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Die-Nacht t1_j345uz6 wrote

So? There are likely many cars on the belt trying to get to Manhattan.

It's the central business center of the region. Reducing car demand to it will cause reduced congestion everywhere around it.

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kolt54321 t1_j34al16 wrote

So to reduce car demand you suggest... Eliminating roads?

That's the most backwards way to look at it that I can imagine. Why not knock down every residential building in manhattan to reduce rent if you're going down that route?

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Die-Nacht t1_j34lhm2 wrote

That wouldn't reduce the rent. It would reduce housing supply, which would reduce how many ppl can live there. And that's a bad thing. This is why rent is so high in NYC: housing supply is artificially kept low.

Reducing road space reduces road supply, which reduces the amount of driving, which in term reduces traffic. Which is a good thing. This is the opposite of "induced demand", which is a well studied phenomena

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kolt54321 t1_j34n1i9 wrote

Why would reduced road supply reduce the amount of driving? In transit deserts (there are plenty of them in NYC), you need to drive to get anywhere.

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