How Do You Get to Work?

It’s Monday morning and you step out of your house to head to work for the day. What’s your mode of transportation? Do you hop in your car and drive alone? Do you walk to the nearest subway station and head into the city that way? Using www.city-data.com, I found pie charts displaying the different types of transportation people use to get to work every morning in US cities.  Below is a comparison between Richmond, VA and New York City, NY.

 

Over the years, I believe people in most US cities, including Richmond and New York, will cut back on driving a car alone to work. Cities could then use large parking lots and other cement areas as places for parks with trees, plants, and wildlife. The benefits of creating more green spaces within cities should outweigh the costs of using alternative transportation modes instead of a car. What are your thoughts on the issue?

Across Europe, Irking Drivers is Urban Policy

As the city of Zurich has made harder for people to drive cars into the city, it has also improved public transport, with an elaborate and ever expanding system of trams. Here, a tram drives down Limmatquai, one of many streets that have been made "car-free" in the past decade. Photo credit: Christoph Bangert for The New York Times

According to “Across Europe, Irking Drivers is Urban Policy,” an article found in the New York Times, a car takes up about 4,000 cubic feet of urban space in Zurich while a person only takes up 3. Large cities in the United States have the tendency to alter their cities to accommodate driving; however European cities such as Zurich Vienna, Munich, and Copenhagen have been taking steps to make cities more livable for people. The idea is simple: to create environments that are openly hostile to cars thus forcing people to use more environmentally friendly forms of transportation. In Zurich measures such as adding closely spaced red lights on roads to create delays, removing pedestrian underpasses, and banning cars on some blocks are being taken. Results have shown that these methods are proving to be effective. Households without cars have increased from 40 percent to 45 percent and car owners are using their cars less. US cities such as San Francisco and New York are slowly taking similar action, but are still lacking fundamental support and policy. I leave you with the following statement made by a city official, “I feel like I am always waiting to cross the street. I can’t get used to the idea that I am worth less than a car.”

The virus crisis

This National Geographic video highlights how deadly rainforest viruses have transported from their animal hosts, and across continents. West Nile Virus is an example of how the world’s increased globalization has made people more vulnerable to deadly diseases. The virus is native to a very specific ecology of birds and streams in Africa. “No one could have imagined it [West Nile] could have emerged in the concrete jungle of Manhattan and Queens,” said Laurie Garrett, a science writer featured in the video.