Sep 20, 2016 12:00
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And largely on the comedy - I think there was a place for comedians in shattering some of the restrictive social mores of the past, but a lot of it does seem remarkably pointless nowadays. (Less so in places where such social restrictions are still in place).
The key takeaway from the car article, I thought, was that cul-de-sacs are worse because there are no shops or jobs in them, and so you have to travel further afield, along highways, to get to places that people typically need to get to:
“The reality is yes, you’re safer - if you never leave your cul-de-sac. But if you actually move around town like a normal person, your town as a whole is much more dangerous ( ... )
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Danger in driving is a numbers game in a lot of ways. Risk increases with number of miles traveled. So of course suburbs designed in a way that maximizes the amount of driving a person has to do to run errands increases risk.
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-- Steve's glad his particular suburban experience was in a part that still had sidewalks and a few destinations still within walking distance, including two schools and a shopping mall.
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So in this case, it might be the drivers, not the street layout.
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Whether that comes back to design is a chicken and egg question. Were the roads designed because people want to move faster or are people moving faster because the road allows it? And given that I regularly see people gun it to a speed bump, slam on the brakes to crawl over the speed bump, then gun it again, plain old physics doesn't always make a lot of an impression on drivers.
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In any case, the kind of alternating revved speeding up with screeching stomps on the brakes is exactly what I was calling crazed hot-rodders, and we don't get that here.
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