Recent Posts
- The High Cost of Free Parking in Boulder
- Revisiting Junction Place, the TVAP and Multi-Way Boulevards
- The Making of Bicycle Things
- Automotive Death Revealer
- Riding with Live Cargo
- Boulder Bike Away From Work Day
- Moving Across Boulder by Bike
- The Bicycling Orchardist
- Bicycle Grocery Shopping Made Easy
- Have Spraypaint, Will Bicycle
Twitterfeed
- Ran a fun bike touring workshop at @CommunityCycles this morning to 4 enthusiastic folks, including Gary from @NeptuneMtneerng apparently! 4 weeks ago
- Selling my AntBike Boston Roadster frame, internally geared and dynamo hub wheels. Makes a sweet city bike: ebay.com/sch/zaneselvan… 4 weeks ago
- Best economic analogy ever: "local [parking price] peaks would shift around like kittens fighting under a blanket." @DonaldShoup 1 month ago
- Boulder county cyclists, help @CommunityCycles understand your needs better by taking this short survey: surveymonkey.com/s/BoulderBicyc… 1 month ago
- For the next 5 yrs I'm on the @BoulderColorado Transportation Advisory Board. Hope to bring in some Carbon Zero thoughts via @AlexSteffen 1 month ago
Linkstream
- When shared cars kill
Peer to peer carshare cars are killing people, because cars of any kind kill people... not because they're shared. They're big and heavy and fast, and they get operated in densely populated areas. Anybody who thought this wouldn't come up when they started setting up these services was delusional. The thing I don't really get is why on earth is the owner of the car liable for an accident involving it? Assuming the car didn't spontaneously explode due to poor maintenance, I presume the death and destruction is a consequence of bad driving, texting, drinking, poor road engineering, etc. Just - Carsharing saves city governments millions
Migrating city fleets to car-sharing has been able to reduce the size of those fleets by 50-75%, and increase vehicle utilization from 30 to 70%, which means way less in the way of city capital costs dedicated to cars. It also means a lot of policymakers getting much more familiar with the sharing economy. - A French-Canadian bicycle moving company
Tips on How to do a Bike Move from Déménagement Myette, a commercial bicycle moving company in Montreal. They have a whole fleet of extra wide Bikes at Work cargo trailers, that carry standard household appliances with ease! More than 1000 bike moves done since 2008. - How Google’s Driving Costs Misses the Train
A fun critique of the estimated driving costs that you get from Google Maps, from Alex Steffen. The costs of driving are largely (mostly?) systemic, and external to the individual, and predicated on an assumption of car ownership, and a mile-for-mile interchangeability between driving trips and walking/biking/transit trips, which is empirically wrong. People who don't rely on cars for transportation do the same things in far fewer miles (3 to 9 times fewer, depending on the urban fabric they are embedded within). - Fourmile Creek Failure
Yesterday the Boulder Greenways Advisory Committee killed the Fourmile Creek Path because of objections from the NIMBYs living near the right-of-way. Separated off-street infrastructure that's available year round is vital to getting kids on bikes, and seeing them as a real mode of transportation. Political will is essential to build for the future even when the nearby and present interests are opposed. Without some backbone here, we're never going to get a transportation system that isn't wholly dependent on fossil fuels, or streets that are built for human beings.
- When shared cars kill
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Category Archives: linkstream
When shared cars kill
Peer to peer carshare cars are killing people, because cars of any kind kill people… not because they’re shared. They’re big and heavy and fast, and they get operated in densely populated areas. Anybody who thought this wouldn’t come up … Continue reading
Posted in linkstream
Tagged accident, cars, carshare, death, law, sharing, transportation
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Carsharing saves city governments millions
Migrating city fleets to car-sharing has been able to reduce the size of those fleets by 50-75%, and increase vehicle utilization from 30 to 70%, which means way less in the way of city capital costs dedicated to cars. It … Continue reading
Posted in linkstream
Tagged cars, carshare, cities, government, sharing, transportation, zipcar
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A French-Canadian bicycle moving company
Tips on How to do a Bike Move from Déménagement Myette, a commercial bicycle moving company in Montreal. They have a whole fleet of extra wide Bikes at Work cargo trailers, that carry standard household appliances with ease! More than … Continue reading
Posted in linkstream
Tagged bicycle, bikes at work, canada, cargo, trailer, transportation
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How Google’s Driving Costs Misses the Train
A fun critique of the estimated driving costs that you get from Google Maps, from Alex Steffen. The costs of driving are largely (mostly?) systemic, and external to the individual, and predicated on an assumption of car ownership, and a … Continue reading
Fourmile Creek Failure
Yesterday the Boulder Greenways Advisory Committee killed the Fourmile Creek Path because of objections from the NIMBYs living near the right-of-way. Separated off-street infrastructure that’s available year round is vital to getting kids on bikes, and seeing them as a … Continue reading
Posted in linkstream
Tagged bicycle, boulder, city, creek, fourmile, greenway, path, politics, transportation
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Between the Lines
Yet another article about the Shoupistas, this time in Los Angeles magazine. Have we reached some kind of cognitive tipping point? Will urban parking policy start changing? Will our downtown business districts be transformed? We can hope…
Taking Parking Lots Seriously, as Public Spaces
An article from the New York Times about the architecture of parking lots, and how they might be much better used as public spaces with some design tweaks. Some cities like Houston and LA, dedicate a full third of their … Continue reading
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Tagged cars, cities, design, parking, shoup, transportation, urban
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More Roads = More Traffic
A new study from the University of Toronto clearly shows that additional free road capacity — either from adding actual road, or shifting people from driving to transit — has no effect on congestion. Traffic expands to fill the available … Continue reading
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Tagged cars, congestion, policy, research, traffic, transit, transportation
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The Joy of Slow Cities
It’s entirely possible that in The Future, we’ll come to realize that slower cities are better than fast. A city in which the fastest thing on the street is a bicycle is a place for living, for being, for enjoying … Continue reading
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Tagged bicycles, cities, planning, progress, speed, transit, transportation, urban
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Parking Price Elasticity in San Francisco
Prices affect parking less than San Francisco expected, in its ongoing SFPark experiment, fully implementing dynamic parking prices with target occupancy rates. Apparently people are willing to pay quite a bit more to be right next to their destination, instead … Continue reading
Posted in linkstream
Tagged cars, data, market, parking, price, san francisco, sfpark, shoup
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