Tag: Walkable Cities
Farmers markets, real food, real living, and the deathly sprawl of America
A busy intersection shows walkable living, local food, and the traffic congestion that could doom both
The greenest way of getting around may be walking, or riding a bicycle. Taking mass transit is generally very green because a bus or train can carry more people per square mile than can individually driven cars, the vehicles are reused by multiple passengers, better fuel efficiency per passenger mile,…
Transportation infrastructure creates JOBS that America needs, and cements in place certain transportation choices
There are a pair of competing needs in America. One is for JOBS – the other is to transform the transportation system. Many are offering rehabilitation of the transportation system as the key to providing JOBS. The rush to create JOBS via infrastructure development could make us miss out on…
Children playing with a ball don’t mix well with cars
A group of children are playing with a ball. They lose control of the ball, and it rolls across the street. It’s an innocent daily occurrence sometimes resulting in a dead child, a driver facing criminal charges, outrage over a needless death, anguished parents, and so on. Who’s really at…
Walkable neighborhoods have higher land values
A recent report published by CEOs for Cities finds, using Walk Score data and techniques, that walkable cities have higher land values than unwalkable cities. The study claims it illustrates “the value that homeowners attach to locations that enable them to easily access a variety of urban destinations by walking…
Walkability for green healthy transportation
Perhaps the greenest form of transportation is walking. We’re all born with the ability to walk (well, save for the few with birth defects) and it is a very low impact way to transport ourselves from place to place. Walking is good exercise, it promotes blood circulation, and can increase…
Farmers markets, real food, real living, and the deathly sprawl of America
A busy intersection shows walkable living, local food, and the traffic congestion that could doom both
The greenest way of getting around may be walking, or riding a bicycle. Taking mass transit is generally very green because a bus or train can carry more people per square mile than can individually driven cars, the vehicles are reused by multiple passengers, better fuel efficiency per passenger mile,…
Transportation infrastructure creates JOBS that America needs, and cements in place certain transportation choices
There are a pair of competing needs in America. One is for JOBS – the other is to transform the transportation system. Many are offering rehabilitation of the transportation system as the key to providing JOBS. The rush to create JOBS via infrastructure development could make us miss out on…
Children playing with a ball don’t mix well with cars
A group of children are playing with a ball. They lose control of the ball, and it rolls across the street. It’s an innocent daily occurrence sometimes resulting in a dead child, a driver facing criminal charges, outrage over a needless death, anguished parents, and so on. Who’s really at…
Walkable neighborhoods have higher land values
A recent report published by CEOs for Cities finds, using Walk Score data and techniques, that walkable cities have higher land values than unwalkable cities. The study claims it illustrates “the value that homeowners attach to locations that enable them to easily access a variety of urban destinations by walking…
Walkability for green healthy transportation
Perhaps the greenest form of transportation is walking. We’re all born with the ability to walk (well, save for the few with birth defects) and it is a very low impact way to transport ourselves from place to place. Walking is good exercise, it promotes blood circulation, and can increase…