gamelord12
gamelord12 t1_j33ri0h wrote
Reply to comment by 22thoughts in Traffic study by former head of NYC DOT reveals what he says is ultimate cause of congestion by HEIMDVLLR
No one is trying to uninvent the car. It just needs to be used far less for jobs that it's bad at; that excessive use is what leads to inefficient spending, climate change, and needless traffic violence and deaths, not to mention congestion.
gamelord12 t1_j0wvyee wrote
Reply to comment by yoshimipinkrobot in Jealous of NYC transportation by OfficialEthxn
3 minute wait times sounds ambitious, but I'd be happy with 10 or 12 on the weekend instead of 20.
gamelord12 t1_ix9b2xh wrote
Reply to comment by UniWheel in Street safety advocate hit by car while biking to NYC memorial for crash victims by Miser
They come in many shapes and sizes, but incrementally, they're trending in the right direction. I'm not sure why the DOT introduces lesser bike lanes as a stopgap instead of doing it right the first time, but their annual updates do acknowledge that an interim lesser bike lane is better than not doing one at all, as it introduces more natural traffic calming.
gamelord12 t1_ix9agbh wrote
Reply to comment by drpvn in Street safety advocate hit by car while biking to NYC memorial for crash victims by Miser
Demonstrating your complete lack of understanding, yes.
gamelord12 t1_ix9a1jr wrote
Reply to comment by drpvn in Street safety advocate hit by car while biking to NYC memorial for crash victims by Miser
The threshold for how many bikes would have to be on one street to cause what could be considered "traffic" is so much higher than cars that I doubt you've ever seen it in this city. And that, once again, is because bike lanes provide higher throughput.
But at this point, you're just trying to avoid admitting that you were wrong. It's cool; induced demand is a somewhat unintuitive concept at first, but we know it for a fact, and it's why there are advocacy groups for bike lanes, which are for multiple forms of micromobility, by the way; not only bikes.
gamelord12 t1_ix91b8y wrote
Reply to comment by darkknight915 in Street safety advocate hit by car while biking to NYC memorial for crash victims by Miser
Oh, is this the first time you've ever heard of induced demand? Give it a Google. We've got so much data proving that taking lanes away from cars in favor of things with higher throughput like bus only lanes and bike lanes actually does wonders for reducing traffic. And definitively, the thing that does not fix traffic is adding more lanes for cars.
gamelord12 t1_ix8zkq5 wrote
Reply to comment by darkknight915 in Street safety advocate hit by car while biking to NYC memorial for crash victims by Miser
Moving more people by bike lanes helps ease car traffic too, so this still helps you if you're in a car. Commuting by bike isn't "pretending to be Lance Armstrong", lol. What absurd hyperbole.
gamelord12 t1_ix8ybri wrote
Reply to comment by darkknight915 in Street safety advocate hit by car while biking to NYC memorial for crash victims by Miser
Taking some space away from cars and giving it to bikes is an improvement to our transportation infrastructre. It makes the roads safer, the air cleaner, the city quieter, it's cheaper to maintain, and it's higher throughput than the same lanes for cars.
gamelord12 t1_ix8xdww wrote
Reply to comment by darkknight915 in Street safety advocate hit by car while biking to NYC memorial for crash victims by Miser
Improving our transportation infrastructure is a stupid cause?
gamelord12 t1_iv2rnyk wrote
Reply to comment by Lebrooklynderp in Traffic deaths in NYC still 14% higher than pre-pandemic levels, latest data shows by ER301
I'm fuming. Even if your goal is to not delay drivers, get rid of parking! Not the bike lane! If those cars are parked there illegally, make sure they can't! (I'm sure I'm preaching to the choir, so this is not me shooting the messenger.)
gamelord12 t1_iv1t980 wrote
Reply to comment by NetQuarterLatte in Traffic deaths in NYC still 14% higher than pre-pandemic levels, latest data shows by ER301
When it's nationwide, it doesn't mean that there aren't solutions, but it does mean that we know what didn't cause it.
gamelord12 t1_iv1t4ew wrote
Reply to comment by PiffityPoffity in Traffic deaths in NYC still 14% higher than pre-pandemic levels, latest data shows by ER301
I see more U-turns, even though there's a one-way street every other block that makes it much safer and easier to turn around and go the other way.
gamelord12 t1_iv17ljq wrote
Reply to Traffic deaths in NYC still 14% higher than pre-pandemic levels, latest data shows by ER301
Definitely just an anecdote, but is anyone else here familiar with 4th Ave in Sunset Park? I bike along there pretty regularly. It was safer a few years ago. I have no idea what kind of maintenance they have to do there so regularly, but they tear up a street, repave it, and then don't reinstate the semi-protected bike lanes (parking in the middle of the street with a small buffer) but only for that stretch. So you end up with bike lane, bike lane, shared lane, bike lane, shared lane, where the state of the street varies block by block. After a section of the street is repaved, everyone just parks where the bike lane should be again. This can't be doing much for safety. If you're going to repave the street...finish it! Put it back how you found it! I don't understand what the point of all this is. (There's a similar situation in my neighborhood nearby, not in Sunset Park, as well.)
gamelord12 t1_j33s1gn wrote
Reply to comment by jadedaid in Traffic study by former head of NYC DOT reveals what he says is ultimate cause of congestion by HEIMDVLLR
I can't imagine what needs to happen to a person to make car free living in Bay Ridge a hard sell.