1

In other words, as u/Right_Yard_5173 mentioned: "Expensive, Unreliable Public Transport Is Increasing UK Car Dependence and Slowing the Economy"

1
Rethinking Urban Futures Through Children’s Books (urbancyclinginstitute.substack.com)

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/58856517

The car-oriented imaginary becomes embedded in the stories we tell children, making motonormativity seem natural[...]

Saw this article shared by Urbanism Now:

"Peter Füssy for the Urban Cycling Institute, explores how children’s books reinforce car-oriented thinking from an early age and argues that radical children’s literature can help reimagine urban futures by challenging motonormativity and opening space for alternative mobility imaginaries."

If you have any good children books that goes against this trend, let me know

4
Rethinking Urban Futures Through Children’s Books (urbancyclinginstitute.substack.com)

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/58856517

The car-oriented imaginary becomes embedded in the stories we tell children, making motonormativity seem natural[...]

Saw this article shared by Urbanism Now:

"Peter Füssy for the Urban Cycling Institute, explores how children’s books reinforce car-oriented thinking from an early age and argues that radical children’s literature can help reimagine urban futures by challenging motonormativity and opening space for alternative mobility imaginaries."

If you have any good children books that goes against this trend, let me know

1
Rethinking Urban Futures Through Children’s Books (urbancyclinginstitute.substack.com)

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/58856517

The car-oriented imaginary becomes embedded in the stories we tell children, making motonormativity seem natural[...]

Saw this article shared by Urbanism Now:

"Peter Füssy for the Urban Cycling Institute, explores how children’s books reinforce car-oriented thinking from an early age and argues that radical children’s literature can help reimagine urban futures by challenging motonormativity and opening space for alternative mobility imaginaries."

If you have any good children books that goes against this trend, let me know

1
Rethinking Urban Futures Through Children’s Books (urbancyclinginstitute.substack.com)

The car-oriented imaginary becomes embedded in the stories we tell children, making motonormativity seem natural[...]

Saw this article shared by Urbanism Now:

"Peter Füssy for the Urban Cycling Institute, explores how children’s books reinforce car-oriented thinking from an early age and argues that radical children’s literature can help reimagine urban futures by challenging motonormativity and opening space for alternative mobility imaginaries."

If you have any good children books that goes against this trend, let me know

1
1

From the article:

Pedestrianizing or 'pacifying' streets increases local revenues for municipalities and businesses, reduces pollution, protects health and improves children's autonomy. Towns around the world are opting for more humane cities.

With the goal of humanizing cities through design, municipalities around the world are investing in pedestrian areas and bike lanes, or removing infrastructure for cars (such as free parking). These are alternatives to the functionalist car-based development of the 20th century. So far, the results have been more than positive: less pollution, greater autonomy for children, less noise, improved health and increased local income for councils and retailers.

“During the 20th century, we invented the territories of false remoteness, we transformed our dense cities and their Mediterranean tradition and living in the street, into territories with functions (live, work, leisure, industry), further and further away,” explains Ana Montalbán, technical coordinator of Red de Ciudades que Caminan (an international association of municipalities and councils that seek to restore public space for residents).

For citizens, this meant becoming pedestrians relegated to the sides of streets that they once inhabited. With the loss of streets, neighborhood commerce fell. The increase in online shopping in the early 21st century also didn't help much, often proving fatal to local stores. But the main driver and symptom of this vicious circle was the car, “a machine that fits perfectly into this dynamic” of urban fracture.

The road pacification cycle

Usually, the total or partial pedestrianization of a street, as well as initiatives that remove parking space for cars or that replace conventional lanes with protected bike lanes, are protested by residents and local business organizations.

“Commerce has objected the most,” said Montalbán. Generally, commerce is opposed to change, not to friendly cities. The opposition to pedestrianization is “very visceral”, and changes as soon as the damage of the 20th century is reversed:

In Graz (Austria), a 30 kph limit was adopted throughout the municipality in the 90s, despite strong opposition: less than half of residents supported it. Once the benefits became evident, support for the measure rose to 80%.

In Ljubljana (Slovenia), a total of 12 hectares were closed to car traffic in 2007, with only 40% of the population in favor of pedestrianization. In 2015, 92% of residents were happy with quality of life in the city. In 2017, 97% of inhabitants “opposed the reopening of the center to motor vehicles.”

These are not isolated cases. Paris, New York, Marrakech, Florence, Vancouver, Melbourne, Buenos Aires, Madrid, London, Vienna, Dubrovnik, Berlin, Vitoria, Bogota, Boston and Médina de Fès (a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a “shopping paradise” according to National Geographic, and the largest pedestrian area in the world) are some examples.

Cars don't buy, people do

Donald C. Shoup, from the Department of Urban Planning of the University of California (UCLA), is the world's leading parking expert. In his book The High Cost of Free Parking (2011), he explains the cost for cities, residents and businesses to subsidize parking. Simply unsustainable.

In fact, it has been demonstrated that the policy of minimum parking requirements (minimum parking spaces per business) is counterproductive and ruins municipalities because nobody pays for them. Strong Towns, the space specialized in urban resilience, has a huge library on the subject.

What can cities do? In Fayetteville (USA), they are consolidating the territory by doing away with this minimum parking policy and putting up buildings for mixed residential and commercial use, because they realize that cars don't buy, people do.

To avoid “the risk of urban sprawl where residential areas are spread out with low-density housing”, according to the Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the design of dense urban centers connected by bicycles is also encouraged. In a national referendum in 2018, 73% voted to protect the bicycle in the country's Constitution. The nation is characterized by sustainable public transport, such as the railway network or SwitzerlandMobility, active (walking and cycling) low-impact routes.

Higher volumes of sales

“Merchants overestimate the use of cars and underestimate active transportation,” say the authors of a study in Berlin, where 91% of the revenue came from pedestrians, cyclists and users of public transport. This is a normal (human) reaction to changes. However, it is unfounded. Why?

Perhaps because “people who walk are very invisible”, said Ana Montalbán. In Spain, only 35% of people have a driver's license, according to statistics from the census of drivers of the Directorate-General for Traffic and the INE's population data.

Another study analyzed the impact on local commerce of the total or partial pedestrianization of streets in 14 Spanish cities. “The results show that stores in pedestrian environments tend to report higher sales volumes than those located in non-pedestrian environments.”

In 2016, the city of Toronto (Canada) removed 136 on-street parking spaces in order to install a bike lane on Bloor Street, a commercial corridor. “The monthly spending by customers and the number of customers served by merchants increased,” the study researchers quote.

In 2021, the United Kingdom's Department for Transport published its book Decarbonising Transport, A better, greener Britain, and although it is an estimate from 2020, it projected that improving foot and bike access would increase potential customer traffic by 40%.

However you look at it, pedestrian traffic yields local economic benefits, as well as others related to health care or quality of life. It is an investment in citizens.

5
Will All L1s Move to Ethereum? (www.decentralised.co)
submitted 1 month ago by pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com to c/crypto@lemmy.ml

As noted by u/rhythm_of_eth on r/ethereum:

Article on how Ethereum is capturing alt-L1s masterfully while working towards offering options for sustainable and reliable L2 businesses and making this acreative to L1 network effects and deflation mechanisms in the long run.

Specially relevant: the stats about L2 profit margins, and how widely they vary when blob limits are low, then tend towards less volatile when there's a wider range for price discovery.

Remember, we said that Ethereum is to rollups what cloud service providers are to software businesses. What happened after the cost of using cloud services dropped? The demand grew, and so did the revenues of cloud providers. AWS is the cleanest example here. It continued to cut prices for customers and still grew like a utility.

6

Non YT link https://inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=-AWqpstcraA

Article about it instead of video: https://nltimes.nl/2025/02/25/utrecht-start-construction-largest-car-free-neighborhood-country-next-week

More details on the project here, in dutch: https://www.utrecht.nl/wonen-en-leven/bouwprojecten-en-stedelijke-ontwikkeling/bouwprojecten/bouwprojecten-in-zuidwest/merwedekanaalzone/projecten-in-de-merwedekanaalzone/merwede

The neighborhood, called Merwede, is scheduled to be the largest car-free district in the Netherlands, with 6,000 homes, a housing mix of 30% social rent, 25% middle rent and affordable buy, 45% free sector rent and purchase.

There is also going to be lots of greenery, offering space for many different plants and animals, water collection, and it will combat heat stress caused by concrete/stones.

Besides, it will also have a large underground heat-cold storage system to heat and cool the buildings. Roofs will have solar panels, green roofs, or water storage.

3

« The Welsh capital is following in the footsteps of Paris, which last year tripled parking charges for SUV-style vehicles, leading to a two-thirds reduction in the number of SUVs using surface parking. »

TIL Paris also had this premium charge, hopefully this becomes a new trend everywhere

For those unaware: [...] SUVs were “much larger than your average car, they produce far more wear and tear on our roads, but fundamentally if you hit a child while driving a heavy SUV the chances of that child dying are grossly inflated".

Which other cities do you know that have also introduced higher parking charges on larger vehicles?

8

The Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) is an area in London, England, where an emissions standard based charge is applied to non-compliant road vehicles

10 million people are now breathing cleaner air, fewer children are growing up with stunted lungs and fewer people will have to suffer from asthma, dementia and heart disease

4

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/55494477

Non YT link: https://inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=2cE5JEwRSpU

For 21 years, these trains had enjoyed traffic signal priority, but now Houston busiest light rail line stops at red lights through downtown.

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 25 points 1 month ago

Politico is owned by Germany's largest right leaning yellow press publisher Axel Springer. They love to push Anti-Green, ultra conservative agendas

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 35 points 5 months ago

It is lovely to see so many people training their AIs

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 30 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

That's a common misconception about congestion price in NY. The poor wasn't driving to Manhattan in the first place, they represented only 2%, and the money generated by congestion pricing will be reinvested back into public transport.

Climate Town did a great video on this subject, with more details if you are interested:

New York Declares War On Traffic (A Congestion Pricing Story)
https://yewtu.be/watch?v=DEFBn0r53uQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEFBn0r53uQ

What's really bad for the poor is car centric design, where you are forced to have a car and spend, on average, $12k annually to maintain it

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 29 points 5 months ago

Would you download a train?

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 24 points 6 months ago

Car centric cities by far. Bring back walkable neighborhoods and give me options to move around instead of only being able to be stuck inside a car

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 63 points 6 months ago

Someone needs to help grandpa over here, I only recognize lemmy and mastodon logos

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 36 points 6 months ago

I was prepared to hear the story that the youtuber got sued into oblivion for defamation. Glad to hear they actually worked on improving it instead

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 44 points 6 months ago

If you are in the EU, remember to sign the petition too:

https://eci.ec.europa.eu/045/public/#/screen/home

Deadline is close, 2025-07-31, and we haven't reached 50% yet

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 22 points 6 months ago

Fuck Denuvo

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 41 points 8 months ago

We should actually use an opensource, decentralized and private alternative instead of relying on another centralized service

See Fileverse for example: https://fileverse.io/

[-] pdqcp@lemmy.dbzer0.com 76 points 9 months ago

I have a better alternative: invest in viable alternatives to driving! expand protected bike lanes, build the damn high speed rail, more trains, trams and bus lines. One more asphalt lane for cars wont solve traffic problems :)

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pdqcp

joined 2 years ago