• Vinny_93@lemmy.world
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    18
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    1 年前

    Houten is pretty small but Groningen, one of the the larger cities in the Netherlands, is now going in this direction. I applaud it. Now it’s just students on bikes that are dangerous. And delivery people on fatbikes or e-scooters.

    • TaTTe@lemmy.world
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      13
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      1 年前

      Also, the size of the city is irrelevant. Even in the video, NJB describes how this concept could be implemented in any city. You don’t encircle the whole city with a ring road, but you create these rings with a diameter of ~2 km around train/metro stations. Even Houten consists of two such rings nowadays. Larger cities would be dozens, if not hundreds, of rings.

      • huppakee@feddit.nl
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        10
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        1 年前

        You don’t even need rings, Barcalona converted regular blocks into what they call superblocks. Imagine the lines of tic-tac-toe (the inside lines of a 3x3 table) being converted to wide footpaths and bike lanes basically creating miniature ‘autoluwe zones’. Not necessarily by prohibiting cars entirely but making the those streets impractical for through traffic.

        • TaTTe@lemmy.world
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          8
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          1 年前

          Yup, that’s even easier to implement and could be done in any city within a few years. I just can’t fathom why almost every single street in almost every single city MUST support through traffic. Even in cities with great public transport and great infra for walking/cycling, with only a fraction of the citizens driving cars, somehow cars are still allowed to drive through basically everywhere. Looking at you Helsinki…