His solution isn't to make it suck less. His just says how great it is to live somewhere that was designed around walking because when the city was established that was pretty much the only option.
The Southern US is designed around cars because until fairly recently it was very sparsely populated, so everything had to be designed around cars and air conditioning in order to develop. It was the correct decision at the time, and changing it now is much more difficult than simply saying "be like this city that was established before the steam engine."
Oh I feel you. Iâve spent a decent amount of time in the southern US. Lots of wide open spaces and cities built on massive scales.
There wonât be any immediate fixes for these places. But there are steps that can be taken. And plenty of cities that are more densely populated, even in the north, Midwest, and west coast are just as terribly designed. Those are what infuriate me most. Los Angeles just makes me mad. Itâs a giant concrete jungle full of absolutely necessary cars and it doesnât need to be that way. 1 in 35 Americans live in LA County and yet itâs one of the worst cities in terms of public transit.
There are obviously other systemic problems. Cities being designed around cars isnât the only one.
But your rage shouldnât be directed at the people who want to make public transit options suck less.
His solution isn't to make it suck less. His just says how great it is to live somewhere that was designed around walking because when the city was established that was pretty much the only option.
The Southern US is designed around cars because until fairly recently it was very sparsely populated, so everything had to be designed around cars and air conditioning in order to develop. It was the correct decision at the time, and changing it now is much more difficult than simply saying "be like this city that was established before the steam engine."
Oh I feel you. Iâve spent a decent amount of time in the southern US. Lots of wide open spaces and cities built on massive scales.
There wonât be any immediate fixes for these places. But there are steps that can be taken. And plenty of cities that are more densely populated, even in the north, Midwest, and west coast are just as terribly designed. Those are what infuriate me most. Los Angeles just makes me mad. Itâs a giant concrete jungle full of absolutely necessary cars and it doesnât need to be that way. 1 in 35 Americans live in LA County and yet itâs one of the worst cities in terms of public transit.