4 ways to make a city more walkable | Jeff Speck

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  • čas přidán 20. 06. 2024
  • Freedom from cars, freedom from sprawl, freedom to walk your city! City planner Jeff Speck shares his "general theory of walkability" -- four planning principles to transform sprawling cities of six-lane highways and 600-foot blocks into safe, walkable oases full of bike lanes and tree-lined streets.
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @matthewsawczyn6592
    @matthewsawczyn6592 Před 4 lety +1553

    I recall being happy to walk 45 minutes to a destination in Rome, because of the sheer beauty on every street

    • @elizabethbennet4791
      @elizabethbennet4791 Před 4 lety +44

      Im happy to walk 45 minutes in New York, San Francisco, St Petersburg, MIami, Charleston, Theyre all gorgeous cities.

    • @goliathsteinbeisser3547
      @goliathsteinbeisser3547 Před 3 lety +110

      That is EXACTLY the point. Make a city that people are happy to BE in, not just a hellscape of grey and noise that one traverses as fast as means permit.

    • @petez4608
      @petez4608 Před 3 lety +1

      Thats for sure

    • @IsThisRain
      @IsThisRain Před 3 lety +41

      This is why mixed-use zoning is extremely important. Not every city can be a Rome, Paris, or NYC, but mixed-use shifts the interests from 'sightseeing' to _socialization_ and _convenience._

    • @SuperiorPosterior
      @SuperiorPosterior Před 3 lety +12

      I walked 45 minutes from high school to home every day, and I'd do my homework in a nice little park.
      Then they tore it up to put in a new apartment complex...

  • @katepeterson5478
    @katepeterson5478 Před 6 lety +2320

    Meanwhile, in my city: "We made bike lanes and nobody uses them, why would we build more?" But about 75% of those bike lanes are directly uphill in the suburbs and none of them connect to each other...

    • @ruslbicycle6006
      @ruslbicycle6006 Před 5 lety +270

      And bike lanes are so efficient at moving people they are never congested. A bike lane that carries twice as many people as a car lane will look empty while the car lane is full of backed up cars.

    • @xtusvincit5230
      @xtusvincit5230 Před 5 lety +26

      @@ruslbicycle6006 Because bikers don't obey traffic laws.

    • @knucker3
      @knucker3 Před 5 lety +53

      @@xtusvincit5230 Seriously. The bike lane near by house is the most dangerous street to cross because they don't stop, they don't even slow down at intersections. And they don't make any noise so you don't hear them coming. Unless you try to walk across the street when they are zooming down all parts of it. Then they yell at you like it's your fault they had to actually slow down for once.

    • @xtusvincit5230
      @xtusvincit5230 Před 5 lety +30

      @@knucker3 Yes, the biker's mentality is that they are superior to others and all must yield for them.

    • @bikerusl
      @bikerusl Před 5 lety +125

      @@xtusvincit5230 what makes you think that? Is that a kind of complaint like jaywalking? That those in a city need treat cars as sacred and not use the public space and never dare slow down the important business of driving big empty cars in circles?
      Motor Vehicle Law's are not morally defensible to be applied to bikes or pedestrians. It is one of the great injustices of a city that cars have a right to kill people.
      Cars don't belong anywhere near humans. They make great video games, for those who prefer the artificial world to the real.

  • @eizhowa
    @eizhowa Před 7 lety +4004

    I think one of the benefits of living in an old european city is that the streets were made to accomodate people (and horses), not cars.

    • @JallenMeodia
      @JallenMeodia Před 7 lety +80

      Being European and explored the USA a fair bit gotta disagree. A lot less stressful traveling around the wide-flat multi-laned roads than it is trying to squeeze two lanes of traffic down roads originally built when cars weren't a thing.
      Also narrow roads will only slow drivers down when they're not use to narrower roads. Make every road narrow it becomes the norm and people become less weary of driving on them.
      As with most things in life one extreme or the other doesn't work just gotta find a happy balance.

    • @eizhowa
      @eizhowa Před 7 lety +307

      +Jallen I meant a benefit to pedestrians. Cars usually end up having to drive around old cities. Driving around London, for example, is faster than driving through it.
      I grew up in the country side where the roads were narrow and the "natives" did drive fast. However, in the old town where I live now, the roads are so winding, there are traffic lights and zebra crossings everywhere which slows cars down.
      I think it is great that I can live in a city without owning a car or being very dependent on busses etc. I can walk where I need to go:)

    • @TheRealE.B.
      @TheRealE.B. Před 7 lety +43

      I live in Pittsburgh, and so many things about our city don't make sense from a design perspective because it was founded before Americans started planning their cities (or driving cars), but it IS relatively walkable until you reach the suburbs. Especially during rush hour, when driving isn't a very attractive option.

    • @NikiK57
      @NikiK57 Před 7 lety +32

      Only partially true - most cities have areas like "Old town" - with small streets etc. But the cities have grown 100x since those times... So its basically only the city centers, old towns etc which are like that.

    • @eizhowa
      @eizhowa Před 7 lety +17

      +Burn Ea Can you name a industrialized civilization from the early 1800s that knew that they had to prepare for future infrastructure like water pipes and electricity, or knew how diseases spread?
      And remember, Americans were once European, so they are no smarter. Unless you think that a persons IQ increases when they cross they travel to the US?

  • @PhillProbst
    @PhillProbst Před 5 lety +784

    The most important factor to promote “walkability” is convenience. If you want to encourage walkability, walking must be more convenient than driving.

    • @sorrowandsufferin924
      @sorrowandsufferin924 Před 5 lety +36

      I think, if you make this happen, if you advocate parallel parking and trees as a way to seperate walkways from streets, people WILL consider walking more convienient than driving, especially on beautiful days. I mean, what would you prefer on a sunny day: Sitting in your car, watching outside, concentrating on the road so you don't get into an accident; or walking along the streets, enjoying the sun and the buzzing of people that gives off a feeling of alive, passing that one restaurant and seeing people eating with each other, smiling and talking? Walking is much more enjoyable than driving - and that comes from me, a person who prefers going by bus over going by train in every case except for time required. I just love the street. But I also love the alive, walkable city that we have so often here in Europe.

    • @alohatigers1199
      @alohatigers1199 Před 4 lety +5

      Phillip Probst
      No, because time is against you.
      I’m not walking to school that takes 20 minutes. I can drive in less than 2. Wow, I save 18 minutes. 18 mins, I can study for an exam. Efficiency 101.
      I’m not walking home with a cart 🛒 full of groceries, it slows you down and it’s tiring.
      I can load all that in a car because a car has a trunk to store stuff. And boom, I’m home in less than 5. So easy. Efficiency.
      I save so much time.
      24 hrs. That’s not enough time.
      9 hrs of sleep.
      2 hr workout.
      9 to 5 day job
      6 hr school.
      Total: more than 24 hrs.
      Not enough to time to relax.
      Again, time is against you. Every second should not be wasted.

    • @Itstime1231
      @Itstime1231 Před 4 lety +39

      @@alohatigers1199 Depending where you live, it is faster to walk than try to find a parking spot, pay for the parking spot, put the ticket on your car, and then go to groceries. If you live far, car, if you live close, walk.

    • @falleithani5411
      @falleithani5411 Před 4 lety +24

      ​@@alohatigers1199 While you drive, you _need_ to concentrate mostly on driving in order to be relatively safe. You waste 2 minutes. While you walk, you can mostly zone out and break down exam questions and research and budgets and mathematics in your head. You waste 0 minutes. The only time I rely on motor vehicles is when I'm transporting a large amount of stuff, and even then, I prefer to use a wagon or public transportation, so I don't have to cut into my thinking time for it.
      Personally, I walk to think, memorize, design, rehearse, compose, and/or analyze. I end up walking for about 2 hours per day on average for those purposes (it effectively _is_ my workout), which means that even though I walk everywhere, some of my walking is just in circles and with no destination, simply because it is _such_ an effective and efficient way for me to work and think that it is often worthwhile to keep walking a bit longer even after reaching my destination, to take full advantage of the focus and clarity it gives me.
      That said, if you are very unused to being a pedestrian, it does take time for it to become second nature to the point where you can let your mind wander without risk, but it's a _lot_ easier to do and faster to learn than driving. Time spent acquiring and mastering a useful skill is not wasted.
      Lastly, if you can actually find a way to cut the car _completely,_ that's a _lot_ of money saved, when you add up the purchase costs, maintenance, insurance, and gas. Efficiency.
      That said, yeah, depending on the job you have and the layout of your environment, this stuff is not always an option. The sooner we can move to a post-scarcity economy where working is no longer _required_ to earn a living, the better it'll be for everyone's education and health. Holding down a job and attending school at the same time is brutal.

    • @FractalPrism.
      @FractalPrism. Před 4 lety +3

      ah yes, all the times i wanted to walk 15 miles to costco then trek home with a bulk of goods.

  • @DramaGeek1225
    @DramaGeek1225 Před 2 lety +116

    I live in one of the cities he cited at the beginning as the "typical American city" and can confirm that it has all the issues he discusses. I technically live close enough to work to be able to walk or bike, but because of the way the city is designed, I would not consider it a safe walk. I used to live in NYC and I miss the walkability and access to public transportation.

    • @sircharlesmormont9300
      @sircharlesmormont9300 Před rokem +3

      I am in a similar position. I live 10 minutes away from work by car. To get to my nearest bus stop, however, is a 20 minute walk to an abandoned parking lot with no lighting and just a teensy sign for the bus stop. The sidewalks are not well maintained. Taking the bus turns my commute from 10 minutes to at least an hour - with a half hour extra tacked on before I clock in. I would much rather pay an hour's wage for a ride share than go through all of that stress first thing in the morning. Now, when I was a very, very young child, my city still had a bus service that came into the neighborhoods. My mom took the bus to work. My grandma took the bus to work. Bus access was part of the appeal of the neighborhood. I, too, once lived in NYC. The public transportation was amazing. I felt so free and so capable, able to get anywhere and everywhere without a car. It was great! We need a drastic overhaul of public transportation here in U.S. cities.

  • @PrincessNinja007
    @PrincessNinja007 Před 6 lety +158

    I've had friends get picked up by cops for walking on the interstate. A huge issue for non-walkable towns (I can't speak for cities, my county seat is 12,000) is that if you don't have a two-car household (which no college roommates have), you're screwed if anything happens to your car. You better pray it's just a flat or an oil change, because even if you're willing to risk your neck to walk 2-3 miles in a ditch next to the highway, it can be literally illegal to walk to work

    • @coffeewithextrasuga1017
      @coffeewithextrasuga1017 Před 2 lety +17

      WTF! I've never heard of walking being illegal. The US finds many ways to surprise me each day.

    • @Lurch685
      @Lurch685 Před 2 lety +16

      @@coffeewithextrasuga1017 highways in the US usually have signs on the on ramps that entry is prohibited to pedestrians, bicyclists, and non motorized vehicles.

    • @LW1Tok
      @LW1Tok Před 2 lety +7

      Only in the US can something like walking be illegal.

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 Před rokem +9

      @@LW1Tok no, he means walking alongside highways, that is illegal in europe too (autobahns)

    • @LW1Tok
      @LW1Tok Před rokem

      @@Blackadder75 I never knew that. We learn something new everyday 😌.

  • @gneruinseruihnutshnu
    @gneruinseruihnutshnu Před 6 lety +934

    Hello from Europe, a place where this talk about cities that you cannot cross without a car sounds sci-fi.

    • @asatsumaorange9296
      @asatsumaorange9296 Před 6 lety +72

      If US cities had reached high population before the car, they would have been built with walking in mind and we wouldn't be having this talk. Philadelphia has about as many people as it did 100 years ago, and it's all mixed-use neighborhoods and rowhouses. Charlotte was a small city then and its population is 20 times higher now. The people who built Charlotte assumed driving was an option and things spiraled out of control so it became the only option.

    • @gearandalthefirst7027
      @gearandalthefirst7027 Před 5 lety +49

      as someone who lives in a big city, I can tell you it's dystopian scifi if anything

    • @zotaninoron3548
      @zotaninoron3548 Před 5 lety +10

      @@gearandalthefirst7027 It is clearly cyberpunk run by huge megacorps that track your every movement through your phone and status updates to your social media. :D

    • @spinnito
      @spinnito Před 5 lety +9

      Yeah that's true most of the time an average sized American car, wouldn't fit a downtown old medieval narrow European street, this it's real!, and I take my electric Chinese scooter skate and I reach everything in 5 minutes, greetings of a Mexican in Spain.

    • @silauz1552
      @silauz1552 Před 4 lety +3

      Yes but for a flat in the center you have to be rich.
      And this leads to Not have stores in the inner City and your Work place is often 5 to 10 km away which leads to many people want Back a Car.

  • @TheKirschbaumfee
    @TheKirschbaumfee Před 6 lety +921

    As a european this blews my mind. i mean i 'knew' that many american cities and suburbs were build for cars but i now know i didnt imagine how this really looks like :D

    • @UkrTrashRemix
      @UkrTrashRemix Před 6 lety +8

      You just haven't been to Ukraine (especially Kyiv)

    • @ThePhDK1d
      @ThePhDK1d Před 5 lety +126

      It’s worse than it looks Ann trust me. I lived in a suburb that the supermarket was 800 m away from me and I had to take the car for a 2 min ride just because there were no streetwalks and I didn’t feel like being ran over. It’s depressing honestly not being able to take a walk just to clear your mind.

    • @jaredlangley6924
      @jaredlangley6924 Před 5 lety +4

      @@ThePhDK1d No you drove because poor people or crazy people walk in the U.S.

    • @mabus4910
      @mabus4910 Před 5 lety +20

      I know what you mean. But in europe we made some planning mistakes on our own. Like building small industrial zones all over the places to spread them out. Now you have trucks cruising everywhere instead of stearing them where you want them to be (on motorways).

    • @_Diana_S
      @_Diana_S Před 5 lety +7

      Why is this so surprising? Did not you learn history in school? We did, I remember being told about medieval cities where second and third floors were extending over the first ones so that they almost touch and block all sun out, household garbage and "liquids" disposed directly in streets, streets, that even at ground level were just wide enough to let a horseman with a lance pass through? You can not think that cities that were built much later, in another part of the world, with different geography and in different economical conditions will be planned the same as medieval ones. You would not be surprised, that Brasilia, for example, looks completely different than old European city, right? Because it is a specially planned city with special purpose, right? Same with Texas and other American cities and towns - they were built for those conditions and were made comfortable for people who lived there at that time and who almost all had more than 1 car in the family. Now times are changing, and we can not judge those cities more than we are judging now dirty medieval European cities with their narrow streets.

  • @davidsw92
    @davidsw92 Před 7 lety +1051

    I for one would LOVE to see bicycle/pedestrian infrastructure prioritized over automotive--I'd bike everywhere if it were safer.

    • @dlwatib
      @dlwatib Před 6 lety +8

      I would bike only if I had an electric bike.

    • @AlanPeery
      @AlanPeery Před 6 lety +41

      Roads are important -- but even city center deliveries can be scheduled for out of main hours delivery

    • @Mr8lacklp
      @Mr8lacklp Před 6 lety +40

      Dave W it doesn't even need to be prioritised over automotive infrastructure. At the moment a lot of our infrastructure is built around the car and the car alone. As soon as we try to implement equality between bike/pedestrian travel and car travel that's a huge step forward.

    • @bcubed72
      @bcubed72 Před 6 lety +2

      Dave W
      Or you could grow a pair and play in traffic, the way I did when I was a bicycle commuter. No "bike lanes" back then!

    • @bat_bro1lewis491
      @bat_bro1lewis491 Před 6 lety +15

      In my home town of Porthcawl in Wales, we had very bad pedestrian and bike infrastructure but then a small few kilometer path and then almost everyone used instantly. This proves if you build they will come

  • @adlinks662
    @adlinks662 Před 7 lety +966

    Went straight on Cities: Skylines after this haha

    • @MrPanda-mp8dt
      @MrPanda-mp8dt Před 7 lety +10

      +ADLINKS same here lmao

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Před 6 lety +40

      Yeah, Cims can be pretty stupid at times, but at least they will gladly walk and cycle.

    • @ColeRees
      @ColeRees Před 5 lety +20

      My first thought: cant wait to apply all of this to my cities lol

    • @horribleIRUKANDJI
      @horribleIRUKANDJI Před 5 lety +2

      same lol

    • @hello.bello.6788
      @hello.bello.6788 Před 5 lety +1

      Me too hahaha

  • @IAMDIMITRI
    @IAMDIMITRI Před 5 lety +231

    I will definitely apply it to my own city someday when I have one.

    • @user-pn9qp1sr3e
      @user-pn9qp1sr3e Před 2 lety +3

      City skylines lol

    • @Kasiarzynka
      @Kasiarzynka Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@user-pn9qp1sr3eLiterally there reason for my CZcams search that gave me this video, lol 😂

  • @lesliengo8347
    @lesliengo8347 Před 3 lety +46

    Having lived in Metro Vancouver and knowing the City of Vancouver is actively trying to reduce carbon emissions by 2050, it is very relatable. Adding more bicycle lanes, different transit options, wider and decorated sidewalks, and being educated about why we should prioritize walking over driving will make a city more livable and enjoyable. Love the humour as well!

    • @switzerlandch4986
      @switzerlandch4986 Před 3 lety +2

      I totally agree with you!

    • @No-iy9cx
      @No-iy9cx Před rokem +2

      Agree! North American city need more public transit and bike lanes.

  • @daidaitastic
    @daidaitastic Před 7 lety +175

    "an optional instrument of freedom rather than a prosthetic device" cool

  • @charmingyoutuber2408
    @charmingyoutuber2408 Před 7 lety +845

    I think I just found what I want to do for a living

    • @jessicahwlo
      @jessicahwlo Před 7 lety +51

      stay gold read Jan Gehl's books as well if this inspires you!

    • @wen6519
      @wen6519 Před 6 lety +101

      that is the sweetest thing i've read in a CZcams comment

    • @jimdevalk
      @jimdevalk Před 6 lety +3

      stay gold just walking for a living? Cool.

    • @captain-sturdy
      @captain-sturdy Před 5 lety

      Random Nobody who are you?

    • @captain-sturdy
      @captain-sturdy Před 5 lety

      Random Nobody did you work in the field?

  • @ferjo3192
    @ferjo3192 Před 6 lety +54

    1:30 - Four things you need simultaneously to make a walkable city: 1. Proper reason to walk; 2. safe 3; comfortable; 4. interesting

  • @peterjones701
    @peterjones701 Před 6 lety +72

    I live in Salt Lake City, and something that I think is viewed as our greatest weakness could become our greatest strength: our blocks. Yes, our 660' blocks are enormous and unwalkable; but I think if we were to carve them up and let them be a mixed-use wonderland, each block could become its own little neighborhood! Living, working, shopping, and recreation could all be on one block! Salt Lake City started out, in a sense, as mixed-use. The Plot of Zion planned for people to live and farm and trade all on their block. It didn't have zoning districts of live here, work there.

    • @ruslbicycle6006
      @ruslbicycle6006 Před 5 lety +7

      Yeah, put in gardens. And the roads are all wide enough to take cars off half and make it usable for people (not cars). I've been in Provo also. It's all surprisingly bikeable, just needs some support to transform and be a happier place for everyone

    • @misconceptionindustries2968
      @misconceptionindustries2968 Před 5 lety +2

      I thought salt lake was great trains and buses everywhere there is alot worse cities trucks me!

    • @Lurch685
      @Lurch685 Před 2 lety +1

      See: Barcelona

  • @cilstr
    @cilstr Před 7 lety +76

    thank you for explaining why i find those new sprawling 'Neighbourhoods" give me the creeps and make me feel ill. :)

    • @SovietReunionYT
      @SovietReunionYT Před 5 lety +7

      It's unsafe for kids to play with such sharp objects. Be careful or you might cut yourself on that edge.

  • @Arjay404
    @Arjay404 Před 6 lety +33

    That commercial bridge at the end was so beautiful.

  • @alexiswhite5419
    @alexiswhite5419 Před 7 lety +25

    I wish he would come to singapore
    our streets are not un-walkable but i would love for his ideas to improve our streets more

  • @nickjoeb
    @nickjoeb Před 7 lety +216

    We need this planning everywhere we can have it! For bigger areas I want trains instead of grid lock!

    • @nickjoeb
      @nickjoeb Před 7 lety +14

      What I'm saying is walkable cities are a good idea. Though in places like the Midwest they may be an ineffective choice due to how the community's are spread out. So there I think a train system would be preferable.

    • @ricisebastiano
      @ricisebastiano Před 7 lety +12

      Rail infrastructure is incredibly expensive, just go with buses; a much cheaper option

    • @nickjoeb
      @nickjoeb Před 7 lety +24

      I don't agree with that. Road maintenance is exceedingly expensive and doesn't actually solve the traffic problem as well as rails. Not to mention getting taxed for rails makes many people stop having a need for cars which is a huge drain on many American's income in the midwest.

    • @zpetar
      @zpetar Před 6 lety +7

      Any good public transportation system can solve traffic problem. It doesn't matter if it is buses, trains... If one bus can transport 60 people compare space on road that one bus needs vs 15-60 cars. To move 10.000 people there is need for roads to accommodate less than 200 buses vs 2,500-10,000 cars.

    • @Mr8lacklp
      @Mr8lacklp Před 6 lety +10

      Richard Zuberecz buses are just worse in every way except for price. Compare to trains they are uncomfortable and cramped. When there is construction being done on the rail and you therfore have to drive half the distance by bus your commute doubles so they are slow as well. Trains may be more expensive but they are also vastly superior. Buses are good to move people within one quarter or one township but if you want travel between towns trains beat them by miles.

  • @octaviasmith5002
    @octaviasmith5002 Před 4 lety +8

    As a non-car owner transplant in Nashville, I can assure you sidewalks *do not* exist except near the gentrified areas downtown and by the universities. I literally walk 2 feet from traffic ON THE ROAD on my commute to work and back. Moving to Minneapolis later on this year and buying a bike. They have pedestrian bridges and bike lanes all over the city (^-^ so excited).

  • @johnpacheco3396
    @johnpacheco3396 Před 5 lety +14

    The best part of many New York buildings that you had a business on the first floor of your building to shop and eat. Same in areas like Hong Kong and others country's were large housing buildings with a Mall in the lower areas

  • @darkknight072
    @darkknight072 Před 7 lety +162

    Houston here, can confirm freeways suck.

    • @johnc6158
      @johnc6158 Před 7 lety +6

      darkknight072 try California

    • @simo947
      @simo947 Před 7 lety +5

      i've been on a road trip from washington to california, oh boy the freeways around san fransisco is a nightmare

    • @TimJSwan
      @TimJSwan Před 5 lety +1

      He's not talking about freeways, which are designed to take you far distances. He's talking about roads that take you from one place to another within the same city.

    • @SovietReunionYT
      @SovietReunionYT Před 5 lety +6

      In the US, there are apparently freeways INSIDE cities! I guess that's what happens when the expand road -> traffic increases -> expand road etc. cycle is taken to its logical conclusion.

    • @Sanif514
      @Sanif514 Před 4 lety +4

      dude its the fucking worse, we've got fairly good places to go to all around but no sidewalks on any streets outside of suburbs as if walking was only meant for leisure to these people.

  • @LaurokaPlay
    @LaurokaPlay Před 6 lety +130

    As a european currently in the Unites States, this is the main reason why I want to move back to Europe asap

    • @Josh-wq8tt
      @Josh-wq8tt Před 4 lety +7

      Just got to find the right town. As you can see in this video, it's so different depending on where you go. Myself, I prefer to stay away from the cities completely.

    • @andrewtucker94
      @andrewtucker94 Před 4 lety +15

      Yeah I enjoyed my US trip but found the lack of pavement/sidewalks in some smaller towns baffling.

    • @Josh-wq8tt
      @Josh-wq8tt Před 4 lety +9

      @Northern Lights it is hideous. Not sure why anyone would want to live in suburbia to be honest. It's not for me and I'm from here. For me I want nothing more than wide open space and no close neighbors though.

    • @friedadavis5887
      @friedadavis5887 Před 4 lety

      Same

    • @catnium
      @catnium Před 4 lety +1

      nah traitors get to stay in the usa

  • @notourz
    @notourz Před 4 lety +4

    I moved from Mesa, AZ to Durango, CO for school and the walkability in each city is like night and day. I love walking in Durango because it has a great transit system, safe sidewalks, narrow streets, diversified small city blocks. In Mesa, even when the weather was great, I hated walking places because the sidewalks are scary, roads huge, and everything is a sprawl. I couldn't tell why the two places were so different, but now I do and I hope Mesa becomes more walkable.

  • @IcelanderUSer
    @IcelanderUSer Před 5 lety +114

    brilliant. I'm so glad people are realizing how we destroyed our cities by accommodating automobiles. you can have the best of both worlds without leveling entire cities, like Houston or Fort Worth. All they had to do in Houston was build decent commuter rail into and out of the city. this would encourage density downtown, where the jobs would be, without having to create a parking space for every single worker.

    • @williamt.sherman9841
      @williamt.sherman9841 Před 5 lety +6

      parking lots are ironically valuable real estate at that point since now the owners can develop what was previously free car storage lots.

  • @GamerGurke15
    @GamerGurke15 Před 7 lety +85

    I am so happy living in Berlin, a European and green city where people decide to walk for an hour to get to a friend instead of taking the subway. Also mentioning that no one would ever think about getting into a car to get to a friend if it isn't absolutely necessary.

    • @acejames7718
      @acejames7718 Před 5 lety +3

      It's nice to hear good things about Berlin. Most of my life I only heatd horror stories. Good to hear ur getting a fair shake these days.

    • @acejames7718
      @acejames7718 Před 5 lety

      heard*

    • @AlexFlodder
      @AlexFlodder Před 5 lety +12

      Another reason for walking/cycling compared to driving. Is alcohol.
      No drunk driving when you walk.

    • @JulieHiltbrunner
      @JulieHiltbrunner Před 5 lety +7

      In Texas, you could die walking an hour mid-day in the summer. But I imagine that’s true of other places in the winter.

    • @jasperfk
      @jasperfk Před 4 lety +8

      Creating Julie Silversmyth Then why did people settle there? They must have walked in the 17th, 18th, 19th centuries, surely?

  • @tristanmoller9498
    @tristanmoller9498 Před 5 lety +16

    Such a genuine guy. Really enjoyed it

  • @woogiemonster
    @woogiemonster Před 7 lety +34

    The image at 6:01 is hilarious (and sad) when you see it out of context, but that was done as a desperate, last-ditch effort to help accommodate cripple people who would use the facility for physical therapy because a standard access-ramp would be impossibly steep. But of course, where there is free convenience, there are also people who don't need it using it anyway.

    • @woogiemonster
      @woogiemonster Před 7 lety +4

      I know, that's why I specified _out of context_ and said _people who don't need it will use it anyway._ That specific gym is photographed dozens of times (google *gym escalator*) and the joke is always that it's a gym that seems to be catering to the lazy, and this specific photo reinforces that by having people use it who have no visible handicap. All I was trying to say is that yes the joke is funny, but *the truth* is that they were actually just trying to help cripple people.

    • @gpwgpw555
      @gpwgpw555 Před 5 lety

      One of my dislikes was when I came to a handicap parking space, I would pass it up just to have a health person park in the spot after me and sprint off to were they were going.

    • @jennyhughes4474
      @jennyhughes4474 Před 4 lety +2

      Don't think you could get a wheelchair on those escalators safely or at all?

    • @xandercorp6175
      @xandercorp6175 Před 4 lety +2

      @@woogiemonster The truth is that helping crippled people hurt everyone else because of human nature.

    • @blazethegryphon9990
      @blazethegryphon9990 Před 4 lety

      @@xandercorp6175 Path of least resistance, such is nature....

  • @boazthomassie4919
    @boazthomassie4919 Před 7 lety +550

    I did a short presentation on suburban sprawl in college. it's terrible for the environment and great for segregation

    • @brendarua01
      @brendarua01 Před 7 lety +45

      Segregation that was supported by federal mortgage programs to boot.

    • @Mario-sy4nw
      @Mario-sy4nw Před 7 lety +49

      +Boaz Chicago mastered the art of segregation by Highway. And there were rumors that certain overpasses were made purposely low enough to prevent buses from going under them in order to keep neighborhoods uniform. The problem with the burbs, (one of the many problems), was that they were basically glorified military barracks that isolated people from themselves and the outside world. When governments tried to force integration by housing law people just packed up and moved to the other side of town. The solution to the problem is to create great cities and people will naturally integrate without even thinking about it (because the city will be a natural meeting point) instead of using a misguided government program.

    • @brendarua01
      @brendarua01 Před 7 lety +6

      Oh great! A zombie troll now. rofl Ok, you can go back to your cave. It will be light soon and I'm sure your mama will have the basement ready.

    • @MrElectricVibration
      @MrElectricVibration Před 7 lety +6

      Would a zombie troll feed off dead topics ?

    • @rsmith155
      @rsmith155 Před 7 lety

      mrbandishbhoir Fucktards

  • @barbaranevesmaia2462
    @barbaranevesmaia2462 Před 5 lety +61

    Hi, I'm a deaf student of architecture and urbanism. Please put closed captions in the videos. #Moreaccessibility, please.

    • @toddkes5890
      @toddkes5890 Před 5 lety +24

      4 ways to make a city more walkable:
      1) Proper reason to walk. This can range from making cars having to go slower, to avoiding the cluster of building types. (By cluster he means don't put a park area, then an industrial area, a housing area, etc. Put a park near homes, a few small industries scattered around, etc.
      2) walk has to be safe and feel safe. No sudden open areas where the walker feels exposed to being hit by cars, or dealing with excess rain/sun. Covered areas allow people to know that if the clouds overhead turn into rain, they can dry off. Confine cars to their lanes, and leave room for walkers. One example was putting it where you had car lanes, then car parking lanes, then bike lanes, then sidewalks. Walkers knew thy only had to watch out for bicycles, and bicycles had parked cars to protect them from cars.
      3) walk has to be comfortable. No sudden ledges to get off the road.
      4) walk has to be interesting. If people get bored walking to a location, they will turn around and not continue. Shorter blocks (200 feet vs 600 feet) mean there is more variety/storefront to see.
      Hope this helps

    • @junkjackbuildernz
      @junkjackbuildernz Před 5 lety +6

      check description.
      ted.com/translate apparently has closed captions

  • @AnthonyFrancisJones
    @AnthonyFrancisJones Před 5 lety +4

    Fantastic - and all so true. Living and having a real interest in Telford (UK) it is good to see how these ideas can be used in a New Town. So much of what works is also counterintuitive and it takes passion, drive and determination to get ideas such as these implemented.

  • @Basta11
    @Basta11 Před 2 lety +12

    This man is doing God's work. We need walkability back to our streets in the US, so badly.

  • @HenryWiygul
    @HenryWiygul Před 6 lety +1

    How fascinating! It seems so intuitive yet completely overlooked!

  • @voiceofreason1663
    @voiceofreason1663 Před 7 lety +5

    Amazing speech. Hopefully the city I live in implements this idea,

  • @hbarudi
    @hbarudi Před 5 lety +21

    A step in the right direction toward reducing dependence on fossil fuels and I like that bridge in Columbus Ohio which is close to where I used to live before it existed. We need more walkable and bikeable roads in the US.

  • @CoderShare
    @CoderShare Před 5 lety +12

    This is my favorite Ted Talk ever.

  • @garciavashchino1
    @garciavashchino1 Před 5 lety +1

    strange how warm these ideas are... they convey such peace... i never noticed... i would love to walk every where like work, food, shopping, fun things... it is not easy when you work in an airport... but i love these ideas...

    • @elietheprof5678
      @elietheprof5678 Před 5 lety

      Airports are definitely an exception :)

    • @exchangAscribe
      @exchangAscribe Před 2 měsíci

      theyre not ideas, this exists in many other places around the world and has for a long time. the U.S. is just horrible at making cities and is obsessed with cars. and they dont care about things like beauty.

  • @joshamorris
    @joshamorris Před 6 lety +42

    #1 way to make city more walkable is to make housing affordable for people who need to walk to live inside city limits.

    • @elietheprof5678
      @elietheprof5678 Před 5 lety +10

      It's actually the other way around. There just aren't enough walkable areas. Short supply and high demand make the rent too damn high.
      (The vast majority of homes are in places where you need a car.)
      The solution is to build more downtowns. Turn boring residential neighborhoods into hot spots with lots of fun stuff happening :)

    • @mashedtomato2079
      @mashedtomato2079 Před 3 lety

      @@elietheprof5678 amen!

  • @JanBaars
    @JanBaars Před 7 lety +56

    bike lanes in New York are still horrible compared to what we do in Holland

    • @sorrowandsufferin924
      @sorrowandsufferin924 Před 5 lety +10

      I've been to Utrecht recently.. The amount of bikes is ridiculous. Never thought I'd experience bike traffic before. That is amazing

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 Před 3 lety

      Help us improve it then

    • @majacovic5141
      @majacovic5141 Před 3 lety +1

      @@greenmachine5600 watch the channel Not Just Bikes

  • @notourz
    @notourz Před 4 lety +18

    Cities have so much potential to be designed for the people who live and commute there but very few cities in the US are willing to make it so. It is tragic.

  • @MarcoSibeiEndau
    @MarcoSibeiEndau Před 5 lety

    Thank you so much.
    It's really inspiring indeed.
    Thank you sir

  • @Slommy99
    @Slommy99 Před 4 lety +1

    Fascinating stuff, I’ve always found architecture interesting so this was a treat to listen to.

  • @ScooterinAB
    @ScooterinAB Před 4 lety +6

    It's surprising how important it is to build cities for the people who live in the city rather than the cars that live there.

  • @bristoled93
    @bristoled93 Před 5 lety +4

    I walk everywhere, I live in the middle of Bristol England which is like most old cities in Europe, very walkable.

  • @markcarey8426
    @markcarey8426 Před 4 lety +2

    Brilliant! Just what I was looking for. Reminds me of A Pattern Language.

  • @cheryldowse6055
    @cheryldowse6055 Před 6 lety

    Fantastic talk! So necessary!

  • @IAMDIMITRI
    @IAMDIMITRI Před 5 lety +3

    I don't have a drivers licence because I always lived in a city where I could walk and tram everywhere. I liked it!

  • @citiesskyscrapers4561
    @citiesskyscrapers4561 Před 5 lety +3

    Great talk. Really interesting, educational and entertaining.

  • @DNModels
    @DNModels Před 7 lety

    Fantastic video! Thank you!!!

  • @ahikernamedgq
    @ahikernamedgq Před 4 lety

    This video autoplayed after another video I was watching ended. This was a great, interesting talk. Very enjoyable.

  • @robinturnbull1731
    @robinturnbull1731 Před 4 lety +4

    So glad British towns and cities are built at a time where carts were the widest things

  • @narayanbabu5323
    @narayanbabu5323 Před 7 lety +12

    thank you this helped me in SimCity and cities skylines

    • @Koellenburg
      @Koellenburg Před 6 lety +2

      me too, it works surprisingly well :) .... just keep the industry away from the residental zone^^

  • @rhejamphi
    @rhejamphi Před 6 lety

    What a spectacular presentation! Concise and intelligent.

  • @ethandenton3393
    @ethandenton3393 Před 5 lety

    Excellent talk. You have an amazing capacity to relate information, and ideas.

  • @angelic8632002
    @angelic8632002 Před 7 lety +41

    Welcome to Europe?
    Seriously though. Good talk. More like this please :)

  • @mickesmanymovies
    @mickesmanymovies Před 5 lety +4

    It would seem I live on the opposite side of that scale... From my apartment I could reach any shop or mall by bicycle in 15 minutes or less.
    On a couple of occasions when going on shorter airplane trips to our capital, I've even strapped my carry-on luggage to the back of my bike and pedalled to the airport (where the city has built a really nice, heated indoors garage for bikes - cars are referred to the outside lot). At a leisurly speed I can get to the airport in just about 10 minutes.

  • @st105900
    @st105900 Před 5 lety

    I loved this talk!!

  • @thisisbs808
    @thisisbs808 Před 5 lety

    Wow, very interetsing talk! Honolulu desperately needs this guy!

  • @xiloeteknowledgiesllc1973
    @xiloeteknowledgiesllc1973 Před 6 lety +23

    Bikes and vehicles should never be mixed. Dedicate walking and biking corridors every 2nd or 3rd block. The point is accessibility. Trucks are completely forgotten by these designers and planners. We have to think about the vehicles that bring the things we like to consume and purchase.

    • @_Diana_S
      @_Diana_S Před 5 lety +3

      This is just a wishful thinking, not real life design. Unfortunately, some of these ideas are being forced on us already without much consideration and taking into account existing situation.

    • @wolf1066
      @wolf1066 Před 5 lety +3

      Trucks should be completely replaced by rail, especially between cities/towns. There's no justification for having large semis entering city limits.

    • @toddkes5890
      @toddkes5890 Před 5 lety

      @@wolf1066 You still have to get goods from the railyards to the businesses that need them. What would you recommend for this, instead of in-city trucks?

    • @wolf1066
      @wolf1066 Před 5 lety +11

      @@toddkes5890 Smaller vehicles - vans and *small* trucks that don't have the same dimensions or do the same damage to road infrastructure or congest traffic as much as 18-wheelers and articulated trucks.
      A decent rail infrastructure could allow for more freight yards scattered across a really large city, reducing the distance required to freight bulk goods so you don't have to fill a large truck to service numerous businesses, you can service a lesser number of businesses with smaller vehicles heading out in different directions.
      Rail can be run from the electrical grid, which gives the option of renewable energy sources, rail has its own infrastructure separate from roadways so other vehicle owners aren't subsidising the damage done to the roads by the 18-wheelers and aren't stuck in traffic behind large slow vehicles and aren't constantly being cut off by arrogant wankers who think that "18 wheels = automatic right of way".

    • @fortunefed8719
      @fortunefed8719 Před 5 lety +12

      @@toddkes5890 There are many cities in Europe who's centers are completely closed to traffic except deliveries in small trucks (think UPS sized delivery trucks and smaller) and everyone walks as they have for literally hundreds of years. You can get groceries, clothes, a nice dinner, specialty items, all within 5 minutes of your home. Mail delivery systems are even on foot with a small pull-cart. By shrinking the size of shops and having more of them, each shop then only needs a small truck to keep it stocked.

  • @luizaugustoprado1358
    @luizaugustoprado1358 Před 7 lety +48

    i discovered it playing sim city 2000.

  • @zkmalik
    @zkmalik Před 7 lety

    beautiful talk.

  • @ffrreeddyy123456
    @ffrreeddyy123456 Před 5 lety

    I love hearing my local area referenced. I grew up outside Portland and always wondered what others meant by a city block, they bigger then my hometown blocks, but not much. NY would be a different story.

  • @Raven.flight
    @Raven.flight Před 5 lety +9

    Interesting video. As an avid cyclist I'm interested in anything that increases cycle friendly cities. I have always thought that a strong 'share the road' advertising campaign would work well, but I'm seeing what he means where 'every lane is a bike lane' means 'no lane is a bike lane'. Yeah, I might brave it, but most people wont, and you have to get a critical mass effect to reduce risk of injury.
    Bike lanes are definitely the way to go, but they also have to be real bike lanes, not afterthoughts. The bike lane that is full of road refuse because it never gets swept (because, well, we didn't really mean it, we only want to clean where the cars go) or buckled due to tree roots just push cyclists back onto the road, and then the drivers are pissed off because the cyclists 'aren't using the bike lane'.

  • @frankhooper7871
    @frankhooper7871 Před 5 lety +111

    "people drive faster on wider streets" - the Dutch know this well and intentionally narrow streets to slow traffic down.

    • @sorrowandsufferin924
      @sorrowandsufferin924 Před 5 lety +2

      The dutch also take the danger of being run over by bikes instead, at least in smaller cities (or is this just a thing in Utrecht? or in parts of the cities?)

    • @stijn4771
      @stijn4771 Před 4 lety +15

      @@sorrowandsufferin924 I'd rather live in a good quality city with the occasional dodging of a cyclist (which is actually a good thing, cause that means that people are meeting eachother and that the city is bruising), than in a low quality city such as the examples this man gave in the talk, where everyone never meets anyone in the street as everyone travels by car.

    • @sorrowandsufferin924
      @sorrowandsufferin924 Před 4 lety +1

      @@stijn4771 Wasn't criticizing the occasional cyclist, I was merely remarking upon the paradox of jamming the streets with bikes so much that the only benefit is an early grave from burnout because no-one gets anywhere anymore on these filled-to-the-brim-with-bikes-streets :D

    • @stijn4771
      @stijn4771 Před 4 lety +1

      @@sorrowandsufferin924 Haha, then I must have misunderstood your point. In that case, yes, (especially) Amsterdam is a crowded place considering cyclists. You'll get a burnout before you can arrive at your destination XD

    • @funnymanatwork
      @funnymanatwork Před 4 lety

      I'll still drive fast, the dutch can't tell me what to do!

  • @TheLilboy6
    @TheLilboy6 Před 4 lety

    What a great speech, thanks a lot

  • @thelastoddman901
    @thelastoddman901 Před 4 lety

    I would love to sit all day to listen to his lecture.

  • @durpface1087
    @durpface1087 Před 7 lety +625

    When you play too much cities skylines.

    • @mengyugao8050
      @mengyugao8050 Před 6 lety +49

      We as players never build cities for people in that game... With 12 lanes wide expressway and AI only uses 2 lanes

    • @magnushmann
      @magnushmann Před 6 lety +42

      I'm danish, so I always build cities with tons of public transport options, pedestrian paths and bike lanes everywhere, mixed plot type layout, interesting street layouts and only with the road size necessary. Basically how cities in Denmark are or will be. This yields very good results in the game.

    • @mengyugao8050
      @mengyugao8050 Před 6 lety +21

      Yes, and the danish way is how you should build cities. People in real life and in Skyline are looking for the fastest option. If EXPRESSway is the answer, than your city will be congested. With other options being faster, there won't be congestion.

    • @Rallarberg
      @Rallarberg Před 6 lety +11

      "Too much"? I don't understand.

    • @jayturner5242
      @jayturner5242 Před 6 lety +4

      Build 2 lanes then.

  • @MrElectricVibration
    @MrElectricVibration Před 7 lety +7

    If it can be done then i consider this a worthwhile investment.
    Mostly for the health benefits of walking instead of sitting and air pollution levels dropping close to homes.
    Having little shops come back to life is a pretty nice bonus 2 :).

  • @simyk810
    @simyk810 Před 4 lety

    Thanks Jeff, this is informative indeed!

  • @DaDenzelWashington
    @DaDenzelWashington Před 7 lety

    Good ideas. Natural protection for sidewalks and narrowing streets to bring down speeds. I'm advising my municipal on accessibility and we are currently adjusting the city to be more friendly to people with disabilities. Surely will use this.

  • @georgewu5
    @georgewu5 Před 5 lety +3

    My block contains (4) 40 stories and (12) 6 stories container housing with pocket Central Parks between them which are on top of the garages. each block is connected by footbridges over the street with traffic. All these are built along the side of high-speed railways, between Hong Kong and Beijing. George Wu, ARCHITECT, A.I.A., NCARB 2018-11-24

  • @oleksandraverchenko9920
    @oleksandraverchenko9920 Před 3 lety +4

    Check Soviet Union block planning. Everything you need is in 5 minutes from your apartment by foot. Kindergarden, School, Store, Hospital e.t.c.

  • @brittanyhumphreys3250
    @brittanyhumphreys3250 Před 3 lety

    So interesting! Thanks for sharing this insight.

  • @EduArchs
    @EduArchs Před rokem

    superbe talk

  • @liuton2005
    @liuton2005 Před 7 lety +48

    I guess this guy is super good at Sim City.

    • @Koellenburg
      @Koellenburg Před 6 lety

      fun Fact here.. the Standard Sim City 5 road had already four lanes :D

    • @gabrieljardine
      @gabrieljardine Před 4 lety

      guess not. Sim City and most of the cities simulators don't give points to some human values, as far as i know.

    • @KrishnaSharma-nx9dy
      @KrishnaSharma-nx9dy Před 3 lety

      @@gabrieljardine city skyline does

  • @Ritaaw1
    @Ritaaw1 Před 4 lety +3

    I live in Tampere, Finland. We have a small airport outside the city and there is buses and taxis that can take you there. I found it funny when I saw american tourists hire a car for such a walkable city with good transportation system. Hiring a car in Tampere is not necessary unless you are going to a national park or a small village far away, which I´m hoping they got the car for.

  • @ThecodbroZ11
    @ThecodbroZ11 Před 6 lety

    Inspirational talk !

  • @cirvis240
    @cirvis240 Před 7 lety

    This was a surprisingly great video!

  • @abramthiessen8749
    @abramthiessen8749 Před 5 lety +5

    Living in Thunder Bay I see a large gap between the older city cores where I can run to three different grocery stores 15 minutes from my house with lovely sidewalks featuring benches and statues along a narrow road. And the newer parts of the city which have wide dangerous roads with zoned suburbs and shopping districts.
    I bike everywhere and so when I went to the movie theatre down the 4 lane road and found out they weren't open, I decided I wanted to go to the mall that was just 1 block away. But to get to that mall, I had to get past a 7ft fence topped with barbed wire which only opened at the vehicular entrance to the theatre parking lot. There is no sidewalk and so I had to walk briefly the driving lane to leave the theatre.
    And for what? Why do they seem to hate pedestrians so much?
    Why did I have to enter the mall by the "contractor's" entrance or else walk a quarter of the way around?
    Half of the city seems to understand and the other side just doesn't.

    • @_Diana_S
      @_Diana_S Před 5 lety +2

      Why don't you write to your city council or whatever it is called?

    • @abramthiessen8749
      @abramthiessen8749 Před 5 lety +1

      @@_Diana_S Good idea.

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 Před 6 lety +218

    I miss my time back in China, everything I needed was within walking distance. No suburbia except for the super rich, mostly empty investment homes anyway.

    • @cluengove
      @cluengove Před 6 lety +1

      lol

    • @guendoff2400
      @guendoff2400 Před 5 lety

      shanghai is amazing

    • @grondhero
      @grondhero Před 5 lety +7

      Do you miss the 50 lane highways where traffic can be backed up for days?

    • @grondhero
      @grondhero Před 5 lety +1

      @@pixiepandaplush I'm certain those 50 lane highways don't keep everything in walking distance, though. ;)

    • @OBSMProductions
      @OBSMProductions Před 8 měsíci

      @@grondhero Dude they got high speed rail now (although I've heard the station placements/land use isn't the best)

  • @ItzJul
    @ItzJul Před 7 lety

    This is like the best video. I agree on 100%

  • @Agent99M
    @Agent99M Před 7 lety

    Really enjoyed this. For me the missing element from the talk especially in the context of the dominance of the car was the importance of public transport to (or closer to) the city.

  • @mollyskittles4499
    @mollyskittles4499 Před 6 lety +4

    This is the most ted talkiest Ted talk ever

    • @sorrowandsufferin924
      @sorrowandsufferin924 Před 5 lety

      Nice to hear you know what this is. I have, frankly, no idea of the concept, I simply like a couple of these. I guess what I'm trying to say is, I like Ted Talks, even though I don't know what Ted Talks are

  • @a7i20ci7y
    @a7i20ci7y Před 5 lety +11

    Decentralizing commercial space is difficult when Amazon and Walmart have destroyed all the small businesses.

  • @hemmel777
    @hemmel777 Před 4 lety

    That last one was great

  • @saranbhatia8809
    @saranbhatia8809 Před 2 lety

    Great talk !

  • @georglp3006
    @georglp3006 Před 5 lety +9

    I suddenly really feel like playing Cities Skylines

  • @GenJotsu
    @GenJotsu Před 7 lety +4

    Knowledge is power. Ignorance is bliss. You choose.

  • @BabvBlues
    @BabvBlues Před 7 lety +2

    wow! good videoi

  • @brushfuse
    @brushfuse Před 5 lety

    Very interesting and succinct talk.

  • @bogbog
    @bogbog Před 4 lety +7

    Meanwhile me living in an underdeveloped country:
    *Cries in Sri Lankan*

  • @thereprehensible435
    @thereprehensible435 Před 6 lety +3

    15:00
    "How swoopy is that curve...?"
    Whoa buddy, that blacksoot engineering garble flew a little high over muh head.

  • @549231
    @549231 Před 2 lety

    This is fascinating.

  • @XanderB42
    @XanderB42 Před 6 lety

    Now I’m glad I live close to Portland OR

  • @viorelagocs
    @viorelagocs Před 7 lety +20

    What prevents those cul-de-sac neighbourhood residents in the US from opening small shops on their property, so other people in the area don't need to drive a few miles to the closest mall for groceries and stuff? I thing it would be a smart way to get back their neighborhood from big developers and turning it in their own. That would promote walking as well. And it would offer jobs too. Why don't they do that?...

    • @danidrinx7842
      @danidrinx7842 Před 7 lety +25

      Viorel Agocs because american laws are written by people on the payroll of large, international corporations.

    • @TabbyeLynne
      @TabbyeLynne Před 6 lety +40

      Strict zoning laws that were originally made to prevent integration and that are still in place now and the pressure from the car/oil industries to keep them on place

    • @orangeziggy599
      @orangeziggy599 Před 6 lety +30

      Zoning laws that prevent business from operating in the suburban neighborhoods.

    • @isaackarjala7916
      @isaackarjala7916 Před 6 lety +7

      Zoning, and it's pretty difficult to get semi trucks into neighborhoods

    • @poisonpotato1
      @poisonpotato1 Před 6 lety +7

      Viorel Agocs Zoning laws and Licenses
      Taxes, fees, inspections, and requires a lot of time and money

  • @freddylubin
    @freddylubin Před 7 lety +3

    It's really a shame to see what's happening to Hanoi, one of my favorite cities, as more and more people buy cars, rather than the minibikes which fit in well with a walkable city.

  • @ryanstanley640
    @ryanstanley640 Před 5 lety

    Great speaker.

  • @dominicbrown3519
    @dominicbrown3519 Před 5 lety

    That was awesome

  • @normanzoelle5154
    @normanzoelle5154 Před 7 lety +8

    European city`s beeing much older, we generally don`t have these problems in Germany.

    • @waltermarlin1730
      @waltermarlin1730 Před 7 lety +7

      Americans are generally self-centered and look at other people in public more like annoying obstacles than anything else.

    • @erikziak1249
      @erikziak1249 Před 7 lety +5

      I put Germany, Austria and Switzerland (at least he german speaking parts) as prime examples of working public transport systems which everybody should learn from. There are exceptions of course.

    • @kayem3824
      @kayem3824 Před 5 lety

      Norman Zoelle You just like living off selling cars to the rest of humanity.

    • @Malte.Research
      @Malte.Research Před 4 lety

      And still Germany needs to do a lot regarding Bikelanes.. to catch up with the Netherlands or Copenhagen:)