01-20-2022, 09:10 PM
Well my point still stands. People still need to use vehicles. It's one thing to say people can go from home to work on the bus/LRT or ride a bike. That's fine if you're just doing that. But people often need to do other things in their day - pick up groceries, friends, elderly parents, their children from daycare etc. You can't carry home a ton of groceries on the bus, nor can you carry your child home on a bike. They may come from out of the region as well, as many do, so looking at how far homes are from a transit stop is not a particularly useful metric all the time. It's easier to take your car and do whatever errands one needs to do in 1 trip than to go back and forth. They could solve the need for ugly, wasteful surface lots by building parking garages, but unfortunately those cost millions of dollars to construct, so many developments don't utilize them.
Until the cities/region become one a utopia of walkable communities with good rapid transit, this stuff is still going to be necessary. It's going to take us decades to get to the point where you can live, work, do your shopping etc all within a couple hundred meters of each other. But we're not Toronto, Berlin, Tokyo or New York City, so there will always be a need to meet in the middle while advocating for change but while understanding the necessity for traditional vehicle transportation and the requirements that come along with that.
Until the cities/region become one a utopia of walkable communities with good rapid transit, this stuff is still going to be necessary. It's going to take us decades to get to the point where you can live, work, do your shopping etc all within a couple hundred meters of each other. But we're not Toronto, Berlin, Tokyo or New York City, so there will always be a need to meet in the middle while advocating for change but while understanding the necessity for traditional vehicle transportation and the requirements that come along with that.