How highways make traffic worse

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  • @Vox
    @Vox  Před 3 lety +1576

    Correction: At 5:12, we use Boston as an example of a successful urban highway removal project that resulted in congestion-reduction. Many of you correctly pointed out that this example isn’t quite right, because they moved several highway lanes underground. You can read more about that project here: www.bostonglobe.com/magazine/2015/12/29/years-later-did-big-dig-deliver/tSb8PIMS4QJUETsMpA7SpI/story.html
    When it comes to congestion-reduction, highway removal projects are inherently complicated, but here is more information about some of the environmental and racial justice impacts of a proposed federal plan to remove urban highways: www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-02-01/urban-highway-removals-could-get-federal-help?sref=PxYB8Mnq

  • @probablyaman
    @probablyaman Před 3 lety +5184

    So building more highway lanes is like opening more tabs on Google Chrome....

  • @mazco3336
    @mazco3336 Před 3 lety +3522

    Me, an intellectual who have played Cities Skylines: Yes, I understand traffic

  • @krystofdayne
    @krystofdayne Před rokem +606

    Like the guy from "Not just Bikes" said: People always talk about wanting to have the freedom to drive. But what about the freedom to not have to drive?

    • @UnkleGaga
      @UnkleGaga Před rokem +4

      What’s stopping you from not driving?

    • @easyflamer
      @easyflamer Před rokem +128

      @@UnkleGaga cause north American cities prioritize car travel so much that traveling on foot, bike, or bus takes hours longer

    • @krystofdayne
      @krystofdayne Před rokem +65

      @@easyflamer Yes but also that's an incomplete answer. Because the obvious retort to that would be "well obviously driving is faster than travelling by bike or on foot, duh, that's why highways exist" (just playing devil's advocate here). So the more complete point would be that even for distances that could and should be well manageable on foot or on a bike, and that you would prefer to use for a variety of reasons (environmental concerns, not wanting to look for a parking spot, the traffic being too bad, whatever, you shouldn't really need a reason to want to have options), often in North America it's just plainly dangerous or extremely impractical to do it (because of stuff like pedestrian bridges that make you take a detour of a mile or something).

    • @lindseyp9131
      @lindseyp9131 Před rokem +73

      @@krystofdayne I'm literally 10 minutes from downtown. I can see the buildings from my neighborhood but I can't get there on foot or on bike because there are no bike lanes and no way to cross the highway. It's the only place we could afford to live.

    • @nvondoom545
      @nvondoom545 Před rokem +37

      @@UnkleGaga car centric infrastructure

  • @Ranvision_Official
    @Ranvision_Official Před 3 lety +3478

    Cities skylines: **adds more lanes** **everyone still only uses one**

    • @_qwe_fk_1700
      @_qwe_fk_1700 Před 3 lety +201

      it is funny because it is true

    • @aaronmett5678
      @aaronmett5678 Před 3 lety +54

      There is only so far over you can go before you have to get back over to the right lane for your exit.

    • @matthewoyan
      @matthewoyan Před 3 lety +177

      *Unleashes the power of TM:PE*

    • @nioxianlerma9201
      @nioxianlerma9201 Před 3 lety +16

      I want them to use all the lanes but there so stubborn.

    • @user-lh1tk6vz7s
      @user-lh1tk6vz7s Před 3 lety +2

      true

  • @TheIronArmenianakaGIHaigs
    @TheIronArmenianakaGIHaigs Před 3 lety +9119

    What I don't get is how much of a fight some Americans put up when there area wants to put in some new buses or light trains.
    Like, isn't it neat to just pay a few $ and get into the centre of a town without having to pay parking?

    • @milosssss9591
      @milosssss9591 Před 3 lety +1732

      Auto manufacturers have lobbied so that public transportation doesn’t grow like it should

    • @tankerkiller125
      @tankerkiller125 Před 3 lety +385

      The problem is that in many cities these modes of transports are unsafe, especially for women at night due to a lack of police protection and or maintenance over time.

    • @JonPRuff
      @JonPRuff Před 3 lety +1656

      But what if THE POORS want to use them? Then THE POORS will be able to go ANYWHERE and not just their designated poor person areas.

    • @mr.b3168
      @mr.b3168 Před 3 lety +1322

      Americans have a "ME FIRST" attitude. My car. My house. No sharing. Public trans is for the poor.

    • @globalincident694
      @globalincident694 Před 3 lety +73

      what if you are the poor?

  • @nicolasblume1046
    @nicolasblume1046 Před 3 lety +6234

    “Adding car lanes to deal with traffic congestion is like loosening your belt to cure obesity." - Lewis Mumford, 1955
    Edit: Cool, thanks for the likes! :D
    Greetings from Cologne, Germany - where a 6 lane highway Bridge is being replaced by a 12 lane bridge 🤦‍♂️

    • @cocazade7703
      @cocazade7703 Před 3 lety +212

      this sums it up precisely. I wish more people were aware of this analogy by Mumford when it comes to highway expansion projects.

    • @ankitjain3649
      @ankitjain3649 Před 3 lety +180

      What a way to explain the congestion. We need to reduce traffic itself rather than allowing more space for traffic.

    • @JBF086
      @JBF086 Před 3 lety +14

      Couldnt say it better than that!!!

    • @BvousBrainSystems
      @BvousBrainSystems Před 3 lety +54

      Wait, 1955? If this quote is real then we've known about this long before a lot of highway expansions were done

    • @SerenityM54L2SAM5L5N1
      @SerenityM54L2SAM5L5N1 Před 3 lety +11

      Until you loosen it to the point where the obesity suddenly disappears. If you build out an amount of highways and roads that exceeds the available demand, surely congestion won't be an issue anymore? Although I'm sure there are issues with cost and practicality to take into account.

  • @redunicorn7760
    @redunicorn7760 Před 2 lety +2442

    Imagine how much better it would be if they created a train network

    • @kaosine2877
      @kaosine2877 Před 2 lety +125

      Or just more types of people infrastructure instead of what's allowed car dominance that has obviously just made things worse for everyone XD (and don't anyone say "how are we gonna pay for it?" You do the changes each time the roads come up for maintenance and vote for leaders better than what we've got. Stop making the same old same old the only option)

    • @AirportPlaneSpotting
      @AirportPlaneSpotting Před 2 lety +37

      A *proper*

    • @smrtfasizmu6161
      @smrtfasizmu6161 Před 2 lety +86

      With those billions of dollars they invested, they could have made thousands of miles of railway. Wayless than that is enough.

    • @AirportPlaneSpotting
      @AirportPlaneSpotting Před 2 lety +2

      Not Amtrak lol

    • @a.16.g
      @a.16.g Před 2 lety +10

      They would’ve have to uproot the city and build it all over again if they really wanted a train network… US suburbs are too sparse to support trains.

  • @Healtsome
    @Healtsome Před 3 lety +1311

    Simple. Just remove all the roads and you won't have any traffic.

    • @arvindhmani06
      @arvindhmani06 Před 3 lety +162

      Task Manager (Not Responding)

    • @MrAmericaninUK
      @MrAmericaninUK Před 3 lety +20

      Don't forget traffic manager to change the lanes

    • @myles432
      @myles432 Před 3 lety +78

      Finally someone with common sense

    • @internetperson9813
      @internetperson9813 Před 3 lety +32

      Or just build such an excellent transit system that you don't have any congestion anyway. It works so well in Germany that the government has decided that it isn't worth it to enforce speed limits (and by that I mean there are none on large sections of the autobahn network)

    • @usarkarzts4207
      @usarkarzts4207 Před 3 lety +35

      Modern problems require modern solutions

  • @daviddima6067
    @daviddima6067 Před 3 lety +2121

    Houston: *the highway is really congested*
    Biffa cities skylines: *hold my tea*

    • @boldblazervids
      @boldblazervids Před 3 lety +130

      Lane mathematics!

    • @colonelkush
      @colonelkush Před 3 lety +146

      “Let’s put a roundabout in this intersection”
      -Biffa (every video, probably)

    • @ali-sxchtwithm6380
      @ali-sxchtwithm6380 Před 3 lety +2

      Hvordan har du det? (This is how you say it in Norwegian.)

    • @ironboxfilms
      @ironboxfilms Před 3 lety +26

      Hahaha!!! The moment I saw this video I heard Biffa say “Lane mathematics”

    • @colonelkush
      @colonelkush Před 3 lety +2

      @@ali-sxchtwithm6380 “Jeg har det bra. Hvordan har du det” (is this how you say it in Norwegian?)

  • @youtubespectator669
    @youtubespectator669 Před 3 lety +1559

    Shanghai, Hong Kong, London, Paris, and Taipei's subway system changed my mind about public transit. I used to think that car ownership is the only way to go. Technically it still is in the US. But I can't imagine driving in those cities

    • @whereaboutsunknown3822
      @whereaboutsunknown3822 Před 2 lety +10

      This right here.

    • @starman1158
      @starman1158 Před 2 lety +162

      And you can basically go everywhere on public transport which are actually quick and reliable

    • @AlizarineSilvermoon
      @AlizarineSilvermoon Před 2 lety +27

      I think it has a lot to do (especially with HK and Taiwan) with total landmass being really small, so they can't really afford space-eating highways. Take a look too at Singapore, where purchase of private vehicles is really controlled

    • @gerardo7072
      @gerardo7072 Před 2 lety +81

      @@AlizarineSilvermoon With HK and Taipei that might be true but he pointed out Shanghai which could have enough landmass for highways, but it doesn't use it for that. So some cities aren't limited by size, they just want to provide different modes of transport. The cities in the us can take a page from their book and see that most transit there works around the city and the metropolitan area.

    • @arthurmillet8023
      @arthurmillet8023 Před 2 lety +7

      @@AlizarineSilvermoon And because the landmass is small in those cities, they wouldn't need to build as many transit lines to serve the city because each line would be carrying a lot of people.
      Houston is very spread out, which means you would need a lot of transit lines to serve the city, and each line would not be carrying as many people because the population density is smaller.

  • @rom7633
    @rom7633 Před 3 lety +168

    One of the biggest cons ever was selling the American Dream as living 1 hour commute from work, where you can't walk to any store, can't go outside cause of dangerous pedestrian paths, & "freedom" means requiring an expensive car (insurance/maintenance) to go anywhere with no public transportation access or even sidewalks

    • @safe-keeper1042
      @safe-keeper1042 Před rokem +3

      Yeah, no kidding.

    • @LabGecko
      @LabGecko Před 10 měsíci +6

      And for any Europeans visiting this after the fact, it is literally _anywhere._ Where I grew up I needed a car and at least 20 min to get to the nearest "convenience" store. When I moved to town it was still necessary to take a car because there were no sidewalks and bikes would (and _very_ often did) get run over, sometimes on purpose out of outrage that a bicycle had the audacity to use a car lane (even though that's the law).

    • @borahaeist3215
      @borahaeist3215 Před 9 měsíci +1

      You don't have to live like that though. I live in America and neither of my parents commute an hour to work, i can walk to school, my town center, walmart, and many other places easily. If you choose to live in a closed off subdivision, that's your fault.

  • @KyrieFortune
    @KyrieFortune Před 2 lety +759

    Ah yes, the residential-commercial mixed zones. Or, as the rest of the world calls it, how towns have been built since the advent of agriculture.

    • @hambos
      @hambos Před rokem +24

      that's facts right there

    • @staringcorgi6475
      @staringcorgi6475 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Towns were made bc of trains back in the years in the us

    • @nogi7028
      @nogi7028 Před 6 měsíci +1

      For THOUSANDS of years

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Před 3 lety +1866

    TLDR: You need public transport.

    • @colonelkush
      @colonelkush Před 3 lety +64

      And more roundabouts/diverging diamond interchanges

    • @Gummmibaer
      @Gummmibaer Před 3 lety +137

      I think: "Invest into public transit instead into new roads" would make more sense.

    • @jgmm26
      @jgmm26 Před 3 lety +100

      Public transport? For poor people? In MY backyard????

    • @Gummmibaer
      @Gummmibaer Před 3 lety +20

      @@colonelkush nope, cause thats just another form of induced car traffic.

    • @colonelkush
      @colonelkush Před 3 lety +14

      @@Gummmibaer what exactly is inducing car traffic? I am for efficient / effective public transportation but also bring up the interchange due to the safety aspect they provide for drivers

  • @GeeklingNo1
    @GeeklingNo1 Před 2 lety +289

    As someone who can't drive, the car-centric society in America is very hard for me and others like me. Now that I'm loosing my vision I'm now to ask my mom if i can go to a friend's house bc I can't go if she won't. I'm in my 20s asking my mom to drive me places like a child again. It's rather humiliating for those who start losing their vision.

    • @FzPura
      @FzPura Před rokem +16

      Sorry to hear that

    • @hambos
      @hambos Před rokem +38

      yeah, I really think it's an unhealthy, time-consuming and unsustainable way of living

    • @academicpresentations6062
      @academicpresentations6062 Před rokem +2

      😢

    • @justanotheryoutubechannel
      @justanotheryoutubechannel Před rokem +32

      I hope you can move to somewhere nice like a streetcar suburb or Europe, I hate how badly vision-limited people are treated in America, for all the blind-assistance infrastructure they built they forget about how their streets and roads are so anti-pedestrian and that seriously screws over people who can’t see to drive.

    • @jellybeansi
      @jellybeansi Před rokem +29

      It's humiliating for so many people. I grew up in a toxic house, and I couldn't even get away from the house for a breather because there were no sidewalks, and the closest bus stop was 20 minutes away. Children can't learn independence. Teens can't do after-school clubs and such unless they're chauffeured around by their parents. Seniors can't get around once they're old enough to lose reaction time, vision, etc. Many people with disabilities can't drive, either. People say "driving is a privilege, not a right", but you have to wonder... Is it really okay that all the aforementioned groups literally can't "earn that privilege" to drive, all because of the infrastructure? It's heinous.

  • @gino14
    @gino14 Před 8 měsíci +27

    The Katy Freeway is the largest Freeway on Earth, spanning *_twenty-six lanes each way_* and costing Texas 2.3 billion dollars to build and 8 million dollars a year to maintain.
    It still jams.

    • @TStone-qv6rw
      @TStone-qv6rw Před 5 měsíci +3

      26 lanes total, not each way!

    • @Tim3.14
      @Tim3.14 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Yeah, my first reaction was "Surely you'll run out of additional drivers eventually." But it turns out you may not get there even with a 26-lane highway. And money (including maintenance costs) and space to build aren't limitless, to say nothing of the potential for accidents when crossing up to 12 lanes of traffic to get to your exit.

  • @ianchandley
    @ianchandley Před 2 lety +164

    I LOVE driving, but having lived in (Washington DC), or extensively visited cities that had amazing public transportation infrastructure (London, UK and Toronto, Canada), I strongly advocate for better public transportation to get around more efficiently. I fail to understand why the USA doesn’t have a high speed rail network like Japan or France running from Boston to Miami and NYC to Chicago.

    • @st3pn56
      @st3pn56 Před rokem +18

      Unlike Japan or France, the US is HUGE while the population is spread out. Its just not economically feasible

    • @MasonGreenWeed
      @MasonGreenWeed Před rokem +14

      @@st3pn56 at least they can try to make rail network between Boston and Baltimore/DC

    • @SomeGuy-lw2po
      @SomeGuy-lw2po Před rokem +33

      @@st3pn56 no I'm sorry but stop using the size card, that's not the real reason.
      For example, although France is smaller than the US, it's still massive and spread out.
      The US could connect some of the major cities in the Eastern region, and as long as it's done properly, it would work and would become financially feasible.
      How many domestic flights are currently made between those cities? Imagine having the option to take the train which may have a longer travel time, but with none of the faffing about with the airport.
      Do not dismissed high speed rail. Sure it's not going to be adequate between NY and LA, but for closer cities it's really a no brainer

    • @tonyye8680
      @tonyye8680 Před rokem +2

      @@SomeGuy-lw2po I don’t think that’s gonna improve the traffic my guy

    • @SomeGuy-lw2po
      @SomeGuy-lw2po Před rokem +14

      @@tonyye8680 you're right, it absolutely wouldn't. That was just an argument showing the size is not an excuse.
      To fix traffic, you need the above, proper regional, suburban commuter rail. Then better transport in the cities, whether that's a great bus service (London busses), trams, metro, good walking routes.

  • @AaronShenghao
    @AaronShenghao Před 3 lety +602

    Astronaut: Huston, we have a problem.
    NASA: What you blew an engine?
    Astronaut: No... The traffic jam is visible from Space!

  • @AwesomeBoysJPTV
    @AwesomeBoysJPTV Před 3 lety +506

    "Because, if we build it, they will come."
    One sentence that answers the whole Question of the Video

    • @someotherdude
      @someotherdude Před 3 lety +1

      They won't come- they are building new malls and retail, and people aren't coming.

    • @nikhilPUD01
      @nikhilPUD01 Před 3 lety +8

      @@someotherdude minecraft?

    • @mumbaikan9185
      @mumbaikan9185 Před 3 lety

      @@someotherdude 😂

    • @recklessrickey9513
      @recklessrickey9513 Před 3 lety +4

      Yes, that’s what a closing statement does

    • @JosephIlling
      @JosephIlling Před 3 lety +2

      Then we should build a bunch of interstate freeways in North Dakota alleviating congestion in places like Houston and LA. Brilliant.

  • @MrMoon-hy6pn
    @MrMoon-hy6pn Před 2 lety +30

    I find it surprising that induced demand is extremely bad only for cars, but good for public transport and anything that isn't a car. For example the more people take a bus/train the better the system can get because high ridership eventually leads to improvements that make things better and more direct/frequent. The more people use a bike the more bike lanes there will be and the better riding a bike can get. That's just how bad and inefficient cars are as a form of transportation, when induced demand works again them but not other forms of transportation.

  • @OscarBorrem
    @OscarBorrem Před 3 lety +712

    Civil Engineer: *Spends most of his life trying to figure out how the road is should be constructed to reduce congestion*
    Average Cities Skylines player: *I'll just remove all traffic lights, and they'll figure it out*

    • @milktar2182
      @milktar2182 Před 3 lety +6

      Basically so

    • @HR15DE
      @HR15DE Před 3 lety +50

      so freaking trueeee. thats exactly what i did and created mumbai city.

    • @milktar2182
      @milktar2182 Před 3 lety +6

      @@HR15DE haha

    • @azan-183
      @azan-183 Před 3 lety +20

      I just put roundabouts everywhere!

    • @ruanfernando
      @ruanfernando Před 3 lety +5

      That'd be true in real life too, vox has some videos on how the lack of signalization on roundabouts make drivers more careful

  • @captainghostlyranger
    @captainghostlyranger Před 3 lety +761

    As a local resident who drive on Katy freeway it’s a nightmare during rush hour. Actual they were going to build commuter trains from Katy to Houston by using an old MKT rail line but one Republican name John Culbertson who was voted out in 2018 denied Harris county to build commuter rail an instead make Katy freeway wider so they did an well like you said vox it only work temporarily . Personally if their was a commuter rail or light rail route available in my area I would take it every day but unfortunately it’s unlikely it will happen.

    • @Belioyt
      @Belioyt Před 3 lety +11

      Why did John Culbertson deny Harris County to build a commuter rail?

    • @petrichor259
      @petrichor259 Před 3 lety +94

      @@Belioyt vested interests ofc.

    • @genybr
      @genybr Před 3 lety +7

      How about "hanging lines" i.e. bridge over the road? Or, alternatively, "line reserved for public transit, police and special vehicles"?
      Step 1 - find factories and rail line construcors who may be in this
      Step 2 - find lobby potential (corruption potential)
      Step 3 - Lobby (corrupt) rail line (as bridge over all road or built-in like a tramway).
      I don't know how it is in US reality, but in soviet russia we're have another solution:
      - local transport for collecting and local delivery people
      - magistral transport for far transit.
      So, probably it's better to lobby special "A" line only for public transit, taxies and ambulances, police, etc with building "Bus terminals" with fast pass-trough stops for M-routes and roundabout for the local busses.
      Local transit is ok to have 1 run for 15 minutes, and ads like "ride over the city for price of a liter of gasoline!". But you're need to speed-up via pre-selling tikets to prevent queue at the station.

    • @jamesbedford7327
      @jamesbedford7327 Před 3 lety +5

      Katy is a place that I think a Park and Ride facility would work really well. Its far enough for the train to be quicker, and there is parking for all them suburban suvs

    • @DisGunnar
      @DisGunnar Před 3 lety +3

      Cy-Fair boys wya

  • @opalyankaBG
    @opalyankaBG Před 3 lety +431

    Boston didn't remove the highway downtown. They simply replaced it with a tunnel. San Francisco would've been a better example here.

    • @lawrencewilliams4829
      @lawrencewilliams4829 Před 3 lety +13

      Or Portland OR

    • @OwenRULESSS
      @OwenRULESSS Před 3 lety +13

      @@lawrencewilliams4829 portland also made a tunnel after the highway removal

    • @bluettr250
      @bluettr250 Před 3 lety +3

      Tunnels are just more expensive roads.

    • @jfridy
      @jfridy Před 3 lety +9

      But people are leaving San Francisco because it costs too much to live there, and there are more options to work remotely, so you don't need to live near the tech capitols in California. And where are the largest number of the people moving. Texas, because the taxes are lower.

    • @dmixdup
      @dmixdup Před 3 lety +16

      Yes. This video is a bit of a mess.

  • @areader2253
    @areader2253 Před rokem +21

    The Katy Freeway is honestly the saddest thing I have ever seen. A train network connecting the city of Houston would have been so much cheaper, and would occupy a lot less space than the monstrosity that is Katy Freeway.

    • @MustacheCashStash125
      @MustacheCashStash125 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Making a bigger highway to make traffic better is like trying to speed up your Internet by opening more Google tabs

    • @TStone-qv6rw
      @TStone-qv6rw Před 5 měsíci

      @@MustacheCashStash125um opening more tabs is like putting more cars on the road, complete opposite.

  • @Bealsie.Boi.713
    @Bealsie.Boi.713 Před 3 lety +189

    As someone who has driven in this highway I can say they nailed the explanation. There are people who once had about a 45 minute commute (very common in Houston) now take 1 1/2 hours. Communities keep popping up further and further down the rod and it keeps getting worse.

    • @zacharyg3366
      @zacharyg3366 Před 3 lety +28

      Texas is getting awful. I advocate for public transportation but it’s hard to with their mindset. Also, way too many cookie cutter, poor quality homes/neighborhoods being built. Looks disgusting.

    • @sayiangod9404
      @sayiangod9404 Před 2 lety +3

      @@zacharyg3366 Agreed!

    • @yeetusdeletus9
      @yeetusdeletus9 Před 2 lety +3

      Houston is probably one of the worst designed cities in all of the US, if you dont have a car youre basically on house arrest

    • @FirebirdCamaro1220
      @FirebirdCamaro1220 Před 2 lety +2

      This is due to a market failure when it comes to housing costs. Once people have families, a studio apartment ain't going to cut it anymore, and condo's and sfh's in the central cities are prohibitively expensive for the middle class and lower class due to supply and demand. No easy fix

    • @veritorossi
      @veritorossi Před rokem +13

      @@FirebirdCamaro1220 Yes, there is an easy fix. Start building apartment buildings with shops on the ground floor, parks and public transport system and it will get fixed. Younger people will buy those small apartments, then move out to a bigger one or maybe a house when they have kids and then the new generation will move to the small apartments, etc. Build the houses close to the apartments and shops so they are walkable neighbourhoods and not isolated from everything. Another thing they should do is make homes smaller. In the US you have tiny apartments, big houses, then super highend multi million dollar homes. There is nothing in between. It's a cultural shift the US and Canada have to make to fight climate change and provide their population with a better quality of life.

  • @Eldelastrufas
    @Eldelastrufas Před 3 lety +2444

    Me, a Colombian who only knows “highways” with 4 lanes at most and are congested 24/7, watching this video: interesting

    • @axelmartinez6242
      @axelmartinez6242 Před 3 lety +17

      Literalmente te veo comentando en todos los videos que veo???

    • @jugutierrez
      @jugutierrez Před 3 lety +11

      Le gustan las trufas y los likes.

    • @jugutierrez
      @jugutierrez Před 3 lety +2

      Totally agree Trufaman.

    • @lgls
      @lgls Před 3 lety +9

      Mexicano aquí, la autopista que rodea el centro de la capital son 5 carriles por sentido y la que rodea toda la ciudad es igual pero con un "segundo piso" de cuota Jaja

    • @FrankU_
      @FrankU_ Před 3 lety

      Viva mi país 😎

  • @tk-sn1ny
    @tk-sn1ny Před 3 lety +396

    Boston didn't remove the highway, they put it underground... And the congestion is still awful, just underground...

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 Před 3 lety +117

      Bear this mind when people suggest flying cars as solution: it will not solve it, it just expands the problem upwards.

    • @marcmele6416
      @marcmele6416 Před 3 lety +21

      Not only did we put it underground but in the process of doing so it made traffic terrible during its construction a nice quick 16 years

    • @nealehardt7957
      @nealehardt7957 Před 3 lety +67

      It's true. The Big Dig buried I-93 through central Boston, added cloverleafs on the West End, and added a new I-90 bridge over the inner harbor. The project had a cost overrun of about 190%. We shouldn't look to the Big Dig for inspiration in solving our freeway problems, except to see how much a city improves when you restore local pedestrian access and hide a blighted freeway.

    • @Banom7a
      @Banom7a Před 3 lety +23

      @@nealehardt7957 agreed, I think South Korea highway removal is better example for this, they removed the highway on the river entirely and resulted in less traffic.

    • @hobog
      @hobog Před 3 lety +5

      @@Banom7a That said, their urban development+mass transit are sensible too

  • @billalumni7760
    @billalumni7760 Před 3 lety +59

    The reason that Boston had success in reducing congestion was due to a particular 2 mile stretch that had 2.1 miles of on ramps before moving in underground. By removing the constant on/ off of traffic flow was improved and congestion reduced especially with better designed exits and on ramps.

    • @aarongallaway7005
      @aarongallaway7005 Před rokem

      I wish Rhode Island would spend money to revamp 95 through Providence. Traffic is horrendous due to the US 6 and RI 146 on/off ramps being so close to each other.

  • @cleytonnicelferreira4429
    @cleytonnicelferreira4429 Před 3 lety +305

    My transport engineering professors says: " The better transportation is don't transport anyone!" Jobs and activities can be LOCAL.

    • @Mastakilla91
      @Mastakilla91 Před 3 lety +38

      That's true. It's more healhty, more economic, more eco-friendly and more natural to humans who for most of their existens used their feet to travel.

    • @garthy4u
      @garthy4u Před 3 lety +31

      Euclidean zoning is the worst thing to happen to urban planning.

    • @whiteclifffl
      @whiteclifffl Před 3 lety +1

      Your professor is a whacked out lib who hates his own country.

    • @garyortolano7374
      @garyortolano7374 Před 2 lety +5

      Haha...in other words, have the building come to YOU. Genius !

    • @MC-ns8gb
      @MC-ns8gb Před 2 lety +4

      Walkability ftw

  • @meinardsl
    @meinardsl Před 3 lety +186

    From a political standpoint there's also significant lobbying groups who'd rather have giant supermarkets rather than small ''just around the corner'' stores. Regardless, in order to expand highways you need to create more space, which is likely going to move someone further away from where they need to go, thus adding yet another vehicle on the same road you just expanded.

    • @no-one_nobody
      @no-one_nobody Před 3 lety +19

      Mexico have a solution for this. In Mexico the most common store is called Oxxo. They are very small stores with little inventory but they offer such a high convenience. They can be as high as 5 Oxxos between a 1 mile radius of every Mexican.
      They have all the basic items: cheese, eggs, tortillas, veggies, beans, jam but most importantly you can pay almost anything: light, water, internet, TV , taxes, school fees, mortgages, travel. Even electronic transfer from account to account.
      It's super convenient in one place you can do everything and it's very close to your home and work from all the country you can always find the same basic products.

    • @brandonchan4537
      @brandonchan4537 Před 3 lety +5

      @@no-one_nobody I think most of the world has this type of shops, we in Malaysia have local private businesses everywhere

    • @no-one_nobody
      @no-one_nobody Před 3 lety +2

      @@brandonchan4537 True but I think that never in the massive scale on Mexico, Oxxos are in many countries of Latam

    • @chloejohnson6861
      @chloejohnson6861 Před 3 lety

      Both small stores and large stores are needed, just like big roads and small roads.

    • @peter_smyth
      @peter_smyth Před 3 lety +2

      @@no-one_nobody I like your list of essential food items. Cheese, eggs, tortillas.

  • @joonimism
    @joonimism Před 3 lety +575

    If we build more, more will come. Indeed.

    • @Plexdet
      @Plexdet Před 3 lety +6

      and here i came to say “so in summary ‘if you build it they will come’”

    • @Plexdet
      @Plexdet Před 3 lety +2

      i also should have waited to the end of the video

    • @TheSundayShooter
      @TheSundayShooter Před 3 lety

      @@Plexdet Let us hope so

    • @Coloruption
      @Coloruption Před 3 lety +5

      @@Plexdet This is always misquoted. It’s “if you build it, he will come”.

    • @winniethepooh8353
      @winniethepooh8353 Před 3 lety

      This made more sense than what she tried to explain

  • @Basta11
    @Basta11 Před 2 lety +66

    I think too much focus is made on transportation and not much is in the destinations themselves. If the destinations are closer together, then walking becomes feasible, no need for motorized travel between them. Many communities all over the world, people achieve their daily tasks without a vehicle of any kind because all their needs are walking distance.
    With more walkable places, public transport becomes more a more effective solution as the demand for people going to and from the same destinations increase justifying high volume high frequency service.
    With low density places where not many people are going to and from the same places at the same time, car travel makes more sense. Public transport is not very efficient because the ridership will not be there to justify high frequency service. And so in these places, buses only stop in 30 -1 hour intervals which is not pleasant nor convenient.

    • @dadutchboy2
      @dadutchboy2 Před rokem

      engineer gaming

    • @justanotheryoutubechannel
      @justanotheryoutubechannel Před rokem +1

      You definitely need density for an ideal system but it can work without it, my town is pretty low density, less than half that of London but it’s still 3 times more than American suburbs, roughly 6000 people per square mile, and you regularly see buses moving between the neighbourhoods and destinations like the pedestrian mall in the centre, or the industrial estate, or the airport. If you have big destinations compacted together where you know people will want to go, then if you make bus routes frequent enough people will use them to travel, you just need to position the bus stops well enough that it’s never more than a 10 minute walk (ideally 5 minutes) from people’s houses.

    • @Basta11
      @Basta11 Před rokem +1

      @@justanotheryoutubechannel Broad density measurements may not accurately reflect the actual walkability.
      Los Angeles county is considered dense, but its almost uniformly sprawl. For most of it, its very hard to get around without a personal vehicle. Businesses and residences are also segregated which necessitates longer travel lengths.
      European towns are considered low density but much of the buildings are actually fairly concentrated (usually around a rail station).
      Walking is still fairly feasible. What makes it low density is that there are vast rural lands.

    • @justanotheryoutubechannel
      @justanotheryoutubechannel Před rokem +1

      @@Basta11 That’s true. In my town though I can confirm it is mostly low density terraced housing, if it was all high rises it would have a huge population by comparison, and it is pretty walkable. But like you said it does have clusters around train stations, and compared to us towns it probably feels like being in an old city. Traditional “ideal” walkable neighbourhoods are usually dense city blocks built into 15-minute communities, but I think you can definitely have a less dense area than that which still works, especially if it has clusters of higher density areas connected via transit.

  • @Calebakeenhughes
    @Calebakeenhughes Před 3 lety +312

    "The suburban experiment is possibly the greatest misallocation of resources in history" - The Geography of Nowhere - James Howard Kunstler

    • @Calebakeenhughes
      @Calebakeenhughes Před 3 lety +19

      @Burt P Hard to recognize it for what it is when it's all you see and exposed to.

    • @artm5583
      @artm5583 Před 3 lety +27

      @@Calebakeenhughes agree, it’s the worst idea ever. People should live close to where they work.

    • @someotherdude
      @someotherdude Před 3 lety +8

      Catchy, but the suburbs are simply the result of liberals making cities unlivable.

    • @artm5583
      @artm5583 Před 3 lety +1

      @Burt P no sir, I own my own home 5 mins from downtown.

    • @artm5583
      @artm5583 Před 3 lety +4

      @Burt P Houston isn’t a little city, also 5k sqft lots is plenty big for living in the city. I’m not Poor 🤷🏽‍♂️ since that’s what you’re implying.

  • @anonymousperson26223
    @anonymousperson26223 Před 3 lety +1088

    Warning: There are *a lot* of Cities: Skylines jokes

    • @sandeegrey5977
      @sandeegrey5977 Před 3 lety +8

      At least its not Fortnite. I'M A PROUD HATER!

    • @tannermanasco2110
      @tannermanasco2110 Před 3 lety +3

      Good

    • @tacticalfall4505
      @tacticalfall4505 Před 3 lety +1

      @@sandeegrey5977 so am I

    • @inferno7997
      @inferno7997 Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you for the warning, now atleast i know what these comments are referencing to

    • @nobyra
      @nobyra Před 3 lety

      @@sandeegrey5977 so you're proud of being a hater

  • @TheKrazykool809
    @TheKrazykool809 Před 3 lety +61

    Boston did not remove the freeway downtown. We buried it under the city leaving the boulevard that you see now above ground. It looks nicer and leaves space to make other forms of transit easier, but that freeway 100% still exists. It is considered a success (the project itself, not the cost and time), but is also the most expensive highway project ever undertaken in the US.

    • @aydinsengun5088
      @aydinsengun5088 Před 3 lety +14

      Yeah this is why I am always skeptical of Vox videos. I also live in Boston and for them to miss such an important distinction is incredibly disappointing. The Big Dig improved a lot of things but we still have some of the worst traffic in nation even after all the work we've done.

    • @lonesnark
      @lonesnark Před 3 lety +2

      They also built bypasses, other highways to carry much of the load the now-underground highway used to carry.

    • @Saintacy
      @Saintacy Před 3 lety +2

      I don't think cities like Houston are going to build freeways underground. Not sure of the reason but might have something to do with water table and sea levels. That's also why our overpasses can seem like a roller coaster ride to some people. I've met people from Houston afraid of the heights so they avoid the freeways with high overpasses.
      Me when it rains heavy in Houston and water pours down from the overpasses: look at the beautiful waterfalls Houston has.

  • @josepharce7534
    @josepharce7534 Před 3 lety +694

    The best way to reduce traffic is improve the public transport and just build a train

    • @CaptainM792
      @CaptainM792 Před 3 lety +72

      Yes, make more people stop driving and use public transport instead. Soon we will get to the point that even the rich would use take buses, trains and taxis.

    • @bigpete1287
      @bigpete1287 Před 3 lety +39

      I'd take the bus to work if the total trip time wasn't 1 hour and 30 minutes. Driving to work from home takes me 20 minutes.

    • @imnotracistbut7445
      @imnotracistbut7445 Před 3 lety +14

      Better reduce population

    • @parkedjeep96
      @parkedjeep96 Před 2 lety +48

      That is the problem with the US. The government made it a breeding ground for driving and made public/ alternative commutes impractical or impossible.

    • @Rainb0wzNstuff
      @Rainb0wzNstuff Před 2 lety +6

      Have most people needs be local and have public transportation for when they're visiting someone or are going to work

  • @aaronmett5678
    @aaronmett5678 Před 3 lety +25

    Wow! in Milwaukee back in the 70s there was a plan to build lots of freeways within the city. But they never went through with those plans because they went through a lot of culturally important areas of the city and people worried they would be cut off from outside travelers. And now those areas are still some of the nicest areas of the city.

  • @kevineusebio
    @kevineusebio Před 3 lety +648

    Cities: Skylines players: Give me 4 hours i'll fix this.

    • @mashisma
      @mashisma Před 3 lety +39

      To be fair, cities skylines makes it difficult to build a pedestrian focused city 😕

    • @AndiKola
      @AndiKola Před 3 lety +8

      Hugo there, hugo there and hugo there.

    • @kullingen6909
      @kullingen6909 Před 3 lety +5

      @@mashisma Don't you mean SimsCity?

    • @YourLocalMairaaboo
      @YourLocalMairaaboo Před 3 lety

      Hey, at least we get some more buses and trains!

    • @nologic06
      @nologic06 Před 3 lety

      Alexander nah, it’s opposite. If you don’t build American city with endless sprawling communities, relying on cars, but build a high density, full of ped. paths city with services near homes, then it’s much easier to make pedestrian oriented city

  • @liamnixon4428
    @liamnixon4428 Před 3 lety +132

    Now those who criticize rail transport, like high-speed rail, and favour road transport now have no excuse for defending the road industry.

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 Před 3 lety +37

      You can skip high speed rail, and focus on reliable regional rail. At the very least regional trains must be a bit faster than car at freeway speed. Not the speed limit, the typical speed.

    • @mastertrams
      @mastertrams Před 3 lety +19

      @@dbclass4075 Hmm... As a UK inhabitant myself, I'm going to say the UK can't skip high-speed rail, since our conventional rail system is at capacity, and we simply can't run any more trains. I don't claim to know what it's like in the US, but I do agree on the notion that commuter rail needs improving to replace cars, but high-speed rail also needs building to replace airplanes. That's why I think a HSR line between Los Angeles and either San Francisco, Las Vegas or San Diego are such good ideas, because they are the right distance to compete with some of the world's busiest air corridors.

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 Před 3 lety +6

      @@mastertrams Regional rail will have less public resistance than high-speed rail. Perhaps regional rail first before high-speed rail.

    • @iismitch55
      @iismitch55 Před 3 lety +1

      I’m all for rail, but the premise of the video was that even adding public transport options doesn’t reduce demand. The whole idea is that the more transportation volume into a city, the more demand.

    • @The98597thMark
      @The98597thMark Před 3 lety +6

      @@iismitch55 What? It does reduce demand *on roads*. Fundamentally, there's a minority of people who have to drive, (and a minority who can't drive), and everyone else is doing whatever's most convenient or whatever they're used to.

  • @joseville
    @joseville Před 3 lety +99

    As a physics enthusiast, I appreciate it when people simplify things to spheres and cylinders!

    • @Zoza15
      @Zoza15 Před 3 lety +1

      Analogies 😉.

  • @ItsHaldun
    @ItsHaldun Před rokem +21

    America: Separate the cities into residential and commercial areas
    Place them far apart
    Do not provide mass transportation options
    People have to use cars and there is traffic
    America: Surprised pikachu face

  • @joeottsoulbikes415
    @joeottsoulbikes415 Před 3 lety +343

    I luckily live in an area where almost everything I need is in a mile or less of walking. I have always hated living in places that require you to have a car to live. Neighborhoods built with hundreds of homes but the closest grocery store is five miles, work is ten miles, shopping for household and clothing is five or more miles. It is just a receipts for living in a car and working to own a car. All the money I would normally spend owning a car, I can instead spend on me.

    • @insanity6379
      @insanity6379 Před 3 lety +11

      Or invest it

    • @lecookie007
      @lecookie007 Před 3 lety +9

      Where is this magical place you live in? ...... sounds rude as I'm typing this but I'm actually just curious

    • @Loud.Thoughts
      @Loud.Thoughts Před 3 lety +2

      @@lecookie007 probably New York

    • @archiebellega956
      @archiebellega956 Před 3 lety +19

      @@lecookie007 These kind of city does exist in other country easily y'know? well not always within 1 miles (1.6 km) but I can get most of my needs within 2 km of my residence. Like veggies? there's a small grocery mom&pop store just 200 m away. Clothes? there's small boutique here, or I can go to larger store 1.5 km away. The farthest place I had was my workplace, about 3 km away since it's located near town center. Rather the american suburban +full zoning style is the rarer ones in the world. Like I get the reason to zone office+industrial (my country kinda did), but stuff like grocery stores and other daily needs shouldn't be 'zoned' hard, like by making a giant suburban that's consist of just housing, but make smaller ones so that there's place for stores, like grocery stores or smaller department stores for clothing to exist between housings.

    • @lynnsartncrafts
      @lynnsartncrafts Před 3 lety +1

      Haha!! Talking about Singapore? Tbh I've never gotten the urge to own a car

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Před 3 lety +488

    As a City Skylines player, we know this pain.

    • @lexlutha7523
      @lexlutha7523 Před 3 lety +44

      As cities skylines player you’ll be smart to use public transport,

    • @safe-keeper1042
      @safe-keeper1042 Před 3 lety +16

      At least in CS, building more roads doesn't incentify people to drive cars more. But yes, you're absolutely right.

    • @ericseventeen17
      @ericseventeen17 Před 3 lety +15

      Has Houston tried turning on
      de-spawning? 🤔

    • @b1ks
      @b1ks Před 3 lety +5

      In City Skyline , it is also important to increase the funding! Funding will increase the amount of buses/trains/airplanes coming out. Try it in creative mod ( unlimited money) and thank me later :)

    • @safe-keeper1042
      @safe-keeper1042 Před 3 lety +13

      @@ericseventeen17 "Can't come to work today, boss, my car despawned again".

  • @eggbeetle
    @eggbeetle Před 3 lety +16

    as someone who regularly drives on the katy highway, i can say with full confidence that you are completely and utterly right. it's always so congested... and for what

  • @oceanstaiga5928
    @oceanstaiga5928 Před 3 lety +417

    Imagine the US had a good bus and subway system through the country like normal people...

    • @jayc1139
      @jayc1139 Před 3 lety +74

      The US has such an intense car culture, and buses are generally seen as 'low class' forms of transportation, on top of many city governments being too cheap to build better infrastructure...I'm afraid the problem will stick around for a while.

    • @kevinolevino3190
      @kevinolevino3190 Před 3 lety +28

      in cities, there are good subway services and good amtrak service, even in rural areas. many americans dont consider public transportation because they think cars are better and faster when a lot of the time its the opposite

    • @paklekj4429
      @paklekj4429 Před 3 lety +11

      @@kevinolevino3190 we indonesian are all using motorcycles because its faster easier to drive it dont take so much space

    • @jack6126
      @jack6126 Před 3 lety +35

      Sadly the American belief that we have a superior way of thinking and a way of life is so ingrained into many Americans that they’ll dismiss ideas simply on the basis that it’s foreign and we need a “American solution”, if they even believe we need a solution at all.

    • @214dude2
      @214dude2 Před 3 lety +16

      I doubt that would work. America is too big of country for subways and bus networks. Freeways are needed in areas of low population density .

  • @ziksy6460
    @ziksy6460 Před 3 lety +25

    I wish my country (Indonesia) realised this. There are always highway constructions going on everywhere. Meanwhile, public transport construction takes a backseat.

    • @brandonchan4537
      @brandonchan4537 Před 3 lety

      hi neighbor , I am not sure Malaysia the same or not, but they are building a highway through Sarawak & Sabah ,but tbh we need it as we only have small crumbling road before. My city of Kuching was planing to build a MRT but it was cancelled,traffic here is very very bad, atleast they are investing on bicycle lanes and free busses

    • @Hakingdoesgames
      @Hakingdoesgames Před 3 lety

      Highway isn't inherently bad, and I think the induced demand is more of an American thing since every single person uses car.

    • @dontgetlost4078
      @dontgetlost4078 Před 3 lety

      @@brandonchan4537 I think your country's capital city, Kuala Lumpur, is without the shadow of a doubt a contestant for the most kilometers of highway per capita. In Google Earth when you turn on the Road option, the tangle of orange lanes (that means highway haha) looks a lot more of a spaghetti than most Spaghetti Junctions in the world.

    • @govinlock8568
      @govinlock8568 Před 3 lety

      Building highways are not bad. Just like other things, too much is inherently bad.
      Sekarang di sini transportasi publik sudah mulai digencarkan. Di Jawa udah enak ada KRL, di Denpasar sebelum Covid macet melulu pas jam sibuk karena gak ada pilihan lain selain lewat jalan raya.

    • @vultschlange
      @vultschlange Před 3 lety +1

      @@govinlock8568 Kapan ya Bali punya kereta api sampe di seluruh bagian pulau ada

  • @lucacoccioli9244
    @lucacoccioli9244 Před 3 lety +80

    I am shocked by this fact that we've known for decades.

    • @Jobother
      @Jobother Před 3 lety +5

      It was first noticed in the 1700s in london lol.

    • @Ryan_Rail
      @Ryan_Rail Před 3 lety +1

      Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot. Nothing is going to get better, it's not.

  • @Necrikus
    @Necrikus Před 3 lety +349

    Cities: Skylines players: "I'm somewhat of a civil engineer myself."

  • @boff__
    @boff__ Před 3 lety +150

    Highways are like a factory, once you mess one part of it the mess will pile on and affect other parts

    • @pepabacon8873
      @pepabacon8873 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes indeed

    • @MrRar66
      @MrRar66 Před 3 lety

      It's called queuing theory and it has a relationship to game theory

  • @dcseain
    @dcseain Před 3 lety +52

    At street level in Boston, elevated 93 was removed and replaced with a lovely boulevard. But 93 was simply buried under downtown, not actually removed.

    • @callmeswivelhips8229
      @callmeswivelhips8229 Před 3 lety +1

      The Big Deception is what it was honey

    • @pleasedontwatchthese9593
      @pleasedontwatchthese9593 Před 3 lety

      We should put are traffic underground

    • @callmeswivelhips8229
      @callmeswivelhips8229 Před 3 lety +3

      @@pleasedontwatchthese9593 Are you kidding?? That's a terrible idea. What we should do is get rid of cars, ESPECIALLY in the big cities. There are a large number of ways to do that and to do that well.

    • @lydiaderhake2532
      @lydiaderhake2532 Před 3 lety +1

      @@pleasedontwatchthese9593 This isn't bad idea, but it ignores the problem for commuters. Alternative commuting methods are the better option, rather than hiding the problem in tunnels.

    • @seanhayes9056
      @seanhayes9056 Před rokem

      I'm glad someone said this, Boston didnt fix anything.

  • @rafaeldovalle4457
    @rafaeldovalle4457 Před 3 lety +57

    Americans: “Houston traffic is the worst”
    Brazilians: “hold my beer”

    • @KingAsa5
      @KingAsa5 Před 3 lety +4

      As a texan, it is the worst

    • @CaptainM792
      @CaptainM792 Před 3 lety +6

      Hong Kongers: “Hold my curry fishballs”

    • @jasonyu6649
      @jasonyu6649 Před 3 lety +5

      @@CaptainM792 Ask an Indonesian who lives in Jakarta, s/he would tell you that a normal traffic jam would last for 2 hours.

    • @paklekj4429
      @paklekj4429 Před 3 lety

      Haha yes

    • @paklekj4429
      @paklekj4429 Před 3 lety +2

      Im an indonesian and i can sure that youre right

  • @stevenleeoff
    @stevenleeoff Před 3 lety +308

    As a Texan, When they say everything is “Bigger” in Texas, THEY MEAN IT.

    • @user-nf9xc7ww7m
      @user-nf9xc7ww7m Před 3 lety +37

      America in general, but even the two way streets are wide as 💩. I've seen two way streets in japan that are what americans would call the shoulder of a road. Then again, Asia tends not to have monster trucks driving on all the roads.

    • @hopseshopsidis
      @hopseshopsidis Před 3 lety +38

      i shouldn't laugh here, but i heard your electricity fallouts are also quite big
      Edit: SHOULDNT NOT SHOULD! 8 months and nobody told me, ahhhhh

    • @tollboothjason
      @tollboothjason Před 3 lety +26

      except their power grid.

    • @jankees4037
      @jankees4037 Před 3 lety +5

      Traffic jams are indeed bigger. The brains in the counsel certainly aren't bigger.....

    • @CrabSmokingACigarette
      @CrabSmokingACigarette Před 3 lety +4

      @@hopseshopsidis Yessir, and proud of it! Tell me of another grid that suffered as much of a catastrophic outage as us. Bet you can't name one!

  • @spartan0x75
    @spartan0x75 Před 3 lety +8

    It's also not just induced demand; it's also the Braess's paradox. This can be observed not only in car traffic, but also in things like the electric grid. The *only* way to solve our traffic problem in the long run is described by the Downs-Thomson paradox, which, in the most simple terms, states that the travel time of one mode can only be as fast as its fastest alternative. In the end, why take the train when you can drive there faster? Why drive when you can bike there quicker? That, combined with induced demand, is why our traffic problem is so chaotic.
    There are great success stories around the world, but one great example is Amsterdam. It used to be heavily congested with cars like our cities just a few decades ago, and yet, now it's known as the cycling paradise with an amazing public transit system. In addition, driving in Amsterdam is no longer a nightmare due to the fact that cars have different roads to take that are indirect but designed for them. A CZcams channel called "Not Just Bikes" have made some great videos on this and I highly recommend folks who might be interested in this.

    • @uptorest
      @uptorest Před 3 lety

      Cost is another factor. Right now I have the option of using the local rail vs driving. I drive cause gas is cheaper.

    • @nickmonks9563
      @nickmonks9563 Před 3 lety

      @@uptorest True, but you also have to factor in the external costs...the car, maintenance, insurance, etc...Once accounted for, I suspect transit is more comparable than you think.

  • @mattwilkinson3209
    @mattwilkinson3209 Před 3 lety +198

    Um, Boston didn’t remove a highway. Ever heard of the Big Dig? They moved it underground and added a fourth lane.

    • @eggizgud
      @eggizgud Před 3 lety +8

      Thanks. Wiki also had more info about the so-called reduced congestion. Sigh...

    • @raymondh5456
      @raymondh5456 Před 3 lety +45

      That’s why it’s hard to take these videos at face value anymore 😢 we always have to take it with a grain of salt and do our own digging.

    • @APaleDot
      @APaleDot Před 3 lety +4

      Thanks for the info. Some of the claims made in this video are pretty sus.

    • @jdlmmf
      @jdlmmf Před 3 lety +18

      It reduced congestion at street level however - despite the fact that Downtown Boston was the destination for the majority of these people. The highway going THROUGH was moved underground, but the accesses (additional 2 lane flyovers, etc) that were dotted along the +1.5 mile stretch sent underground were severely reduced. At certain points, you had 2 and 3 lane access (!) lanes, now there is only a single entrance/exit (spread in different points) along the entire stretch. Additionally, the highway wasn't just the part sent underground - it was also the 8 lane avenue on the surface parallel to the entire length.

    • @someotherdude
      @someotherdude Před 3 lety +15

      The video was made by Vox, so it's bullshat.

  • @windywendi
    @windywendi Před 3 lety +298

    People out of America be like "just dump the automobile culture"

    • @champanzee6486
      @champanzee6486 Před 3 lety +57

      The way cities are built in the US, makes it difficult to dump the automobile culture.

    • @jide7765
      @jide7765 Před 3 lety +11

      @@champanzee6486 public transport...

    • @d.b.cooper1
      @d.b.cooper1 Před 3 lety +38

      Honestly having grown up in a small town in the UK with good public transport links everywhere, On my travels around the world I've always lowkey felt sorry for cities/areas that really aren't easily navigable by foot or easy public transport beyond busses. I get many parts are rural, But big built up cities & metropolitan areas have little excuses. The thought of spending hours driving from a suburb to a city or something along those lines has always terrified me, I know its not avoidable for everyone even some parts of the UK, But forever grateful that most of us at least have a choice with a wide reaching rail network/inner city trams/tubes.

    • @sarchivorist477
      @sarchivorist477 Před 3 lety +23

      @@champanzee6486 this exact sentiment is the very reason why US won't get any change. "Yeah we have been built that way", but the sunk cost of automobile culture is a more important factor now

    • @jankees4037
      @jankees4037 Před 3 lety +18

      Public transport will solve the US cities, sadly the US never invested in anything serious ever so far. So it all has to be done now. Maybe take an example on how China is solving this. They built a superior road and train network the last decades.

  • @envoy3
    @envoy3 Před 3 lety +47

    I live in vancouver and this pain feels so real. The biggest issue with our highways is the bottlenecks, but every time they fix one a new one forms further down the line. We're currently debating replacing an aging tunnel with a massive 10 lane bridge but the bigger problem will be that the bridge is followed by a bottleneck further down the highway. We could spend 10 billion dollars just to push the bottle neck further down the road or we could just build a more functional city by utilizing mass transit and more "city within a city" models. Neighborhoods where we have towers with grocery stores and shops on the lower level so you dont even need to commute to pick up groceries. Thankfully this city has a decent public transit system or else things would be 10 times worse.

  • @colonelkush
    @colonelkush Před 3 lety +323

    Solution: MAKE EVERYTHING A *ROUNDABOUT*

    • @tacocat1714
      @tacocat1714 Před 3 lety +17

      Americans say no.

    • @colonelkush
      @colonelkush Před 3 lety +40

      Cause we all agree that traffic lights are fair and balanced except when it’s 5am and there’s no one at an intersection with the light is red but you can see the cop in the shadows lurking waiting to pounce on the one to run it

    • @Big007Boss
      @Big007Boss Před 3 lety +1

      Northern italy is switching to roundabouts, they started a while back

    • @Cythil
      @Cythil Před 3 lety +22

      @@Big007Boss Most of Europe have gone over to roundabouts. They help with some issues when it comes to traffic flow. So is not odd that they are popular. And generally is more the flow then the capacity then help with. But one should not underestimate how much flow matter.

    • @MrLOLametro
      @MrLOLametro Před 3 lety +7

      Roundabouts don’t work for highways, it’s only something for smaller roads that intersect without bridges etc.

  • @laithshehadeh1517
    @laithshehadeh1517 Před 3 lety +16

    This video doesn’t discuss that the reluctance of Americans to live in more dense housing is a huge issue that plays into this as well.

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 Před 3 lety +6

      Mostly anyone west of East Coast, actually. More younger people are in favour of urban life today than our previous generation, so that is something.

    • @degnaw
      @degnaw Před 3 lety +5

      I don't believe this is an issue of Americans being reluctant to *live* in more dense housing, it's a reluctance of entrenched residents to allow such housing to be built. Most US cities currently ban even duplexes on the vast majority of their residential land area.

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 Před 3 lety

      @@degnaw At current housing market, those entrenched residents are more likely at least baby boomers' age, or very wealthy.

    • @nickmonks9563
      @nickmonks9563 Před 3 lety

      Failure to provide infrastructure and opportunity with that density also plays a role. Density much include "living" spaces such as parks, gardens, workshops...the kinds of things suburban and rural residents often have access to in their own homes, but that might be shareable and managed in cities. Of course, improved quality of life leads to the other deterrent to dense housing...cost.

  • @rexcolt9742
    @rexcolt9742 Před 3 lety +30

    Actually, Improving public transportantion and gentrification is the solution.

    • @patrickkotowski5780
      @patrickkotowski5780 Před 3 lety +4

      Exactly. I think more North American cities would benefit from having more public rail networks, connecting downtown to the edge of surburbs, at least.

    • @rexcolt9742
      @rexcolt9742 Před 3 lety +3

      @@patrickkotowski5780
      Im not saying making roads bigger is wrong or unnecessary.
      But gentrification of cities and improving public transport is the real solution.
      Of course, that would mean ending suburbanization and its rac*st origin

  • @KySeR686
    @KySeR686 Před 3 lety +13

    The last line: 'If you build it, they will come' is a Field of Dreams (1989) reference :)

  • @pennyjpie
    @pennyjpie Před 3 lety +66

    I've spent at least half my life on the Katy freeway.

    • @Ryan_Rail
      @Ryan_Rail Před 3 lety +2

      Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot. Nothing is going to get better, it's not.

    • @jankees4037
      @jankees4037 Před 3 lety

      Never thought to get to work on a different way? Or move.

    • @someotherdude
      @someotherdude Před 3 lety

      ..... because some liberal opposed the improvements that would have helped speed it up.

    • @JYMAHJAMES
      @JYMAHJAMES Před 3 lety

      @@jankees4037 1:55 listen

    • @jordankelly4684
      @jordankelly4684 Před 3 lety +1

      @@someotherdude really it's a liberals fault? In texas? Okay guy. Liberals aren't in power there.

  • @jstelm
    @jstelm Před 3 lety +82

    5:25 Umm. All Boston did was put the highway underground. Kind of an important point to leave out on that one.

    • @jeffreydearing276
      @jeffreydearing276 Před 3 lety +16

      Not only that but they ADDED lanes, contrary to the point of this video.

    • @beastateverythin
      @beastateverythin Před 3 lety +24

      Not ‘all’ they did, but extremely important, and it should’ve been said. A huge benefit of Boston’s plan was separating local traffic from regional traffic. A boulevard is better land use and can make the city tax revenue. Same thing happened with Seattle’s Viaduct.
      Turning a highway in a city into a tunnel is a good solution in car-centric America. But it costs a lot.
      San Francisco is case of a city only replacing the highway with a boulevard

    • @josephm.6453
      @josephm.6453 Před 3 lety +5

      That's vox for you. Any video here remotely related to politics is questionable at best

    • @chrisf247
      @chrisf247 Před 3 lety +6

      I laughed at that pretty hard. The idea that they just replaced the road with a tree-lined boulevard and everything just solved itself is pretty childish.

    • @degnaw
      @degnaw Před 3 lety +2

      @@chrisf247 They're not wrong, they just picked a terrible example. The Embarcadero in San Fran is a real-world example of exactly what you cite.

  • @thespanishinquisition2200
    @thespanishinquisition2200 Před 3 lety +10

    As a Houstonian, I ain’t even surprised That the first image seen in this video was Katy freeway

  • @dbjungle
    @dbjungle Před 3 lety +8

    I'm from Houston and I can say that without remote work opportunities it's only going to continue to get worse regardless of new roads or less roads. Salaries are not scaling with inflation so more people are having to work that may not have worked in the past. Plus the population is growing. The jobs get concentrated in certain areas so people drive.

  • @EdwardCreates
    @EdwardCreates Před 3 lety +44

    so you’re saying, if we get rid of highways, there won’t be any traffic!!

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 Před 3 lety +3

      That is basically the total reverse of highway expansion argument. Like all extremes, that is very negative.

    • @isaks7042
      @isaks7042 Před 3 lety +12

      You are saying this ironically but you are actually right. Amsterdam get rid of of several highways and future projects that american city planners wanted to implement in their city. Nowaways Amsterdam is famous for being the city of bicyclists and the traffic there is one of the best in the world.

    • @cuevasmarcos23
      @cuevasmarcos23 Před 3 lety

      Well may not help people get to their job initially but would encourage people to find another way to work that doesn't involve using their vehicles.

    • @uptorest
      @uptorest Před 3 lety +4

      Can't have traffic if you don't have roads lol

    • @rs72098
      @rs72098 Před 3 lety +2

      It's like the "legalize all drugs" argument, both riddles with errors. You might as well make this a "roll safe" meme.

  • @samesamebutdifferent563
    @samesamebutdifferent563 Před 3 lety +216

    Learn from Cities Skylines - reduce jams by removing all traffic lights.

    • @Ryan_Rail
      @Ryan_Rail Před 3 lety +3

      Sadly you can predict code but you can't predict people who drive the wrong way down a one-way road!!!! Like seriously how do people manage to do that!!!??

    • @Wistbacka
      @Wistbacka Před 3 lety +12

      @@Ryan_Rail But one thing Cities have correct: Best way to reduce traffic jams is not to build more lanes per se, but to build more dedicated roads and alternative routes to get from point A to B. But that is not feasible in real life, because that would cost too much and also take up too much valuable real estate and/or industry space.

    • @Hans.Dewitt
      @Hans.Dewitt Před 3 lety +5

      @@Wistbacka there are many causes and solutions to traffic jams, there is no silver bullet. But I think planning the zoning and flow of the city is by far one of the most important aspects when starting a new city, something that is difficult to do in existing metropolitans

    • @sarchivorist477
      @sarchivorist477 Před 3 lety +4

      Honestly and unfortunately, this is the typical "civil engineer" solution and it won't work. If you think about this, highway is like you get rid of all signal lights on a road but we still see congestion coming (like the ones shown in the video)

    • @HR15DE
      @HR15DE Před 3 lety +3

      i have built the perfect indian utopia with no traffic lights and called it Mumbai. so this gave me a chuckle. it would work if cars could collide with eacher without crashing.

  • @krmbnb2557
    @krmbnb2557 Před 3 lety +34

    If there is no road there is no traffic congestion, big brains move

  • @darreldennis7115
    @darreldennis7115 Před 3 lety +49

    Just realized Katy Freeway is the World's Widest Highway. Wow, everything really is BIGGER in Texas.

    • @urbanistgod
      @urbanistgod Před 3 lety +3

      Go big or go home!

    • @Gingerfrost
      @Gingerfrost Před 3 lety +3

      (did not occur to me at all) do admit. .. it's awesome to drive on that highway in the morning(late night) at 80mph, clear traffic. //Granted it forced me to get over my highest fears moving down to Houston where ppl drive 50mph even on the small small roads.

    • @CrystalClearWith8BE
      @CrystalClearWith8BE Před 3 lety +3

      The Katy Freeway is nothing compared to the 401 through Mississauga. The 401 have lesser lanes than the Katy Freeway. The 401 through Mississauga have the widest point of 22 lanes.

    • @worldchangingvideos6253
      @worldchangingvideos6253 Před 2 lety

      Bigger and dumber, we've all seen Idiocracy

  • @chefboyoassugly8118
    @chefboyoassugly8118 Před 3 lety +13

    That is the thing i HATE about when im in Texas. (I split my life like half the year in DFW/Houston, the other half in Mexico City) and the reliance on highways and cars is such a necessary mean of transportation even for the simplest things. But when im in mexico, Walking, Bus, the lovely Metro, Kombis. Taxis on the rare occasion. That is one of the HUGE ➕'s to living in 🇲🇽

  • @artuno1207
    @artuno1207 Před 3 lety +83

    Really wish the US would embrace improve public transportation, but that won't happen for as long as big oil investors like the Koch Brothers continue to lobby for more and more personal vehicles, as opposed to better trains, buses, subways, and pedestrian mobility.

    • @SamTheMountainBikeBeast
      @SamTheMountainBikeBeast Před 3 lety +8

      We need more subways

    • @waffle2434
      @waffle2434 Před 3 lety +9

      I agree with your main point, but just to correct an incorrect part, big oil investors are actually pro buses and were actually one of their biggest advocates when they were first being invented. Since big car manufacturers are still the ones who make them, they are awarded massive government contracts to make a bunch of them, they use up significantly more fuel than a standard car, and typically they facilitate even more lobbying opportunities in the form of dedicated bus lanes. Big auto and oil companies actually killed wider adoption of public train networks by proposing buses since they would use the existing highways that they were also lobbying for, so big auto and oil companies are not anti-public transport, they are anti-public transport methods that don't net them any money, so they aren't actually against buses.

    • @anwitmondal6417
      @anwitmondal6417 Před 3 lety +5

      Not only because of the lobbyists but because the average american has grown too used to the comfort of a car. No matter how much you argue you have to admit that a car is way more comfortable than public transport. The biggest being you don't have to stick to a time table and can leave whenever you want.

    • @mikaelj90
      @mikaelj90 Před 3 lety +1

      @@waffle2434 this is complicated. I would still say they’re not pro public transit, they just realize they have to do something. Both of their efforts to support buses have ulterior motives, so I don’t know if you can call that a pure support for public transit. As you said in the 40s 50s and 60s, it was about getting rid of the street cars of other cars could move more freely and that the buses would use their oil. And today their efforts to support buses and bus lanes are so the developing countries don’t build subways and that these countries keep using their oil and cars.

    • @waffle2434
      @waffle2434 Před 3 lety +9

      @@anwitmondal6417 This really depends on where you live, in a big city absolutely not, as someone who lives in a big city with a highly developed train and subway network, I would attest that trains and subways (if done right) are significantly more comfortable than cars, because I never have to deal with traffic, trains, where I live, are never delayed, they come by every five minutes, and are significantly faster than any car I have ever been in. I can get from my job to my apartment in under 10 minutes during peak traffic because of trains, the same trip in a car would take at least 30 minutes because the roads are so congested during morning rush hour, I could walk to my job faster than driving there. On top of this, I do not have to worry about the hassles of driving, so I can actually be productive on my commute, and the yearly membership pass I pay to board the train every day is significantly cheaper than any car insurance or car payments I have ever seen. Don't get me wrong, I still think cars are indispensable and really the only means of transport in rural areas since there really is not an economical way to maintain public transport in low-density areas, but in big cities, there really is not a point to owning a car.

  • @majorfallacy5926
    @majorfallacy5926 Před 3 lety +8

    More importantly, induced demand also works for public transport and bike infrastructure, i.e. if you improve the thing you want commuters to use even though nobody uses it right now, people will start using it once it's built

  • @Pseudynom
    @Pseudynom Před 3 lety +8

    Widening a highway is like upgrading your computer's processor while still using a magnet disc hard drive.

  • @maxwellvigil6084
    @maxwellvigil6084 Před 3 lety +103

    Houston: I’m going to pretend I didn’t see that

  • @damianosdamai1022
    @damianosdamai1022 Před 3 lety +18

    0:32 Next time you're stuck in traffic remember that all those people in their cars could fit in one train....

    • @Ryan_Rail
      @Ryan_Rail Před 3 lety +1

      Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot. Nothing is going to get better, it's not.

    • @roryhanlon927
      @roryhanlon927 Před 3 lety

      Clearly you've never commuted in London. It turns out, you can't all fit in one train.

    • @damianosdamai1022
      @damianosdamai1022 Před 3 lety +2

      @Joe Marley Corona is a temporary crisis. The conclusions of the studies are general and are not applicable during these extrordinary times.

    • @damianosdamai1022
      @damianosdamai1022 Před 3 lety +1

      @@roryhanlon927 Of course you can't. You need to either build more underground lines or invest in other modes of transport (i.e. bikes). But it still takes people off the streets. London is already a mess despite all its public transport and probably is always going to be like that due to its old, narrow, historical roads. But, imagine if each one of those people took their cars instead of the underground.... It would be quicker to walk from Croydon to Westminster than drive...

    • @ligametis
      @ligametis Před 3 lety

      car is still more comfortable.

  • @davidcantor293
    @davidcantor293 Před 3 lety +28

    Remember when “waze” came out and legit had the best alternative routes until everyone else caught on aha!

    • @lydiaderhake2532
      @lydiaderhake2532 Před 3 lety

      Is that what it was? I didn't know a servi....aaaaah. you mean congestion. I got all excited thinking there was an app that told you how to avoid driving

  • @Curtisjackson501975
    @Curtisjackson501975 Před 3 lety +15

    Its not the highways, its the lack of Efficient Public transport and the US culture of owning a car to commute.
    Government should encourage people to use the Public Transportations and invest more on public transports.

  • @SpoiledBread24
    @SpoiledBread24 Před 3 lety +59

    The reason is the lack of lane mathematics

    • @davidalejandroquirogaorozc5512
      @davidalejandroquirogaorozc5512 Před 3 lety +3

      Even economics if you think about it 🤔

    • @rs72098
      @rs72098 Před 3 lety +9

      Math does eventually show that adding more lanes would relieve highway congestion, it just takes quite a few more. City populations are NOT infinite and eventually equilibrium would be reached.

    • @SpoiledBread24
      @SpoiledBread24 Před 3 lety +1

      @biffa plays inde games

    • @Ryan_Rail
      @Ryan_Rail Před 3 lety

      Somone is a Biffa fan

  • @Jorge_Pronto
    @Jorge_Pronto Před 3 lety +36

    Also, something this video neglects to discuss it the physical point of bottlenecks. Even if you add 24 lanes on a highway, when all trafic leaves that highway on 1 or 2 lanes, it is going to bottleneck one way or another. More roads is never a good option, even from a "flow" perspective.

    • @MobiusPeverell
      @MobiusPeverell Před 3 lety +4

      Bingo. I don't see this cited nearly often enough. All infrastructure built around private vehicles is inherently too low-capacity to handle travel in and around cities. There's a reason public transit used to be called "mass transit." It is able to move much larger numbers of people much faster than private vehicles can, as long as it's built right.

    • @jankees4037
      @jankees4037 Před 3 lety

      It is indeed make enough connecting roads as well. Finally any highway wider than like 2x5 roads is effective as the traffic on the left lanes have to cross so many lanes on the right to exit. Or for example a 2x4 divides into 2 times a 2x2 road that works alright.

  • @BiffaPlaysCitiesSkylines
    @BiffaPlaysCitiesSkylines Před 3 lety +259

    Very interesting 👍

  • @tollboothjason
    @tollboothjason Před 3 lety +9

    The coronavirus has made a lot of people work from home. If they get to continue that, it may keep some of our urban highways from clogging again.

  • @GeorgeButcherprofile
    @GeorgeButcherprofile Před 3 lety +47

    The highway “removed” in Boston was actually turned into a tunnel, part of an enormous network of highway tunnels built over 20 years at great cost and remaining stubbornly congested.
    Not the best comparison for this video unfortunately.

    • @Pacmanghost
      @Pacmanghost Před 3 lety +11

      Shhhh... that doesn't fit the narrative!

    • @FreewayBrent
      @FreewayBrent Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, this is a horribly researched video.
      Also...the Katy Freeway remains heavily congested at peak hours, but overall, it's not *as* slow along the entire corridor as it was before it became one of the world's widest freeways. That, despite the corridor carrying a good 70,000-90,000 extra vehicles per day along any given point compared to a decade ago. Plus, weekend traffic congestion is most definitely lower than before it was reconstructed.
      I can actually list a lot of examples of reduced levels of congestion, after a corridor was widened. US 50 in the Sacramento foothills is a good example, where despite continued growth, the freeway still operates at faster speeds nearly two decades after HOV and truck climbing lanes were added.

    • @aydinsengun5088
      @aydinsengun5088 Před 3 lety +2

      For them to miss such a glaring distinction is incredibly disappointing. Boston has some of the worst traffic in the nation despite all the work we've done to try and fix things. Don't get me wrong, the Big Dig helped a lot but to say we got rid of our highways is just completely false. This is why I never trust Vox videos unless I double check the information myself.

  • @richardscott9871
    @richardscott9871 Před 3 lety +70

    Boston built a tunnel to relocate the highway, they did NOT remove it.

    • @BLeuchteProductions
      @BLeuchteProductions Před 3 lety +9

      I love it. You can walk around downtown Boston now and small businesses and restaurants have flourished. I commuted into Boston for years and never had to go through downtown. And then on weekends I would take the rail in and walk around. Downtown is like a a park now.

    • @ahyes589
      @ahyes589 Před 3 lety

      @GNR Forever Boston is a great city, you should definitely go to visit one day. I used to live in Lowell, MA but ironically ended up moving to Houston. It's hard to tell which has worse traffic.

  • @smrtfasizmu6161
    @smrtfasizmu6161 Před 2 lety +3

    I live in a city in a Southern Europe, here when the traffic jam hits, the first road that becomes untraversable is the highway which goes through the city.

  • @zhenyamediocris4373
    @zhenyamediocris4373 Před rokem

    Wow, that's grand. It's extremely important to explore smth new every day and your team always helps. You're fascinating!

  • @blobba5442
    @blobba5442 Před 3 lety +130

    Hong Kong is a golden example of good transport network.

    • @andrepoiy1199
      @andrepoiy1199 Před 3 lety +6

      For dense areas

    • @YuShawStang
      @YuShawStang Před 3 lety +18

      I lived in Taipei, the place also has the good public transportations.
      But I moved to U.S., because I love driving and hate tiny roads in Taipei.

    • @Hans.Dewitt
      @Hans.Dewitt Před 3 lety +6

      its easy when you have a small population and not that much land to manage

    • @jankees4037
      @jankees4037 Před 3 lety

      Paris or Amsterdam are pretty good as well.

    • @alexanderwang2484
      @alexanderwang2484 Před 3 lety +8

      @@Alaois we are talking about cities in the us too not the whole country

  • @Paterick26
    @Paterick26 Před 3 lety +44

    This reminded me how friggin awesome it is that we made home office the new normal

    • @lydiaderhake2532
      @lydiaderhake2532 Před 3 lety +3

      It's back to traffic congestion in my city. Home work was short lived.

  • @user-gc5xy4cj9b
    @user-gc5xy4cj9b Před 10 měsíci +2

    I appreciate your perspective on this, however, Austin is a prime example in Texas that the lack of highway expansion doesnt necessarily mean that it will deter people from moving to an area or deter them from using the highways. Local authorities in Austin fought highway expansion in order to deter population growth, but the people came anyway, and that led to Austin having the most congested traffic in the state.

  • @PakaBubi
    @PakaBubi Před 3 lety +4

    Glad to live in Europe. I live 40 miles from my work place and the commute takes 45 minutes with train, including walking from the train station to my office.

    • @stachuvonokrutny7071
      @stachuvonokrutny7071 Před 2 lety

      - Lives in EU
      - Uses miles
      😨

    • @PakaBubi
      @PakaBubi Před 2 lety

      @@stachuvonokrutny7071 not using miles but in the USA they do....

  • @theprimest
    @theprimest Před 3 lety +30

    If you're reading this you have potential to create great things. Yes. You.

  • @matthewoyan
    @matthewoyan Před 3 lety +191

    Cities Skylines players: *takes notes*

    • @SonuSingh-xw8zi
      @SonuSingh-xw8zi Před 3 lety +2

      hahahaa.. same. I was thinking about the same thing.

    • @kiel228
      @kiel228 Před 3 lety +1

      Lul

    • @finnrummygaming
      @finnrummygaming Před 3 lety +4

      Cities Skylines traffic doesn't really work the same way. 99% of cars on the road are citizen-owned, and whether citizens drive depends on distance, speed limits, and whether they own a car. Plus, people in Cities Skylines cannot work from home! They must get to work somehow.

  • @Stratelier
    @Stratelier Před 3 lety +11

    "If you build it, they will come" is indeed the epitome of induced demand. (Yet somehow _it's_ considered positive while induced demand is a negative?)

    • @raulandj
      @raulandj Před 3 lety

      I don't get why everyone treats induced demand as a negative, the same principle applies to Public transport. They opened up a freeway bypass that connected a poor suburb to a local university in my area, enrollments for the poor suburb went up because what was a 90-minute bus trip turned into a 20-minute car or 30-minute bus trip.

    • @Stratelier
      @Stratelier Před 3 lety +3

      @@raulandj The problem isn't induced demand in and of itself, but that the roads are overburdened partly _as a result of_ induced demand.

  • @nombusomlambo1794
    @nombusomlambo1794 Před 3 lety +35

    The Katy Highway looks like something from my nightmares. Knowing me I'd get so lost with all those lanes

    • @whiteclifffl
      @whiteclifffl Před 3 lety +1

      Then stay in Africa.

    • @unlockedaccount
      @unlockedaccount Před 2 lety

      @@whiteclifffl ok ? relevance

    • @whiteclifffl
      @whiteclifffl Před 2 lety +1

      @@unlockedaccount Why would someone named Nombuso Mlambo criticize anything in the United States?

  • @random-np3gn
    @random-np3gn Před 3 lety +6

    Long term solution to any traffic congestion is always an efficient public transport

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes, but walking and cycling as well. Any alternative you give people will release pressure on the roads, and fortunately pretty much every option (with the possible exception of private helicopters) is also more environmentally friendly than using a car to commute.

    • @random-np3gn
      @random-np3gn Před 3 lety

      @@rjfaber1991 I dont think walking and cycling is practical to commute for work. Virtually all people live quite a distance from the work place

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 Před 3 lety +1

      @@random-np3gn Depends how you build your cities. The US infamously has a lot of urban sprawl, which does indeed disincentivise walking or cycling, but most cities in the world are dense enough for it to be perfectly possible.

    • @darryloid3533
      @darryloid3533 Před 3 lety

      @@rjfaber1991 im going to say the some thing

  • @gaotosky1010
    @gaotosky1010 Před 3 lety +45

    So that's why my bridges fail in Poly bridge...

  • @DK-go5ww
    @DK-go5ww Před 3 lety +4

    As an everyday user of Katy fwy over the last ten years I have a few comments that invalidate many of the points made in this video: 1) there is a big reason why authors show the statistics only up to 2014, as in 2018 the expansion plan was finally finished with solving the biggest bottleneck of i10 which is the i10, 290 and 610 (all are at least 6 lines big) intersection at uptown. Once that was done the 290 became a light speed tunnel with no traffic anytime (thanks to increase from 3 to 6 lines of traffic in each direction and HOV lines), i10 received additional lines to exit to 610 not blocked by 290 traffic, drivers now have a flexibility in selection of morning and evening commute routes depending on the traffic conditions at one of the highway options. 2) HOV lines provide fast way to drive in and out downtown in times of worst rush hours - it is also friendly to the modern trends as you need just one passenger on board with you to enjoy it for free, 3) westpark can back you up at any time. Also just as a honorable mention - 290 expansion turned its traffic situation from one of the worst in Houston to the most reliable highway at any time during the day or night

  • @harry5326
    @harry5326 Před 3 lety +5

    As Jay Foreman says "Motorways set a precedent that you are supposed to drive"

  • @dheerajkushal4458
    @dheerajkushal4458 Před 3 lety +13

    I love the way how you guys donot stick to a single topic and diversify yourselves. Thank you for the content.

  • @joelhkbn
    @joelhkbn Před 3 lety +16

    Wouldn't it be better for the US to build railways anyway?

    • @jakubprzybya1058
      @jakubprzybya1058 Před 3 lety +12

      Yes it probably would. But it is the US they don't like smart things

    • @jinjunliu2401
      @jinjunliu2401 Před 3 lety +2

      In the long-term it is better to invest in autonomous driving, because traffic jams practically always happen because of small human behaviours on the road which AI driven cars won't mimic. CGP Grey has a good video on that.

    • @adamt195
      @adamt195 Před 3 lety +3

      @@jinjunliu2401 AVs are unproven technology that still requires 4000lb metal boxes to drive quickly in the same space as pedestrians and cyclists, and it still takes space to park those vehicles. All of that space for parking has forced the US to build things so far apart that you have to drive places. Removing cars means things can be built much closer together and cars are then no longer needed to go everywhere.

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 Před 3 lety +6

      @@jinjunliu2401 No matter how clever your cars become, they still take up (including the gaps between cars) about fifteen square metres, and most likely will still carry only one or two people. Buses, trams, trains and bicycles are all far more space-efficient.

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 Před 3 lety +2

      USA already had a vast railway. They just need to expand it to include passengers.

  • @crazyhayden
    @crazyhayden Před rokem +10

    Building more freeways is like getting bigger pants as a solution to obesity

  • @fluffyunicorn7187
    @fluffyunicorn7187 Před 3 lety +5

    Meanwhile I live in East Texas where we have a two lane highway and most of the time you're the only car on the road 😂