Friday, February 22, 2013

From The Atlantic Cities — Cars and Robust Cities Are Fundamentally Incompatible


Parking disrupts the urban fabric in places like Hartford
where it occupies more than 20 percent of downtown land.
Big roads and parking garages are so common in American cities that it's easy to forget these places once functioned exceptionally well without them. However, in their persistent battle to satisfy the demands of motorists, many urban areas are losing out.

In the early 1960s – when highway construction was at its peak and cars were just beginning to leave their mark – a handful of critics predicted there would be irreconcilable tensions between vibrant cities and their motorized inhabitants. Nearly 50 years later, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania published research validating this idea.

Read more: Cars and Robust Cities Are Fundamentally Incompatible - Commute - The Atlantic Cities

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