Walkable. Cities.
Not having to wait 55 minutes if you ever miss a train, or hoping a theoretical 15 minutes for a bus with a very high chance of skipping runs or breaking down. And a system to actually be where you want to be, instead of then having to walk multiple kilometers after reaching the central station.
A lot more public transportation ( tram, bus, brt, subway, depending on the budget), mixed zoning, pedestrian zones/streets, proper bike lanes, expensive parking inside the city, bike lease (like Vélib’in Paris), trains to facilitate transit between zones without good public transportation access (like suburbs or countryside) and city center.
Stop making driving hard, start making walking and mass transit easier. They are not the same thing!
Making driving hard just means people either spend more time doing it or they avoid the area as not being worth the trouble.
Investing in public transportation and bicycle infrastructure has always been a good way of getting cars off the road.
The answer is well planned mass transit. I have been to Tokyo. Took their bus, subway, and bullet train. They work flawlessly together connecting millions of people. I believe the public transit in Japan runs far more efficient than the ones in the US. They also are profitable unlike the one here swimming in debt.
Walkable cities and mass transit. I’ve traveled in Tokyo, Seoul, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore. All of them have very good public transport.
Building networks of reliable, consistent, affordable and SAFE public transportation
- Accessible & free public transportation options
- Mixed zoning, so places where people work/eat/shop/etc. can be near where they live
Finish the gd high speed rail @california 😭
Porverty.
Before Vietnamese Sai Gon was still called Sai Gon, there was a lot of car on road.
When Sai Gon change name to HCMC (i.e: communism triumph over greedy capitalism), lot of cars disappeared, replace by bycycle, then motorcycle until today.
So, porverty to the point that convert car from necessity to luxury is a best way to reduce car.
Encourage remote work wherever possible.
Bosses hate this one. The things they’ll do for a full office…
Oh here they just make it increasingly harder to use a car inside the city without a matching increase in public transportation offer and seemingly bank on everyone becoming a cyclist or using these dumb motorized scooters things.
And given how annoying certain cyclists can be (not all of them, but many are) that ain’t looking good.
Same in my area. They introduce meters, take away free parking areas, lower the speed limits, ban left turns off main streets.
But they don’t fix the sidewalks, they don’t make a nice alcove for the bus stops, they have the trains but you need to pay a fortune to get to them in parking, they don’t install bike lanes, they treat little paths in woods like suburban streets, and they don’t have the crosswalks sorted.
Meanwhile Walmart lets me park for free.
I like how they made my street a one way street that changes way at each intersection, making it impossible to drive in straight lines. They also keep demolishing ugly concrete roundabouts to then rebuild a similar, just as ugly, vegetation-less concrete roundabout.
Ebike subsidies.
Accessible and affordable and prompt public transport