, and pedestrians. Unfortunately they’re pushing against decades of built infrastructure and a general culture of cars, cars, cars. There’s also a metro area that isn’t always in sync with the City of Portland proper on prioritizing non-car modes of transportation. It’s at least good to see some good people at the top.

    Portland doesn’t really have the density to put in many more trains just because of cost. However, where it does have money is in two spots: upgrading bus service to better frequency, time of day, and facilities. That has been happening recently with one high traffic corridor. I’d also like to see some way to reach suburbs that are somewhat far away from a frequent bus line, but have many low income people who don’t have a car.

    • comfy
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      2 years ago

      How new would you say this approach is, where people at the top are making Portland less car-centric? (are we talking 5 years or 20 years?)

      How successful and popular would you say the changes so far have been?

      • @pingveno
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        32 years ago

        It started around the 70’s with Portland’s freeway revolt. There had already been some push back against one freeway by prominently black neighborhoods, but this was a more powerful movement from the city as a whole. One planned freeway that would have taken out 1% of Portland’s housing was canceled, the Mt. Hood Freeway. Another proto-freeway that ran along the downtown waterfront was ripped out and replaced with a smaller boulevard and a strip of parkland, now the Tom McCall Waterfront Park after a governor who was instrumental in getting in built.

        The federal money that was to go to the Mt. Hood Freeway was instead put towards the first 15 miles of track of the MAX light rail train. Since then, it’s been extended to almost 100 miles and 5 lines. Bicycle advocates don’t just have the ear of city council, they are city council. Portland’s been building out bicycle infrastructure ever since the 50’s. It’s no Amsterdam, but we’re decades ahead of most cities in the US. The area that I live in, Central Eastside, is within a safe bike ride of downtown Portland. Biking in isn’t too different from driving in and parking time wise, plus I save a lot on having a car, paying for fuel, parking, etc.