TooFar wrote:Only a conservative nimby living in Adelaide would say that. How are they found wanting? I don’t think anyone is saying that Freeways are the total solution, but they are an integral part of the complete transportation system of a modern city.
What cities are reducing their freeways? Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney. They are the major cities in Australia. You are just talking rubbish without providing any facts at all. :wank:
I drive on a freeway every day of my life. They are great. Sure there is some congestion at times but the benefits far out way the negatives. I don’t think you would find many people where I live wanting to remove the freeways and install traffic lights.
You are focusing on fantasy and not reality.

Remember Australia is not Europe, our cities have far more in common with North American cities. It is just Adelaide f*cked it up. Built a NA type low density city but did not provide sufficient transport options.
How funny to see you saying that "only a conservative nimby living in Adelaide would say that", when we are each living in the part of the world where the anti-freeway crowd are the progressive liberal set. Now you've given me an identity crisis, I must be some sort of a progressocon nimberal or something.
Earlier this month, Philadelphia (your current digs, yes?) was host to a major conference
Reimagining cities: urban design after the age of oil. Not many speakers there were talking on the manifold benefits of freeways. That link, by the way, is from the magazine Next American City likewise published in Philly. You'll hardly find any positive stories on freeways there, although the cover story this month is "A new era for train travel?" ("Is this Amtrak’s moment to shine and usher in a new era of train travel?"). Evidentally, they are all unimpressed by the same freeways that you are driving on.
Frankly, I find it hard to get excited about freeways (not in a positive sense, anyway) when I get caught in a real jam, such as on Thursday last week, when my evening commute was much like
this guy's. That's 45 minutes to travel about 6 km on a road with a 100km/h limit, and the buses are in the HOV lane.
As for rejecting freeways, there are two ways that happens. The obvious way is when an existing freeway is removed, as has happened in the past with the Embarcadero in SF, the East River freeway in NYC, and as I hope ultimately happens to Seattle's Alaskan Way Viaduct. But these were all forced by events, they had become unsound. Even clearer is the voluntary demolition of the
Cheonggyecheon Motorway in Seoul. The success of that project now has cities like Shanghai and Tokyo contemplating the same option. And if you want an American example, you could try Milwaukee, WI, who demolished the
Park East Freeway. Or, even closer to home, Sydney is considering demolishing the
Cahill Expressway.
The less obvious rejection is when the transit budget is changed to reduce investment in freeways. That's harder to spot, but it's happening right across America right now. Pick any place that's chosen to start building rail or BRT - the money that they're spending on transit is money that they chose not to spend on roads. Not so long ago, that was unthinkable.
Yes, urban planners (or lack thereof) of previous generations have left us with a host of problems. I say that the right course of action is to solve their mistakes and not to legitimise them by tacking on dated concepts of transport and city-dom.
A lot of people talk about our lack of freeways as if it's a mark of backwardness; I want to make a blessing out of adversity, to change the debate from us being trapped in the past to being the city of the future that skipped the middle phase. My dream would be to see Adelaide become the first post-oil city: Adelaide - The City Without A Freeway. I want us to be the city that they talk about at urban design conferences. "If Adelaide can do it, then so can we" they would say. That, I believe, would be a much more significant outcome for us all.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have a bike to ride and a bus to catch.
PS - as a neat little
denoument for this diatribe, I rode out of the house 10 minutes after the bus that I used to catch left, and I beat it to the freeway. The poor thing was stuck in traffic, the queue of cars waiting to turn onto the SR-520 stretched back almost half a mile.