unsurprisingly, London is all for the better for these projects having been canned in the 60's - very few massive roads cutting up neigbourhoods, and helped avoid the massive tipping into redesigning cities for single/low occupancy cars. it's so successful, that in 2022, 46% of households in greater London have *zero* cars. if you're curious what it what have looked like, go for a walk around Notting Hill and see how Westway has damaged the human environment and walkability.
You build highways and they screech about cutting up neighborhoods.
You don't and they screech about the resulting sprawl as development becomes more diffuse.
My pet favorite solution is more park & ride transition points on the outskirts and light rail in the dense areas but the cognitive dissonance it takes to argue that raised highways and highway pits cut through neighborhoods but not let out a peep when it's subway and tram lines doing the same should disqualify one from voting.
As much as I hate the NIMBYs for insisting on violating other people's property rights you at least have to give them +1 for consistency.
Looking back with hindsight we'd probably be better off if we had just built all the urban highways and rail lines (and other transit infrastructure projects) that have been seriously considered over the years.
but the cognitive dissonance it takes to argue that raised highways and highway pits cut through neighborhoods but not let out a peep when it's subway and tram lines doing the same should disqualify one from voting
Here’s a thought experiment for you. You are on foot, perhaps with a kid in a stroller, perhaps with a dog on a leash, perhaps an armful of groceries. It is a gorgeous day for a walk. You have multiple destinations on the other side of several transit arteries:
* a subway that passes under city streets with sidewalks, if you’re lucky maybe it goes under a park that’s between you and your destination
* a light rail line with trains passing every few minutes, clearly visible, with lots of time in between to cross the tracks, if you’re lucky maybe the area around the line has some pretty plants and trees
* an elevated highway with cars zooming along the feeder roads in its shadow, if you’re lucky there’s a crosswalk with pedestrian lights
* a ground-level highway, 8-14 lanes of constant high speed traffic in both directions, if you are very lucky there is a pedestrian overpass no more than 2-3 blocks out of your way and you’ll only be inhaling exhaust for a little while
Which one of these would you rather cross? Which one of these feels like an integrated part of the neighborhood, which ones feel like a raw open wound in the city when you try to cross them on foot?
> You don't and they screech about the resulting sprawl as development becomes more diffuse.
Highways create urban sprawl, they don't prevent it.
> the cognitive dissonance it takes to argue that raised highways and highway pits cut through neighborhoods but not let out a peep when it's subway and tram lines doing the same should disqualify one from voting.
But a subway/tram line is completely different from a highway. Trains can move an order of magnitude more people/stuff, don't result in local air pollution, don't create a lot of noise, don't result in road accidents that kill people and destroy property. And that's even before you realise that a subway is underground so you don't need to tear apart neighborhoods to build them and you basically wouldn't know it's there.
Rail lines have more than 10x the throughput though, so you need vastly less of them to do vastly more work.
A city with enough roads for 100% car usage is approaching not being a city anymore, just an unending suburban hellscape, but a city with barely any roads and more rail than it really needs can still be a beautiful city.
To add to that, underground railways exist in many cities, but underground road networks effectively don't. The throughput by volume dug out the ground is viable for a rail service, its totally non-viable to bury an equivalent throughput 20 lane highway underground.
> You don't and they screech about the resulting sprawl as development becomes more diffuse.
Huh? Don't highways enable sprawl? The brand new neighborhood built way out "in the country" (not for long...) next to the brand new highway in Yates' Revolutionary Road comes to mind.
> You build highways and they screech about cutting up neighborhoods.
You don't and they screech about the resulting sprawl as development becomes more diffuse.
The green belt policy around London where you were prevented from developing was quite good at preventing sprawl for decades.
Similar policies in Oregon now, which force increased density in existing (orm as an option, brand new) urban areas, rather than just spreading. Or at least, there were a decade ago. I hope they've survived.
IDK where you live, but I live in a country with a lot of trams and trains (the Czech Republic), and the NIMBYs attack absolutely everything. It may take decades to overcome their resistance.
One example of many: in the city I was born (Ostrava), there is a tram line planned since the 1990s (on the chance that anyone knows Ostrava here: Poruba VIII. obvod). That is not a very beautiful neighbourhood, rather a standard Communist high-rise zone with a lot of loud car and bus traffic through the main arteries. But the NIMBYs are absolutely relentless in attacking the tram project and anything even slightly connected (e.g. relocation of gas lines) in courts.
See also Glasgow, where the megaproject did happen and the American-style M8 terminates directly in the center of the city. It's never quite caught up with good public transport options. I'd suggest trams if the massive cost and time overruns of the Edinburgh scheme hadn't put me off.
(There _is_ a subway in Glasgow, but due to tunneling difficulties and its age the trains are unusually small. It feels like a 2/3 scale model of the London Underground)
I disagree, and wish it had happened, but regardless, the biggest problem is they failed to invest in a plan B. For example, the options for folks outside of London wanting to get in are dire and could have been solved with several large car parks next to fast mass transit - the two Westfields are perhaps the best options there right now, and those are shopping centres not intended for such use and, ironically, located right next to the expressway projects that did happen (the Westway and the A12 respectively). Maybe CrossRail will help? Park and ride from Abbey Wood, perhaps?
I have a trip to London planned later this year and it's still a toss up between parking at Westfield Stratford or just driving into the city centre and paying the congestion charge.. whereas really it should be an easy choice by now.
> I disagree, and wish it had happened, but regardless, the biggest problem is they failed to invest in a plan B. For example, the options for folks outside of London wanting to get in are dire and could have been solved with several large car parks next to fast mass transit
encouraging more cars into the center is explicitly an anti-goal, so not sure why you wish these projects had been built?
yes there should be more park and ride on the outskirts, but Stratford isn't really outskirts anymore, and wasting lots of land for parking in Stratford or White City instead of homes also seems a silly waste of their good connectedness.
> I have a trip to London planned later this year and it's still a toss up between parking at Westfield Stratford or just driving into the city centre and paying the congestion charge.. whereas really it should be an easy choice by now.
I guess that indicates the congestion charge could be higher.
I guess that indicates the congestion charge could be higher.
Economically, I agree, but in practice, I think it misses a point. I go to London once every year or three. So I can justify spending a lot more for a single day's convenience than, say, someone who goes a few times a month. As a rare visitor, I contribute less to London's congestion and problems, but on the other, I contribute less to its economy too, so is raising the congestion charge fair?
All that said, this conversation has encouraged me to at least try some other options and broaden my approach, so I might park at Ebbsfleet and get HS1 in (19 minutes). It costs £19.10 each way though and about £25 for the parking, but I'm up £30 in congestion charges and painful traffic..
encouraging more cars into the center is explicitly an anti-goal, so not sure why you wish these projects had been built?
I'm too young to have been around when they worked on the project, but my personal preferences are oriented around different goals than they had. I would be quite happy with a Angelesation of London, but I'm one of those weirdos who likes Milton Keynes as well..
Not quite sure what you mean by "Angelesation", but if it is a reference to Los Angeles, that was never going to happen. The reasons the projects described in TFA didn't happen was reflective of a city that has been in that location for centuries. Nobody was ever going to convert London into anything remotely like LA.
London’s economy is doing better than the rest of the UK even with the charge that it’s worth taking the hit rather than paying for all the health and pollution externalities of one additional marginal car, which is more than just the fuel burned.
You might be able to do better than £19.10 each way, depending on what time you're travelling. An unlimited all-day travelcard from Ebbsfleet to London[0], including tube/bus/train in zones 1-6 is only £24.40 off-peak (no arrival before 10am Mon-Fri). It's £45.00 peak, though.
I guess that indicates the congestion charge could be higher.
The trouble with public transport advocacy is that it so often relies on the stick rather than the carrot as the main incentive. The better solution is almost always to provide attractive public transport options. If you can do that then people will use them anyway. If you don't do that then people will do what you don't want instead unless you totally prohibit it. And if you prohibit it then maybe they won't come at all.
The catch is that providing good public transport is a challenge even in densely populated areas and for long distance travel. Our biggest cities also tend to be very old and that means layouts that are far from ideal for running an efficient public transport network.
The other catch is that good public transport is never going to be cost-effective in smaller towns and rural areas. So doing it would require a massive commitment from both local and wider government and in the UK we don't have that. Politicians tend to be very good at talking about grand ideas but no-one is willing to say "We need to put your taxes up 5% to subsidise loss-making transport infrastructure so there's a sensible alternative to cars for everyone who doesn't live in one of the biggest cities."
This is why I'm not sure emphasizing public transport is the right long term policy here. Better infrastructure to support small-scale private transport seems a more promising direction to look -- bikes, e-scooters, future electric vehicles designed for one or two passengers and light baggage, etc.
Talking about carrots for motorists is just privilege bias. We are where we are because of many policy decisions, many of which came with a particular world view, including the idea that motorists should have more infrastructure investment to support them. If you come at it from the perspective of active transport, removing cars _is_ the goal. Further to that, fewer cars means public transport becomes much better. We have to get into the virtuous circle where fewer cars begets more active transport and public transport which begets fewer cars.
All non-toll roads are loss making, let's not pretend that cars are free. That's even before we get into a discussion about the negative externalities of driving.
The Cambridge GCP (essentially a talking shop with a remit to deliver new infrastructure, but prefers to deliver reports instead) commissioned proposals on a "metro". One of those proposals had loads of small self guided pods. Superficially they seemed like a great idea until you looked at the flow rate required to have them deliver the people required, and suddenly you have the the road congested with pods (or, if you will, cars).
Talking about carrots for motorists is just privilege bias.
I have no idea what that means. However if we ever want to achieve more than talking in this area then we need to be realistic. And the reality is that lots of people rely on private cars every day in this country, and they collectively have enough money and political influence that you aren't going to change that behaviour at scale with a hostile strategy. You certainly aren't going to do it with arguments based on some kind of righteous indignation and words like "privilege".
We have to get into the virtuous circle where fewer cars begets more active transport and public transport which begets fewer cars.
That would be great. And if there is one thing we have learned about transport planning in the last fifty years it is that the cycle is not going to be started on the "fewer cars" side. You can criticise as much as you like, that is obviously your prerogative, but I prefer to explore policies that have a greater than zero chance of actually working.
All non-toll roads are loss making, let's not pretend that cars are free.
The UK government has consistently received 3-4x as much revenue from direct motoring taxes as government of all levels spends on direct motoring services for many years. This is why they are so worried about the loss of much of that revenue with the rise of electric vehicles. And if you want to include externalities in the costs of cars then you also have to include indirect benefits and again you might not like the answer if environmental concerns are your priority.
It is interesting that you picked Cambridge as your example because it is an excellent example of what I am talking about here. For years the local authorities have been increasingly car-hostile and despite the unusually high prevalence of bikes in the city the council have always been heavily in favour of relying on buses to solve the congestion and pollution problems. They have been trying that for a very long time and it has never worked. But still every few months someone puts up the parking fees again or adds more restrictions on where you can drive or park or proposes this year's variation of congestion charging. Meanwhile cycling provision is still substandard and the city centre is still dying.
Privilege bias is a bias that means you find it difficult to understand the position of those that are not in the privileged class. In this case, you think that as a driver the world should not be made more difficult for you, but you don't realise that making it more difficult for you makes it better for everyone that is not a driver.
Cambridge has had very little impactful effort towards reducing car usage, hoping they can sidestep the difficult reality of having to reduce cars through a stick approach. Until that's done, there's no chance the buses will do much since as you don't quite point out, they're just stuck in the same traffic. They're still hoping to avoid reality by building special roads for buses and a few parking spaces outside the city.
For sure cycling provision is substandard. You have no arguments from me there!
Privilege bias is a bias that means you find it difficult to understand the position of those that are not in the privileged class.
I've been a cyclist for a lot longer than I've been a driver and I've lived in or around Cambridge for a long time and been personally affected by everything we've been talking about from all perspectives.
I am not "privileged" or unable to understand your position. I just don't agree with your conclusions for the reasons I've described in the comments above.
Cambridge has had very little impactful effort towards reducing car usage, hoping they can sidestep the difficult reality of having to reduce cars through a stick approach. Until that's done, there's no chance the buses will do much since as you don't quite point out, they're just stuck in the same traffic. They're still hoping to avoid reality by building special roads for buses and a few parking spaces outside the city.
It is unclear that a congestion charge would be effective in causing sustained modal shift in Cambridge, not least because it is unclear whether any council that voted for one would survive the following election. Prominent local councillors have been advocating more aggressive anti-car measures for years but so far despite the supportive rhetoric no council has passed them. Ask yourself why.
It is clear that buses can't be the main solution to traffic problems in Cambridge. The council has spent a lot of money over the years on research that explained to them exactly why, which has mysteriously been largely ignored, perhaps because it didn't give the "right" answer. But if you know anything about the mathematics of traffic modelling you can quickly convince yourself. Just try to find any viable location near the city centre for a central bus hub that could accommodate a significant multiple of the current bus traffic levels without causing gridlock in the surrounding streets.
Ironically the Park and Ride schemes that you casually dismissed have been one of the few clear successes in Cambridge transport in recent years, taking thousands of cars off the roads in the city centre.
For sure cycling provision is substandard. You have no arguments from me there!
I'm glad that we can agree on this. If the local authorities had spent a fraction of the money they've spent on pro-bus measures on pro-cycling measures instead, we might have been in a much better situation in this area today.
I can't respond to your deepest comment, but the privilege is you can drive, which is distinctly not universal. In any case, having biases is totally normal.
Smarter Cambridge transport has addressed many of the issues you raise in far more detail than I can in an off-topic comments thread: https://www.smartertransport.uk
I can't respond to your deepest comment, but the privilege is you can drive, which is distinctly not universal.
It is normal for the large proportion of the population who don't live in densely populated urban centres served by adequate public transport, because for most people there simply isn't any viable alternative.
And before anyone invokes the privilege argument again, consider that being able to afford a home in those densely populated areas with good public transport is also a privilege. In fact compared to owning a car it's a privilege that involves a couple of extra zeroes in a place like Cambridge or London.
Smarter Cambridge transport
is a defunct private advocacy group whose members have included prominent members of the local cycling campaign well known in the community for their borderline extreme views on transportation policy. That said, we should address the substance of the arguments and not who was making them.
Take the piece about P&R. It's mostly consistent what I've already said above.
It isn't cost-effective to run a comprehensive public transport system outside of densely populated urban areas and high traffic long distance routes. Public transport works because of economies of scale but there just aren't that many people in a place as small as Cambridge who want to make similar journeys at off-peak times. This is the fundamental qualitative difference between a few of our biggest cities and everywhere else in the country.
Even so those P&R sites have capacity for thousands of cars every day that aren't then driving into the city centre. It takes a peculiar kind of mental gymnastics not to see that as a win.
I can't find any other source for anything they're talking about with the costs, including the "Cambridge South East Transport Park & Ride proposal", which doesn't seem to be mentioned anywhere in the official description of that programme[1]. And note that the Cambourne route proposals they mention have been highly controversial for many reasons and haven't actually happened yet.
The other piece suggesting alternative bus routes is a more reasonable proposal than most of the local bus advocacy and deserves credit for that. Unfortunately the traffic model mentioned isn't public but we do know from past public comments by those in the know that the model is inadequate and in particular it grossly underestimates some effects that cause dramatic increases in journey times for large numbers of road users. Without seeing real figures for how you put that many buses around the ring road without causing the usual mathematical problems with queueing in heavy traffic and making the whole system fall apart it's hard to know whether it's a useful proposal or not. Likewise it doesn't say how pedestrians and cycles would take advantage of the now-free road space inside the ring road if there's an effective barrier caused by a steady stream of buses on the ring road itself nor what would happen to all the cycle traffic that currently uses the ring road itself since it would obviously be far too dangerous to continue doing so with that many buses around.
Pods were trialled between the West Cambridge site and the P&R and were proposed to offer 24 hour service, but the main Cambridge Autonomous Metro proposal was for units that could seat over 100 people. But the new mayor likes buses.
> The trouble with public transport advocacy is that it so often relies on the stick rather than the carrot as the main incentive
I...don't understand what your comment is about? London has excellent public transport that runs all the way into the non-London bits around it. it's mostly made of carrots.
London already provides public transport even beyond it's own boundaries. It seems pretty unfair to insist that we, as London tax payers, spend even more money on providing services to people outside of London.
how much better does London need to make (and I assume pay for?) public transport for the Home Counties before you think it's OK for London to not demolish thousands of homes, in London, to build more roads for people who don't live in London?
London already provides public transport even beyond it's own boundaries. It seems pretty unfair to insist that we, as London tax payers, spend even more money on providing services to people outside of London.
I don't think I've even suggested anything like that here.
That said, the thing about public transport is that it's all-for-one. If it's going to be a viable alternative to owning private cars then it has to be reasonable for all journeys someone needs to make not just a few convenient examples. There is no "local" or "national" with public transport for most people. The question is whether they can get from A to B in some reasonable way for any A and B they care about.
In any case, that's a fault of poor public transport in the shires, not London.
Please see my other comments in this discussion. There is no "public transport in X". There is only "public transport". It will never be cost-effective to provide mass transit outside of densely populated areas and major long distance routes so if you want to enjoy the benefits and shift people away from cars in large numbers then you have to accept that we all need to subsidise plausible alternatives for everyone, probably through some serious taxation and government spending.
I used to know people who would commute by train to London from Bath and Bristol. Every day.
And others who would drive from central Wiltshire to London and back. Every day.
Work from home should have highlighted the insanity of those kinds of work patterns. Trains are greener than cars, but no commuting at all is greener still.
Unfortunately it's looking more like we'll be heading back to pre-Covid normal, with very limited mixed-mode working offered as a bonus to those who qualify for it.
> Unfortunately it's looking more like we'll be heading back to pre-Covid normal, with very limited mixed-mode working offered as a bonus to those who qualify for it.
Is it? Everyone I know with an office job has greatly expanded home working options. Most of them were previously 100% in the office, and now have the kind of 1 or 2 days in the office a week hybrid options that used to be exclusively for tech companies. And quite a few individuals I know have been able to go completely remote only having to go into the office a few times a year and have been able to move cities entirely.
Public transport into/in London is pretty good. Crowded but not unbearable, especially if you can avoid rush hours.
I have a car in London but almost never drive into central London (just in my area and out of London) - getting in and around Central London is much better with public transport.
> The trouble with public transport advocacy is that it so often relies on the stick rather than the carrot as the main incentive.
That's mostly because the carrot does not work. You can't really do much better than a private car. Once you are ok with driving, and very many people are, it is the most comfortable and individualized means of transport. So realistically, on one hand of course public transport must be good, but on the other hand it does not matter as much. People will still use cars whenever possible. You have to make it difficult, expensive and uncomfortable.
On the point of small private mobility I fully agree with you. This seems to be the future, if only our politicians would understand that.
> You can't really do much better than a private car.
what does this mean? owning a private care in central-ish London is awful - traffic is slow, there's limited parking both at home and at your destination, they're mostly emitting loads of pollution. in most cases, public transport is cheaper and faster (or at least not much slower).
where in London do you live that you think personal low occupancy cars are the "best" option?
> You can't really do much better than a private car.
I once read an analysis linked on HN, claiming that cars are only a personal net benefit if you're rich enough to pay for someone to drive you around, or live in a city that's not yet developed in a car-accommodating way and has low car ownership rates, and that the last personal transportation development that was actually a strong net benefit was the bicycle.
This is because car-centric city design pushes everything much farther apart (big front lawns so your house isn't too close to the nasty street; huge setbacks next to highways [look how damn wide those are next time you're on one!], the highways themselves, enormous interchanges, "green spaces" that aren't intended for people to be in but just to provide a buffer between people and roads, gigantic parking lots, et c), plus cars are expensive, so by the time you factor in the extra travel distance due to cars being widespread and the amount of time you spend working just to pay for your car (and gas, and maintenance, and a place to keep it) most people are losing time, when the whole point was to travel faster.
I thought that had to be overstating it. So I ran the numbers for myself. With conservative estimates for how much closer my house would be to the city if you took out all the car-created distance, with my own spending on cars being rather low, with my commute to the city center not being that long (20-25 minutes each way), and with my income being nearly double the household median income in my city (so I need fewer hours working to pay for my car)—well, I'll be damned, I would save a little time in a hypothetical city that wasn't designed around cars, but instead around bicycles and walking. Which means cars are a slam-dunk loss for most people, if my numbers came out that way—they only seem like they're saving you time if your city has already been messed up by car-centric design.
If and only if you build the system around those cars. If there is no free parking and a parking lot is taxed like it is productive land, then parking is expensive.
Cars are convenient because we have made the tax system cater to them. It makes for terrible cities for everyone not in a car at the moment.
> Once you are ok with driving, and very many people are, it is the most comfortable and individualized means of transport. So realistically, on one hand of course public transport must be good, but on the other hand it does not matter as much. People will still use cars whenever possible. You have to make it difficult, expensive and uncomfortable.
I think you're missing one really key factor, and that is time. If the traffic is sufficiently bad, even an easy cheap comfortable car journey stops looking attractive, because it is slow.
UK example: I've had the "pleasure" of driving right across central London; my start point was within sight of London City Airport, my destination was Heathrow Airport. The shortest route is more or less a staight-line journey of about 25 miles. You would be crazy to attempt to use that route that during working hours. It is often faster to head straight out of London, and drive a long looping route, a total of ~60 miles in length. It will save you at least 20 minutes driving time.
European example: a couple of months ago I was in the Austrian border town of Kufstein and needed to get to Innsbruck. I hopped on a Railjet train, which made the journey in 35 minutes with very few stops (only one, IIRC). By car it would have taken at best 60 minutes, assuming no major traffic issues. Motorway speeds are limited to 100km/h in that part of Austria in an attempt to reduce air pollution.[0]
One stop at Wörgl if i am not mistaken. Trains in Austria are pretty nice indeed, but of course only if you have a train available. If you first need to drive to the train station then more often than not the commuter trains aren't worth it time wise.
If you catch one of the fast trains though then of course it is a different story.
You can't really do much better than a private car.
There are all kinds of things that might be better than a private car. The point I'm trying to make here is that most of them require radically more commitment (= money + political capital, usually) than those in power and those who vote for them are willing to give at present. Bashing car drivers is the "something must be done and this is something so we're doing it" approach. It gets you popular points with your base. Unfortunately as we've seen for many years now it doesn't actually work without providing decent alternatives as well.
People will still use cars whenever possible. You have to make it difficult, expensive and uncomfortable.
Obviously I don't accept that premise. There are also inherently inconvenient things about a lot of car journeys and about owning and maintaining the car itself so to an extent it provides the deterrent effect you've been talking about automatically without any artificial "stick". Public transport doesn't have many of those downsides. Some alternative methods of private transport don't either. But you need local transport to be frequent, reliable, cheap and comfortable, and you need long distance transport to be all of those things plus easily reachable by local transport.
Assuming the metal tube runs on a moderately convenient schedule between convenient locations and that they'll not transporting things that they can't conveniently take on the metal tube.
I was just reminded of this last week. I was going into the city about an hour away for a class but after thinking about it, I'd still have needed to drive to the train station and park, the train schedule was suboptimal, and I'd have had to carry some things associated with the class around with me all day. I do sometimes take the train in but although it's sometimes convenient, it's not a panacea (and doesn't work at all for going in for an evening event). It's also not cheap.
The thing with raising congestion charges, higher taxes on airfares etc is that you then limit these options to the financially well off, which doesn't seem very progressive.
And people who can afford it just feel a sense of entitlement because they have purchased something. And it is a resource we all own and have already paid for. We should have a basic right to access that resource. The problem is when people take more than their fair share. In the centre of London that could be driving 1 mile a day. We should give a free tier and then ramp up prices exponentially after that. The more you use the resource the more it costs per mile.
Even in the US, where car ownership is practically mandatory and broad taxes or fees on driving are significantly lower, owning a car is associated with higher incomes because the base cost is still several thousand a year in insurance, gas, etc. so if you tax it you are already hitting wealthier people.
It certainly seems progressive to me. Charging private vehicles to access the roads reduces demand, which allows other modes such as buses, trams and bikes to move more people more quickly.
I don't see what's progressive about letting private cars clog the roads up and slowing down London's vast and comprehensive bus network.
I guess the point is that it's not related to the person's income. For someone on minimum wage, the £15 congestion charge prevents them using the car. For a high-earned, it's just a fee to pay as you continue to drive in London.
But food at the supermarket, clothes, even water from the tap are all priced without regard to individual income. Why would road usage be any different?
The wealthy are always able to buy the nicest things, and addressing income inequality is a very valid goal. But what realistic alternative is there to the price mechanism that still allows for a level
of individual choice, and permits vehicle journeys that are economically necessary (e.g. tradespeople) while discouraging car journeys that could me made by other means.
As for the minimum wage earner, they are the least likely to be able to afford to keep a car. The current roads free-for-all means their bus journeys are far slower due to the traffic, and more expensive due to the larger number of buses required to maintain frequency on congested roads.
A possible solution to reduce inequality from road charging while still maintaining the benefits of the price mechanism would be to return the proceeds (after maintenance costs) to the residents of the city in the form of transport credits. These credits would be able to be spent on road access, public transport, or cycling as the individual preferred.
I don't really agree with the original premise, but I would point out that:
> The wealthy are always able to buy the nicest things,
the problem is that there is no product differentiation when it comes to road usage. You're either on it and paying the same fee, or you're not.
It's not like food, clothes, housing where you might be paying a lot for these things, or you might be paying less. We price specific items of food without regard to income, but there's a wide variety of items of food to choose from, at different price levels.
The local water company does not provide deluxe or budget versions, water is water. The same applies to gas and electricity. All are major household expenses.
In the context of a large city, there certainly is differentiation in transport. You can grab a large amount of the scarce road space for yourself with a car (even more if you park on-street) or taxi, or you can take a smaller share of it by getting on a bus, bike or tram.
Why not go entirely surveillance system. And record all use of roads. Mandatory 24/7 tracking with penalty payments on any public road. Then track which roads and sections of roads person travelled during each day using which method. And divide the bill between all of them.
Use routes that other people use and get it cheaper, have the private low use roads cost more. As poor people are more likely to live in denser areas it would be cheaper for them.
> But food at the supermarket, clothes, even water from the tap are all priced without regard to individual income. Why would road usage be any different?
If you buy more/better clothes you end up paying more. You also end up paying more to upkeep said clothes.
If you consume more water, you end up paying more for it; Progressive water pricing is very common around the world.
A progressive road usage pricing scheme would not be out of the ordinary.
If LA is anything to go by, building these large elevated highways wouldn't have fixed anything. Tokyo does have a lot of elevated highways, admittedly, and that has a certain aesthetic appeal there, but it's a very different place. If the elevated highways in London had ended up anything like the Westway, it would have been awful.
I do agree that we could do with more Park and Rides though. In the past, I've parked at the O2 because there's always space in the day, then took the Jubilee line in.
Some of Tokyo's elevated highways are an aesthetic disaster; the one that goes very low over the Nihonbashi bridge is the classic example. On the bright side they are finally planning to move that particular expressway underground...
Honestly, driving in London is slow and annoying, and it's hard to find parking, particularly in the center.
You're much better off using public transport within London, or just walking (I've seen people take tube rides one or two stops that are quicker to just walk in the center).
I don't even own a car in London anymore, I just hire them when I need to get away somewhere that needs one.
You're absolutely right once you're there. I'm talking about actually getting there as someone who lives 100+ miles away. The UK needs better options for switching from the required car to some high speed option for the final 30 minutes of the journey. Even LA offers this with its Metro stops..
There are plenty of train stations 30 minutes out from London. You can go as far north as Letchworth Garden City, west as Reading, south west as Woking and so on.
There's a shortage of convenient parking at these outlier stations, because most were built in the center of towns long ago without parking in mind. Woking station was built in 1838.
There are options like Bristol/Didcot/Oxford parkway that do exactly that. Some of the lines are very slow though and need a lot of modernisation to give quick access. I wonder if some of this could be solved one day using small electric regional airlines that could land within the M25 and fly from small town airfields with parking.
I believe such a thing happened a fair bit with Newquay until COVID caused services to cease. I live quite near a small airport that flies to Amsterdam. I can actually be in central Amsterdam quicker than London door to door and it's an appealing approach, but the CO2 situation is not so nice.
There are absolutely great rail links to London. From nearly every direction. Drive your car to one of those places, buy a travelcard and you're all set.
Scooters are IMO the best way to get around London if your common destinations are not well connected to the Tube. Cycling isn't too bad but it can be a tad intimidating.
Out of interest, why do you wish that it had happened? As far as I'm concerned, the idea of making London more car-friendly is directly at odds with anything that would actually improve the city itself.
> solved with several large car parks next to fast mass transit
I don't disagree with this concept, but your suggestions are still surprisingly far in to London. Why do they need to be inside the M25 at all?
Out of interest, why do you wish that it had happened?
I like roads. I like motorways. I've always enjoyed being in LA. Just a personal preference. I am under no illusions that it would have actually worked in London, but I have a Ballardian sense of "what if" to major infrastructure projects. I never expect anyone to agree with me.
your suggestions are still surprisingly far in to London. Why do they need to be inside the M25 at all?
They don't. Ebbsfleet, being on HS1, is a reasonable example of a park and ride option outside the M25, although it's amazingly expensive to park there for what used to all be fields when I was a kid..
The problem is lack of infrastructure. We can't just slap 4 or 5 Ebbsfleets outside the M25 because there are few reasonable ways to offer a 20-30 minute journey into central London from them at this point. But this is my point. If they'd conceded we'd need this sort of thing when they ditched the ringways project 40+ years ago, we could have had something in place well before now. Where can you park and ride from, say, the top third of the M25? Stevenage is probably your only reasonable bet.. especially as even Cockfosters is a cramped 40 minute tube ride to St. Pancras.
There needs to be a quid pro quo for the inconvenience and 20-30 minutes feels like a reasonable amount of time to get from the outskirts to the centre of a large city. If public transport took the same amount of time, or more, as driving, there is less motivation for a driver to use it unless you can price them out of driving.
(Indeed, that is the problem in my local area since the nearest town is an hour on the bus, versus a 25 minute drive, so services keep getting cut.. so less people ride.. etc. etc.)
> car-friendly is directly at odds with anything that would actually improve the city
this is because our solutions to car-friendly cities usually mean tearing down neighbourhoods, more pollution etc. there are solutions that please both sides of the table, but they usually involve huge costs. and in the current climate of litigating everything combined with political polarisation and the very nature of democracy, they're usually a non-starter.
> There are solutions that please both sides of the table
I'd love to hear about some of these. As someone who sits firmly on one side of the table (live in central London, don't own a car etc.) my default position is to reject anything which encourages the use of private motor vehicles in the city, so I definitely think I should try to hear the other side!
I'm not sure why you are downvoted, as everyone is entitled to their opinion.
I kind of agree with both sides, but the people suggesting train rides forget that the train doesn't stop in front of your house, and doesn't leave when you want it to. And taking an extra luggage with you is a pain. Owning a car gives you so much more freedom in your life that few people who can afford it willingly don't own one. For a few years I did try the rental model, but it was so much hassle that I couldn't bear it any longer. I'm usually on the go every other weekend.
I used to live in Greenwich, and while I had a bike for commuting, on the weekends the car was the only way to get OUT of the city within a reasonable amount of time and get back again. It was still a pain, as pretty much any journey started by getting to the M25 first, then driving on it to some extent, making the smallest journey a 30-40 minute minimum. It didn't help that South London is pretty much an impassable barrier by car (takes so much time that it's not worth it). And Greenwich even has the A2 and the (constantly clogged up) Blackwall Tunnel, so it is one of the better areas of London regarding car ownership.
On the other hand, I never understood why anyone would want to drive into the City, that really makes no sense, and I fully support the congestion charge.
On the other hand, I never understood why anyone would want to drive into the City, that really makes no sense, and I fully support the congestion charge.
I also support the CG, but I am also quite far on the "I'm staying in my car" end of the spectrum, so maybe I can answer the question! I don't relish the idea of driving into the City, but it's a rare enough experience that I mildly enjoy it - the traffic isn't as bad in the CGZ as it used to be, and I hugely prefer the solitude of driving to, well, the alternatives. Could I do such a journey on a weekly/monthly basis? Absolutely not.
Highly recommend Not Just Bikes and Practical Engineering channels on YouTube. You'd be hard pressed not to realise that wishing they'd happened was a mistake.
I'm an unusual case, but I live in one of the least accessible parts of the country with extremely poor transport links (even by road). It is, of course, totally possible to drive to other cities to then get the train, but then you have the same problems just in a different city (since amazingly few have particularly good parking + mass transit arrangements).
Beyond that, once you're in the car and trundling along, switching transport modes isn't particularly appetising, particularly when trains are so costly if not booked in advance and you have zero idea if you'll even get a seat. Yes, I've stood for two hours on a train out of London. No, it's actually not more fun than sitting in two hours of traffic.
If you failed to pre book a month in advance, it used to cost over £150 for a return trip to London from Bath which got you in before normal business hours, and you very often did not get a seat for that (making it impossible to spend the time productively, one of the key benefits of train travel). If you have three colleagues travelling together for a meeting, driving or even taking a car service is invariably cheaper.
Unless you live somewhere with a garage that you can get to without going outside, then I don't really see the difference with a car that you also have to walk to first.
But even if not, are you made of sugar or something? Why can't you handle any weather?
(Short of disabled people, but that's not what this discussion is about.)
they are hypothetical numbers, the point being walking in bad weather is a strong argument for not using public transport
I don't care what other people do as much as you seem to, save the planet and all that, woo. if you want clean air move to a village on the coast. if you want to be kind to your children, raise them there
> the options for folks outside of London wanting to get in are dire
I literally can't think of a city I've been to that has been easier to get into? There's endless options of overground, underground, river, bus. What more do you want?
I literally can't think of a city I've been to that has been easier to get into?
Admittedly I didn't define "easier"! London is near the top in terms of number of options, regularity, 24 hour availability, etc. For me, "easier" refers to time and comfort as someone who tends to be coming from random points 50+ miles away with young children, luggage, and a car at my disposal.
And if you were to dumped at a random point 50 miles away with a car at your disposal, the centres of many UK cities are, even relative to their size, more comfortably reached than London's. Leeds, Cardiff, Newcastle, and Glasgow, for example (Leeds is notably good for access). If the car isn't allowed to go into the town centre, I think York or Oxford do a good job too.
Crossrail will eventually (hopefully this year now) make it trivial for you to catch a fast, direct train from shenfield/romford to Bond Street - even today this is a straightforward journey with a change at stratford tbh.
Then we have a repeat performance of everything I said before but merely in a different town. Even in towns as far flung as Peterborough, Reading or Oxford there are numerous issues with accessing and parking at the stations.
You're celebrating the fact that people don't own something that they probably (judging by looking at other people) would find quite useful. Many, many people pay a lot of money every month to own their own private mode of transportation. So are these 46% really voluntarily abstaining or are they forced into abstinence?
I know that many, especially young, childless, people think they don't need a car. I know several such people that happily pay (and can afford to) quite a steep price for leaving their city, either by train, plane, or rental car. But they're not typical, I'd say.
In my case, our family car is moved only very little, say 10000km/a. There are some use cases where a rental car or train tickets just don't cut it - we would pay double the price and still have longer travel and additional complications (mental load is a real thing for parents).
Obviously, I am not driving through the city if I can avoid it. But every now and then I want to leave it/return to it. I consider ownership the best option here and I gladly pay for the parking space.
So in conclusion, I think that every city should make it trivial to rent a parking space in some garage. People that don't own cars might benefit from such additional storage space as well. I also don't think it should be more expensive than renting a very simple apartment. But instead, cities try to cram more and more people with less and less space into the same buildings.
And I would not be surprised if these road projects were designed with a much smaller and less densely populated city in mind.
This argument doesn’t take account of the impact on others of the thing that stays in your garage most of the time. The environmental impact of manufacturing it, of creating infrastructure to carry it etc.
We should absolutely celebrate lower car ownership in cities and work towards making it a viable option for more people.
I don't buy the infrastructure, except for parking, it's needed for logistics anyways. the environmental impact of manufacture is a red herring as it's pretty much impossible to spend money without a similar impact.
> In my case, our family car is moved only very little, say 10000km/a. There are some use cases where a rental car or train tickets just don't cut it - we would pay double the price
Have you actually done full lifetime cost analysis of the owned car vs. a rental car under this scenario?
The outcome can depend on a number of things, notably how much you pay for your own car initially. It's also obviously somewhat subjective how you price the inconvenience of picking up/dropping off the rental car.
When I did this in Philadelphia in the mid-90s as neighborhood car shares started to become a thing (briefly, sadly), my conclusion was that since we already owned (outright) a small, useful vehicle at that point, it made more sense to continue doing so, but that if we were about to buy a more expensive replacement vehicle, the car share made more financial sense. This was with a child, btw.
Yes, I did. We buy our cars out of a saving account where we put a monthly fee in. I know relatively well what our car costs us and yes, it's a significant amount of money.
Unfortunately, the alternatives are nearly always more expensive (rental) or don't cover all the use cases (train) or both (car sharing, sometimes trains).
The thing is, once you decided on ownership, the cost of doing more with your car is relatively low compared to the alternative (like using the car for grocery shopping instead of buying a cargo bike for the task).
In our case it's the weekend trips with the kids. Cars big enough to carry all kids are expensive and relatively rare. Renting over the weekend is expensive. And working on Fridays and Mondays makes it difficult to go out to a rental station and get one of those cars or return it in time.
So in the end, it's certainly doable but more expensive than owning and creates more stress/hassle.
E.g. pets. Most rental companies don't allow pets in their cars.
And there might also be situations where the next rental company is far away and you'd spend a lot of time going there. Depending on how often you need a car, having your own in front of your house might be the better choice.
Same for long holidays where the rent for a car can easily be a big chunk of your holiday budget even if you only need it for a few days during your trip.
Thank god this didn’t go ahead. It would have made london into a car centric hellhole, and I suspect traffic would still be terrible. I’ve never been to any large city where the traffic flows freely, regardless of how much road infrastructure there is.
It feels like building more infrastructure just causes people to use more of it, because the "cost" of using it goes down. Kind of similar to how having faster computers has just resulted in us creating more bloated software, instead of everything becoming snappier.
Induced demand doesn’t mean the additional infrastructure is useless. It just means it likely won’t reduce traffic. You’ll get greater population, more economic growth. More people able to get to where they want to go.
And induced demand applies to all kinds of things, not just automobile infrastructure. So it should help you be more thoughtful about what infrastructure you want to actually build, but crucially it does NOT mean that the infrastructure is worthless.
High usage of resources for low expenditure of man-hours directly correlates to higher quality of living.
You couldn't afford an air conditioner if transportation was expensive, power was expensive and every step along the way was running on paper records.
But transportation, power and administrative overhead (and a whole laundry list of other things) are cheap enough (in terms of labor) that you can afford to get and use an air conditioner and you are better off for it.
We want fast and efficient transportation, power generation, record keeping and information management (and other things) because those things add a labor cost to just about everything in our word.
It helps to think of money and time as being convertible to and from each other.
Dubai is usually over 38 °C (100°F) for half the year, usually reaching 40°C (105°C) and once reached 49°C (121°F). Humans can't really cope with temperatures that high unless it's insanely dry out. I would argue Dubai can really only be lived in through artificial means.
If their median/average/<whatever> quality of life is greater that way then so what?
Every ideologue latches onto buzzwords like "human scale" but forgets that the whole point of that buzzword is that the thing is represents theoretically goes hand in hand with quality of life.
Look at the local climate and land situation for Dubai. It's not exactly a surprise that they prefer to just spread everything out and travel in cars. Just a 1/4mi walk from subway station to destination would be pretty uncomfortable for large parts of the year. At least in St. Petersburg you can put on a big jacket during the uncomfortable part of the year.
> Every ideologue latches onto buzzwords like "human scale"
I started hating this term, because it appears to reflect a very particular lifestyle which in turn fits a very particular demographic and just assumes this is better than alternatives.
One thing that I never see mentioned is how this affects availability of real estate. In my corner of the world people are generally leaving large cities, because at least half of the working population isn't eligible for a mortgage for an apartment within city limits.
You can only go so far on foot or on a bicycle in a day. With a car you at least have a bargaining chip against the local real estate market.
The problem is often that people want to live in a place that is cheap and with space and then drive to where jobs are and the pay is high (city), which means wide roads to get to city, which means lots of pollution, noise, lack of safety for those in the city. As far as real estate, there are often other reasons for the high prices. The root cause is often not just land.
I am hoping that self driving electric medium sized buses giving a hybrid between public transport and uber would solve that. Move people away from car ownership.
Robert Moses was successful carrying out many projects like this in the 1960s to add urban highways in NYC and other northeast US metropolitan areas.
It's mostly a big tragedy. Neighborhoods sliced through, where highways created largely impermeable boundaries for pedestrians. And the swaths of destruction where eminent domain was invoked and then dense, culturally rich, bustling, thriving blocks and blocks were bulldozed and paved.
Even the most collectivist public-transit apologist should be celebrating Robert Moses. He greatly expanded the predecessor to the MTA, and secured its legacy by building the toll bridges and tunnels that subsidize the wildly expensive New York City subways, generations after the bridges and tunnels have been paid off.
He used the toll revenue to fund his own highway building projects, independent of state/local budgets.
He fired everyone on his staff that advocated for rail network. He starved rail lines (that, at the time, were being used very heavily) in favor of road networks.
He also rather hated black people and puerto ricans.
I can only imagine you've heard things about Robert Moses written by the great fans of the man, who USUALLY were high-modernists who loved his big bridges and roads.
his biography, "The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of NYC" is the comprehensive evaluation of his life and legacy. He shaped the modern world 10x more than anyone else who has ever lived, and vastly for the worse.
The proposals for the inner ring are really astounding - it would have gone right through all sorts of lovely historical neighbourhoods, across nice local parks - right through many of the nicest inner suburbs in London. Every time I see the fortress-like sides of Southwyck House in Brixton I'm reminded of it. If it had gone ahead it really would be a completely different city today.
Today Oslo has major roads in tunnels under parts of the city. My impression visiting was that this is how you would solve the problem if you had infinite budget.
I do not like the way the text scroll just ‘jumps’ ahead when scrolling down after the header picture. The title has disappeared above your screen before you have time to read it. It reminds me of the Apple product pages, whereby your scroll is constantly hijacked by spinning pictures of laptops opening and closing.
The North Circular is a decent enough road if you don't live by it.
I happen to live just by the South Circular, and it's not really a ring road. You wouldn't use it to circumnavigate London, it's just a joined up set of separate roads (of various sizes) that happen to form a vague semi-circle.
Also on the Eastern side there's only a ferry to connect the North and South Circulars. And that ferry has quite limited operating hours and capacity. It's also very slow.
To avoid the ferry you either need to come West a bit and use the Blackwall Tunnel or go way East and use the outer ring road (M25) crossings at Dartford.
Before WW2 there was a plan to dramatically extend the London Underground miles into the surrounding countryside, far beyond the metropolis. The depression paused that plan and WW2 and the impoverishment of the country ended it. I hope someone writes a similar article about the unfinished transport system that we call the tube.
After nearly 100 years we've come full circle and the Elizabeth line is opening, connecting Reading and the town's West on London to the city through to Shenfield - although perhaps still not on the scale they originally pictured.
Those proposals were extreme, specially Ringway 1, but getting around London is far worse than in Paris, which has the benefit of Haussmann's boulevards pierced after the upheavals of revolutions, and the Périphérique. Political stability entrenches vested interests and NIMBYism, like the fact much of London's choicest property is still owned by descendants of the feudal aristocracy and people don't own the land their houses are built on, they just lease them like medieval serfs would have, since land reform never happened in England.
At one point, there was even a proposal to build massive highways underground instead, but Paris' friable limestone (just as in London) and long history of undocumented quarries make any tunneling effort fraught.
> people don't own the land their houses are built on, they just lease them like medieval serfs would have, since land reform never happened in England.
I’m curious about this - are you referring to leaseholds? Because that seems to mainly exist for flats. If you have a freehold (like almost every house has) you definitely own the land.
You might find Guy Shrubsole's book, Who Owns England?, an interesting read. It deals with land ownership, so not directly with freehold v leasehold for householders, but it contains some startling statistics.
There's a decent review of the book (from 2019) here:
Technically the Queen (the crown) owns all the land. In practice it doesn't make much difference, but it does kick in if a freehold suddenly has no owner.
In reality, all nations have dealt with that problem in roughly the same way, the land reverts to the state.
In the US if an owner of property can't be identified, then it's given to the state to deal with and in France it goes to the local authority.
In most of the UK, the land is given to the Crown Estate (not the monarchs personal property but to fund the country). The exception is Cornwall and Lancashire, where it's given to the relevant duchies (i.e. the prince of wales and the monarch), who by convention sell it and donate the proceeds to charity.
> but getting around London is far worse than in Paris
not sure about this. every time i go to Paris i'm stuck in traffic. at least in London i've got at least 5 routes i could take. and this is exactly because there are no boulevards.
The roads in Hampstead where I live are too narrow for two cars to pass in opposite directions, but are not made one-way, which is a prescription for gridlock, and this is hardly central. Then you have blocks like this one in Belsize Park that is nearly a kilometer long and and an impassable obstacle to traffic flowing NW—>SE towards Central London:
Interesting to read in the current context of the Silvertown tunnel currently being built despite complaints from both sides of the river and an admission from TFL that it may make traffic worse south of the river.
Not to mention the fact that cyclists can’t use the tunnel…
I wonder about whether the Silvertown Tunnel will make the average traffic worse but the worst case traffic better.
Currently, if the Blackwall tunnel closes, traffic basically grinds to a halt across a huge part of SE London. I was taking my dying bunny to the vet the other month and a trip that normally takes under ten minutes took forty due to the Blackwall tunnel being closed, even though I'm all the way back in Hither Green.
Nevertheless, I would have preferred they built one of the many proposed pedestrian/cycling bridges...
To be fair the congestion in that area is also because of a significant number of the side roads across Lewisham/Greenwich having been closed to enable the low traffic neighbourhoods - much needed but making congestion awful as a consequence.
And this is why our governments love China so much. As Trudeau said:
"There's a level of admiration I actually have for China. Their basic dictatorship is actually allowing them to turn their economy around on a dime."
And it is also a reason why governments and their pet projects, despite their claimed authority, are not actually serving those they purport to serve. Huge projects at public expense - eg the creation of the road networks we do have - don't necessarily serve people, but do serve corporations (eg automakers).
The dartboard should be done for the London tube/rail network. It easy to get into central London from periphery (say Bromley to Victoria is 20min by train, 1hr by car), but periphery to periphery is not good if you dont have direct train (eg Bromley to Greenwich is 45min by train, but 20 min by car). The situation is worse if you are carrying luggage and/or kids.
Whilst things like Westway are an abomination, the other parts of London's road structure are little better. I used to live just off the South Circular, which is a road system in notion only - there are almost no dual carrige-ways, and the route simply joins up a lot of suburban minor roads. The North Circular is somewhat better (unless you live next to it), but not much.
Couldn't you use Elon Musk's Boring Company to recreate the missing Ringways as underground tunnels?
I remember as an American overseas in 1975 that it was one of the most baffling aspects of driving in London. I don't know if they still do it but the rental car companies would offer to drive you from Central London to the beginning of the freeway. Assuming they took either a bus or the tube back.
I took a trip to Bournemouth to see a ham radio buddy and ended up being white knuckled the entire way. After our visit I ended up turning the car in and taking the train back into London!
so, yay.
obligatory jay foreman video on the topic: https://youtu.be/yUEHWhO_HdY