Flashback Friday.
The percent of carless households in any given city correlates very well with the percent of homes built before 1940. So what happened in the 40s?
According to Left for LeDroit, it was suburbs:
The suburban housing model was — and, for the most part, still is — based on several main principles, most significantly, the uniformity of housing sizes (usually large) and the separation of residential and commercial uses. Both larger lots and the separation of uses create longer distances between any two points, requiring a greater effort to go between home, work, and the grocery store.
These longer distances between daily destinations made walking impractical and the lower population densities made public transit financially unsustainable. The only solution was the private automobile, which, coincidentally, benefited from massive government subsidies in the form of highway building and a subsidized oil infrastructure and industry.
Neighborhoods designed after World War II are designed for cars, not pedestrians; the opposite is true for neighborhoods designed before 1940. Whether or not one owns a car, and how far one drives if they do, then, is dependent on the type of city, not personal characteristics like environmental friendliness. Ezra Klein puts it nicely:
In practice, this doesn’t feel like a decision imposed by the cold realities of infrastructure. We get attached to our cars. We get attached to our bikes. We name our subway systems. We brag about our short walks to work. People attach stories to their lives. But at the end of the day, they orient their lives around pretty practical judgments about how best to live. If you need a car to get where you’re going, you’re likely to own one. If you rarely use your car, have to move it a couple of times a week to avoid street cleaning, can barely find parking and have trouble avoiding tickets, you’re going to think hard about giving it up. It’s not about good or bad or red or blue. It’s about infrastructure.
Word.
Neither Ezra nor Left for LeDroit, however, point out that every city, whether it was built for pedestrians or cars, is full of people without cars. In the case of car-dependent cities, this is mostly people who can’t afford to buy or own a car. And these people, in these cities, are royally screwed. Los Angeles, for example, is the most expensive place in the U.S. to own a car and residents are highly car-dependent; lower income people who can’t afford a car must spend extraordinary amounts of time using our mediocre public transportation system, such that carlessness contributes significantly to unemployment.
Originally posted in 2010.
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 32
Kai — August 9, 2010
What I wouldn't give to live in a town designed for walking or biking! I've failed my driver's test twice. I don't want to drive, I hate it. but if I want to get anywhere around here I HAVE to learn eventually and I have to drive. Otherwise I'll be taking cabs or bumming rides off people all my life, which takes a away a lot of my independence (not to mention my money in the case of cabs.) And the public transit system here sucks. It's a shame. Not only would me not driving benefit the environment, I wouldn't be forced to do something I never really wanted to do in the first place.
DoctorJay — August 9, 2010
Tom vanderbilt has been doing some interesting writing on carless people in movies:
http://www.slate.com/id/2262214/
DoogieHowser — August 9, 2010
I live in LA too and I disagree. I would not call our public transportation system "mediocre." I'm carfree - I can't really afford a car on my student budget nor do I think I would want to take on the hassle of buying one right now when I might move in a few years - and I'm able to get to just about anywhere on the LACTMA bus lines, municipal bus lines (i.e. Culver City transit, Big Blue Bus) and Metro with my bike filling in the gaps along the way. It definitely isn't glamorous and it's definitely slower than driving (although in some cases it's not - I can usually ride my bike faster than traffic during rush hour in some parts of the city like K-Town) but I don't agree with this trope that's thrown around that LA has an atrocious or horribly inefficient public transport system. Look up some of the efficiency statistics for LACTMA and compare it to other public transport systems in the nation, I think you'll be surprised. LACTMA also has some pretty nice busses, especially on their Rapid lines. There is in fact a pretty sizable population of the city that uses and relies on these lines, often entirely by choice (i.e. they're not economically forced to) - the thing is, the *vast majority* of these people are not-white and they're usually blue-collar, which means that the use of public transport (especially buses) in LA is *way* more stigmatized than it is in almost any other major city I've lived in.
I used to live in New York and I think LACTMA buses are actually more efficient and cleaner than buses in NYC (and if you live in the outer-boros, you often find yourself riding way more buses than trains) but public transport in NYC isn't as stigmatized because a wider range of demographics (read: whites and middle class people) use it. So that's an important part that you're missing I think: the perspectives that people bring to the table regarding transport.
I could go further into this discussion re: cycling as well but I don't want to take up too much more space. I will say that most people tend to think of cycling as a juvenile activity, regardless of who is doing it. I will also say that there is something about cycling that really pisses off a lot of people, even many so-called "progressives." The "progressive" city of Santa Monica was pretty notorious for harassing cyclists (i.e. cops pulling over cyclists, detaining them for prolonged periods, only to let them go without any charges) up until a few years ago. That's a whole 'nother topic, but it's related to how people perceive different forms of transport and how that influences their decisions.
Jeff Kaufman — August 9, 2010
In practice, this doesn’t feel like a decision imposed by the cold realities of infrastructure. We get attached to our cars. We get attached to our bikes. We name our subway systems. We brag about our short walks to work. People attach stories to their lives. But at the end of the day, they orient their lives around pretty practical judgments about how best to live. If you need a car to get where you’re going, you’re likely to own one. If you rarely use your car, have to move it a couple of times a week to avoid street cleaning, can barely find parking and have trouble avoiding tickets, you’re going to think hard about giving it up. It’s not about good or bad or red or blue. It’s about infrastructure.
This ignores people choosing where to live at least in part on transportation. For example, we moved from a suburb and One reason we now live where we do is that we did not want to own a car and our new apartment is closer to the subway and has better bus service. I'm not sure how big a factor transportation is in most people's housing decisions, though.
Rachel — August 9, 2010
If I want to bike to the grocery store, it involves crossing a street with a speed limit of 50mph but, of course, cars go 60 and up. There is no crosswalk, even at the light. There is no bike path, just gravel on the sides of the roads. Besides the grocery store, there's a strip mall with a CVS and pizza hut, starbucks, a gym, a few restaurants, and a newly built office building. This is where the nearest bus stop is - still requiring to cross the major street and travel a good ways by bike. Beyond that, to bike anywhere (like the library) would involve an extremely long bike ride and to cross more major roads.
I live in a fast growing city on the outskirts of DC. It's about a half hour by car to the nearest metro station. There are 2 high schools that would be within biking distance if only I didn't fear getting run over while trying not to fall over on the gravel shoulder of the road.
This city is not meant for biking or public transportation, and it saddens me.
Kai — August 9, 2010
My town was nto designed for bikes either. I'm not comfortable riding a bike on the road (probably because when I was a little kid my dad made us ride on the sidewalk on bike rides.) It's nerve-wracking as a bicyclist and for the driver (when I've been in car.) If I hit a person on my bike (which seems unlikely) they're going to be a lot less hurt then I would be if I was hit by a car on my bike. There should be either bike lanes or bicyclists should be allowed to ride on the sidewalk.
As far as I'm concerned, things powered by motors usually belong on the road, things powered by people's movement usually belong on the sidewalk (or at least not in traffic.)
anty — August 9, 2010
In my experience, being carless in LA is not bad at all especially if you live nearish to one of the subway/light rail/dedicated bus lines. The westside is pain for this reason because of the particularly congested traffic.
I hope this isn't too much of a derail, but Kai brings up a great misconception: riding you bike on the sidewalk is actually more dangerous than riding in the street! Do you think something on wheels going ~10 mph should really be sharing a sidewalk with pedestrians? Do you think drivers look for such things when pulling in and out of driveways? With visibly comes increased safety.
When I pass cyclists in my car I treat them the way I want to be treated when on my bike--I give them at least 3 feet of space and do not pass them until I am able to safely do so. As a driver I find it no more stressful than any other aspect of driving.
Phoebe — August 9, 2010
On the flip side, Portland is mostly great for biking and public transportation. There are a few difficult parts to bike, but overall it's very good. Of course, this means there are lots of bikers on the road and you have to constantly be careful not to hit them. Public transportation (TriMet) is annoying to use but since all high schoolers get free bus passes there is no reason not to use it (for us, anyway. Google maps will also tell you which is more efficient based on mileage and gas prices versus ticket prices for the bus. For most places I go to on a daily to weekly basis it's cheaper to use TriMet). However, the suburbs (newer, relative to the city) are not as great. TriMet doesn't cover them as much, so sometimes it's harder to take the bus. They are also not on the bike map nearly every biker in Portland has (it's free), so biking is harder there too. It's easy to see the difference of the houses, too. In my neighborhood only half the houses have driveways, whereas the suburbs they all have 2-car garages.
mercurianferret — August 9, 2010
Your link to LA being the most expensive place to own a car is from a NYTimes article from Valentines Day, 1982, and based on 1981 figures.
Since that time, LA has developed a subway system, introduced (much-maligned) bus and HOV lanes, and increased the miles of bike lanes (although by all accounts that I've found, these lanes are a tangle of mis-matched and unconnected pieces).
I don't know if LA still remains one of the most expensive places to own a car, 29 years after the data was collected. (Note: it might still be, but I'm not holding my breath.)
naath — August 10, 2010
Yes.
I think it's all too easy (I certainly do) to fall into believing that it's all about Individual Choice, but it's really not. Even one's location is not always a choice - people are forced through financial circumstances to live in certain areas.
For instance where I live cycling is very easy. Indeed given where I work it is much easier for me to cycle than to drive (there is only very expensive parking and the roads are very congested)! But it is only through having a good job and a partner who also has a good job that we manage to have a reasonably sized home in the city (and of course only through being the sort of people who can get the right sort of job that we can both work in the same city) - if we were poorer we would probably have to move further out (making cycling much less easy) in order to afford a decent sized home.
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