Submitted by mocha_sweetheart t3_zw253n in singularity
NewCenturyNarratives t1_j1vunbq wrote
Reply to comment by Clarkeprops in Driverless cars and electric cars being displayed as the pinnacle of future transportation engineering is just… wrong. Car-based infrastructure is inefficient, bad for the environment and we already have better technologies in other fields that could help more. An in depth analysis by mocha_sweetheart
I don’t think that trains and bikes would work out in the middle of nowhere, obviously. I just don’t understand why places like LA, Houston, and Denver lack all of the infrastructure that would make it count as a city
Surur t1_j1vy562 wrote
Imagine you start a new city. You could either built a road network for $1 million a mile, or a train network for $150 million per mile, and still built a road network.
Imagine your city is expanding, and you are adding new suburbs. You can either extend your roads for $1 million per mile or extend the rail for $150 million.
Imagine you have to run your rail network at a loss, and few people use it, as they already have cars and you have a very good road network already that is more convenient.
Imagine your taxpayers do not use the rail in any case, and vote against rail extensions, since they don't plan to use it.
Still don't understand?
Clarkeprops t1_j1vykgk wrote
I’ve played sim city. I get it. Toronto is not a new city. You can’t expand the streets. None of those things can be added without taking away from others. It’s taken 10 years and 12.5 billion just to put in a crosstown light rail and has colossally fucked traffic in that area 24/7 for over a decade now. It doesn’t always work the same as it does on paper.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments