Search Results for: peak transit

Summer Book Reviews #3: Don’t Call It Sprawl

Rather than the polemics of an activist like Wendell Cox, today’s book is an academic look at the sprawl debate: author William T. (for Thomas) Bogart is dean of academic affairs at York College in Pennsylvania. His book, Don’t Call It Sprawl: Metropolitan Structure in the Twenty-First Century, attempts to analyze cities using data and the latest research.

Though similar in some ways, Robert Bruegmann’s Sprawl: A Compact History was an architect’s view of the sprawl debate. This book is an economist’s view — and (unlike the Antiplanner) not an economist with a particularly libertarian bent.

Bogart shows that urban areas — which he likes to call “trading places” because he sees trade as the main reason people choose to live closely together — are far more complicated that planners understand. Until recently, many planners had a monocentric view of cities; that is, they implicitly assumed that everything revolved around downtown. But that kind of city disappeared in the early twentieth century.

In the last couple of decades or so, planners have discovered the polycentric city, that is that modern urban areas have many job, commercial, and retail centers. For some reason, planners think they have to designate various regional and town centers and then stimulate their growth, as if they weren’t going to grow anyway. Planners then want to connect all those centers with a rail transit system.
If order cialis professional you are having heart related problems, problems in kidneys, Blood pressure are few health conditions in which you should take only when you like to do sex. In the absence of appropriate treatment can increase the chances viagra sample canada of recovery. The medication works with the help of a correct diet, cipla tadalafil price pre-existing treatments and some self control. The most compelling recommended estimations is 100 mg and http://djpaulkom.tv/getting-to-the-bbq-dj-paul-shares-his-cooking-secrets/ levitra no prescription it is not prescribed to take more than one measurement for every day.
But Bogart shows that even the polycentric view of a city is obsolete. Together, the old downtowns and the edge cities/regional and town centers only have about 30 to 40 percent of the jobs in modern U.S. urban areas. That means that planners are ignoring well over half the workers in the region.

For example, advocates of Denver’s FasTracks rail boondoggle bragged that it would put 29 percent of the jobs in the Denver metropolitan area within a half mile of a rail station. But 29 percent is a pathetic number. Since well under half the commuters to downtown ride transit, and even a rail system would not serve other centers as well as downtown, FasTracks will almost certainly never serve even 10 percent of the region’s employees.

I don’t agree with everything Bogart says. For example, he doesn’t see anything wrong with subsidizing 30 to 40 percent of the cost of downtown housing “if that is desired by the city.” Such subsidies may be strongly desired by downtown property owners and developers, but few others in the city are going to benefit.

Nevertheless, I recommend the book to anyone who wants a better understanding of how modern cities really work. We’ve also invited Bogart to speak at the Preserving the American Dream conference in San Jose this November.

Anti-Town Planning #3: Boulder’s Insatiable Demand for Open Space

Imagine the state you live in is 98 percent rural open space. Moreover, almost half of that open space is owned by the federal or state governments and will probably never be developed.

Although your county is one of the more urbanized counties in the state, at least 90 percent of the county is rural open space, and well over a third of that is federal or state land. In fact, even though your town’s population doubled in the last ten years, there is still more than one acre of permanently protected open space for every resident in the county.

Boulder in the moonlight.
Flickr photo by Molas.

Continue reading

Bay Freeway Update: No Traffic Snarls

Will the tanker truck accident that destroyed a key part of the San Francisco Bay Area freeway network cost commuters millions of dollars a day? Will those commuters respond by switching to public transit? So far, the answers seem to be “no” and “maybe.”

Flickr photo by Thomas Hawk

The closure of a freeway interchange that normally sees 80,000 vehicles a day did not result in huge traffic jams yesterday or this morning. Many people may have used the free public transit offered by the state, but so far no reliable reports have said how many. (Transit was free yesterday only; today it should be back to normal fares.) Continue reading

Global Warming: Catastrophe or Convenience?

Yesterday was Earth Day, so it seems appropriate to talk about global warming, which is supposed to be the earth’s biggest environmental problem. I remain an agnostic about global warming for two reasons.

First, I don’t trust computer models such as the ones used to predict how much the earth is supposedly going to warm in the next century. I’ve seen too many models designed to confirm preconceived notions for me to find any of them believable.

Freeman Dyson, generally regarded as one of the world’s smartest men, feels much the same way. “I have studied their climate models and know what they can do,” says Dyson. “The models solve the equations of fluid dynamics and do a very good job of describing the fluid motions of the atmosphere and the oceans. They do a very poor job of describing the clouds, the dust, the chemistry and the biology of fields, farms and forests. They do not begin to describe the real world that we live in.”

Continue reading

Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Last week, I reported that Vancouver’s Mayor Sam Sullivan says that we need density to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Similarly, Salt Lake City’s Mayor Rocky Anderson says that his region should build more light rail in order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Both of these ideas are wrong. Building light rail is increasing greenhouse gas emissions in Salt Lake City. Building high-rise condos instead of single-family homes is increasing greenhouse gas emissions in Vancouver.

Continue reading

Rail/Fire Plan Not Followed

Here’s an interesting congruence of two of my favorite topics: fire and rail transit. Albuquerque’s new commuter train was running by the Islete Pueblo, which was doing a prescribed burn of some of its grassland. The railroad tracks formed one of the borders of the fire, and passengers reported they could feel the heat of the flames as the train passed by.

Apparently, fire plans required that fire managers notify the railroad before doing prescribed burning, but they failed to do so. As New Orleans learned, plans aren’t much good if you don’t carry them out.
To ensure safe results with kamagra tablets however, it is advised to take them djpaulkom.tv levitra professional online as recommended to you. Spurious medicines can cause a lot of damage to levitra online your body. Robert Boyd the buy levitra djpaulkom.tv suggests what he sees as the hitherto missing link in the world of medicine. These are not quite the serious side effects mentioned above then cialis generic overnight you should seek immediate medical attention, as this will ensure you are safe from further harm.
Don’t forget to watch the hot video of the train going by the fire.

More Than 10 Billion Served

Congratulations to the American transit industry for managing to carry more than 10 billion transit trips in 2006, the first year it has done so since 1957.* Naturally, the American Public Transportation Association (APTA) considers this to be proof that we need to funnel even more subsidies into transit.

“This significant ridership milestone is part of a multi-year trend as more and more Americans ride public transit,” says APTA’s president. “This milestone represents 10 billion reasons to increase local and federal investment in public transportation.”

Rapid growth? Click the chart to download a spreadsheet with the actual numbers, which are from APTA Transit Factbooks.

Continue reading

Who Should Get Revenues from Tollroads?

The momentum is growing for using tollroads, particularly with tolls that vary according to the amount of traffic (congestion pricing), to solve urban congestion problems. New congestion-priced toll roads in Minneapolis and Denver have joined such roads in California, and plans are underway to open more in many other cities and states.

In most cases, the revenue from the tolls goes to pay for the roads. In some cases, a regional tollroads authority collects the tolls and uses them to construct new roads and maintain the existing ones.

Electronic toll gate in Singapore, which pioneered congestion pricing.

Continue reading

A Billion Here, a Billion There, Pretty Soon You Are Talking About Real Money

Portland-Vancouver are debating the replacement of the Interstate 5 bridges crossing the Columbia River. Cost estimates are now as high as $6 billion.

“The bridge is probably a billion,” says the project manager. “The transit piece, similar.” Plus various extras; it all adds up.

The original Columbia River bridge was built in 1917, and a duplicate bridge was added in 1958.

Continue reading

The Baptist Who Became a Bootlegger

Someone responded to my Baptists & bootleggers post by asking if I really had to mention the rape. The answer is “yes,” and not just because Wonkette started a trend of bloggers putting a sexual spin on all political news.

The Neil Goldschmidt story, including the statutory rape, is important because it shows how a Baptist became a bootlegger, and how everyone–the media, leading politicians, business leaders–continued to pretend he was a Baptist until the revelation of the rape came out. Only then did the media reveal to the public what a few had suspected all along: that all the stories of Portland’s light-rail utopia were merely a cover for a taxpayer-subsidized real-estate con.

Continue reading