Streetsblog.net
Why Are U.S. Transit Agencies Failing to Implement Modern Train Designs?
Almost every urban rail system in America lacks a key design feature that's become standard in cities around the globe: open gangways, which let people easily walk between cars, increasing capacity and leading to smoother operations.
April 6, 2015
Biking Skyrockets Where San Diego Added Buffered Bike Lanes
Build bike infrastructure and they will ride. It's true just about everywhere, including San Diego.
April 3, 2015
Albuquerque Bike Advocates’ April Fools Prank Could Turn Prophetic
Every April Fools Day, we'll see several dream scenarios announced on different sites in the Streetsblog Network -- you can call them pranks, but they're also exercises in imagining a better future. This one from Albuquerque yesterday really hit its mark.
April 2, 2015
“Less Parking, More City”
Adding parking spaces might seem like the answer to traffic problems, but it ends up making them much worse.
April 1, 2015
The Case for Letting States, Not Cities, Shape Development Near Transit
A bill circulating in the Connecticut legislature -- HB 6851 -- would give state officials greater control over development near transit stations.
March 31, 2015
Don’t Be Mistaken: Vancouver Gets a Lot for Its Transit Dollar
Vancouverites go to the polls in May to decide whether to raise sales taxes to fund a slate of transit improvements. But polls show the measure is headed for defeat.
March 30, 2015
Comparing 20 Years of Housing Growth in American Cities
Here's an interesting way to visualize how different regions are growing (or not). Using a tool developed by the University of Virginia Demographics Research Group, Michael Andersen at Bike Portland shares these charts showing where housing growth has happened relative to city centers. The dark brown lines show the number of occupied housing units at one-mile intervals from the urban core in 2012, and the orange lines show the distribution in 1990. The gap between the lines tells you where housing growth has happened, and there is huge variation between regions.
March 27, 2015
Car Storage for a Few Trumps Safe Streets for All in San Diego
A major street safety campaign in San Diego is running up against the fierce territorial instinct that only on-street car parking can instill.
March 26, 2015
When “Congestion Reduction” Policy Actually Doubles Down on Congestion
The powers that be in Northern Virginia are getting ready to divvy up $350 million between a list of transportation projects. But in this growing, congested region, highway projects always have an edge over transit in these types of budgeting sessions, thanks to some old-fashioned policies that come from the state DOT.
March 25, 2015
How Wisconsin DOT Distorts the Numbers to Sell Highway Projects
The Interstate 94 expansion in Wisconsin is a textbook example of how state DOTs manufacture the case for billion-dollar highway projects.
March 24, 2015