These housing, anti-car articles posted to HN have a such an emotional and dramatic feel. I'm not saying there isn't any truth to it. But it feels the same as American political propaganda. There's a distinct over-dramatic shrieking to it.
Yup. No matter the cause, it’s the end of the world. In my experience the reason is escalation: you make a reasonable case, respondents argue in over-the-top tones, or in bad faith. Easy to escalate in turn. Eventually it’s impossible to have a moderate opinion, relayed in good faith, and hope to have any effect whatsoever.
Well, to be fair, parking is AT LEAST as important as housing, since housing without parking is pretty damn useless in almost every city there is. There are very valid reasons that most of the population of the world (and especially the US) simply refuse to live anyplace where public transit is the only option - it just sucks. Always.
No. There are many places where it’s perfectly viable and pleasant to do without a car, through some combination of walking, biking, and public transport. Granted, most of those places are outside the US, but even in the US there are a few decent spots, I’ve lived in them.
Not every location adopts the approach of building a car dependent hellscape, and then using the very car dependence they have created as justification to continue the car dependent approach.
Would also go so far as to put forth any college town with a climate where a bicycle will get you around most of the year without dying from freezing to death or heat exhaustion.
Whether or not those cities are "better with a car" doesn't really matter here. OP was asking what "cities you can live in without a car", and you can do that in all four of those (I've done so in Seattle and San Francisco). Whether or not you love to do it doesn't change the fact that it's perfectly possible.
And Mt. Rainier? Really? Again - the question was whether or not you can live in a city without a car. Rainier is two hours outside of the city, so it's not even a part of the question.
LOL guess everybody refuses to live in Tokyo, New York, London, Hong Kong, Singapore, Berlin, Amsterdam, Paris, and so on, as evidenced by the severe lack of people who live in those cities.
More to the point, parking regulations _nudge_ people into owning cars since low density places means you have to drive _everywhere_. And the more you drive, the less you walk to the point where it becomes a seldom, maybe Sunday afternoon walk and at that point, it's clear to see how owning a car can overtake your life. And so you drive, and when you get to where you want to go, you need parking. It's a vicious circle. Desire to own a car -> drive instead of walk etc -> build parking -> shops & houses become separated by oceans of parking -> desire to own a car.
Living in a dense, walkable cities where your friends and resources are close is a healthy and sought after lifestyle. You should try it.
Parking is more important than housing? How is that conclusion reached?
I wish we didn't need cars as much as we do but every time you see a block of apartments built with minimal/no parking you know what is going to happen once people move in. The streets are littered with cars fighting for parking space.
Simply taking away car spaces from buildings doesn't seem to work. It doesn't convince people to "not have a car".
Japan has a thing whereby cars are not allowed to park on the street though, along with proof-of-carspace upon buying a car. Maybe that should be the model to go for?
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 39.3 ms ] threadNot every location adopts the approach of building a car dependent hellscape, and then using the very car dependence they have created as justification to continue the car dependent approach.
Holy shit lol. I usually kinda roll my eyes when transit activists use the phrase "car brain" but it just clicked.
How do you plan to get to Rainier?
Whether or not those cities are "better with a car" doesn't really matter here. OP was asking what "cities you can live in without a car", and you can do that in all four of those (I've done so in Seattle and San Francisco). Whether or not you love to do it doesn't change the fact that it's perfectly possible.
And Mt. Rainier? Really? Again - the question was whether or not you can live in a city without a car. Rainier is two hours outside of the city, so it's not even a part of the question.
Living in a dense, walkable cities where your friends and resources are close is a healthy and sought after lifestyle. You should try it.
I wish we didn't need cars as much as we do but every time you see a block of apartments built with minimal/no parking you know what is going to happen once people move in. The streets are littered with cars fighting for parking space.
Simply taking away car spaces from buildings doesn't seem to work. It doesn't convince people to "not have a car".
Japan has a thing whereby cars are not allowed to park on the street though, along with proof-of-carspace upon buying a car. Maybe that should be the model to go for?
Article says no rationale or explanation was given.