I’m in Toronto Canada and it’s a very car dependent landscape unfortunately and honestly I’m a little jealous seeing European places and how nice they are with their rich history. Meanwhile here in Ontario we have quadruple-carriageways and stroads lined with strip malls and big-box stores with their expansive parking lots. Unless you’re with friends, going outside can be pretty bleak to the eye.

My ideal town would be as such

  1. a car-free and dense downtown area with rowhouses and condo units above cafes and shops

  2. lots of trees and greenery

  3. traditional architectural design

What would you think for yours?

  • hddsx
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    Bike lanes benefit car drivers if and only if bike lanes encourages more bikes. Taking away one entire car lane to put two not often used bike lanes benefits nobody - and that is the case in the city I cited.

    I’m all for infrastructure improvements, I just don’t think bike lanes is the way to go. Perhaps once mass transit is introduced, we can reduce car lanes for bike lanes, but I don’t believe the area I used to live is at that stage yet.

    • frostbiker
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      In practice, transit only works in sufficiently dense neighborhoods. It is either not economical or not frequent enough in typical North American suburbs. Bike lanes work in suburbia: you place them in roads where the speed and frequency of car traffic is currently discouraging would-be cyclists.

      Bike lanes cost pennies and you offen don’t need to take any car lanes away because you can simply paint the existing car lanes a little narrower.