Sarah Goodyear
Recent Posts
Connecting Residential Density and Fuel Consumption
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Sometimes, and with some people, intuitive arguments just don’t cut it. It’s good to have some facts and figures at hand. That’s the topic of today’s featured post from the Streetsblog Network. On member site Worldchanging, Clark Williams-Derry wrote: Photo of a neighborhood in Ventura, California, by -Wink- via Flickr. Sometimes I feel a little […]
So Much Parking It Hurts
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Today on the Streetsblog Network, Austin Contrarian counts the ways that too much parking can damage a downtown: (Photo: Amber Rhea via Flickr) Parking raises the cost of new development, which means less of it. This may be no big deal for a city with a built-out downtown, but it is a big deal for […]
‘You Would Just Love to Lob Something at Their Heads’
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The troubled relationship between cars and bikes is an old topic, but that hasn’t stopped it from being a hot one on the Streetsblog Network and around the web in general this week. And it’s not going to go away any time soon. What it looks like when everyone tries to do the right thing. […]
Getting a Fair Share of the Road
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Today on the Streetsblog Network, we bring you a post from Greater Greater Washington in which a bus and a bicycle have a bad encounter, leading to a discussion about windshield perspective (that bus has a mighty big windshield) and sharing the road. Antonio López writes: Bus and bike (not the ones in the story) […]
Use Your Body and Your Brain Will Thank You
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We talk a lot on this blog about abstractions — theories of urban development, economic hypotheses, planning paradigms. But in the end, it all has to play out in the real world. And the real world of transportation is about one simple thing: moving your body from one place to another place. So today we’re […]
“Spatial Mismatch” and Why Density Alone Isn’t Enough
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Density, density, density. It’s something of a mantra in sustainable transportation circles. But in today’s featured post from the Streetsblog Network, UrbanCincy points to the cautionary example of Atlanta — a place that could perhaps best be described as dense sprawl. The skylines of Atlanta. Photo by mattsal88 via ImageShack. What has happened in Atlanta […]
Meet the Network: UrbanReviewSTL
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It’s been nearly ten months since we first started building the Streetsblog Network — a group of bloggers around the country and around the world who write about livable streets, transportation policy, sustainable development and related topics. To find these folks, we asked our friends for tips and then went out hunting on the Internet. […]
Pay Close Attention to the Following Message About Distraction
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In the last couple of weeks, the issue of cellphone use and texting while driving has finally been shoved into the national consciousness, thanks to an excellent series of articles by Matt Richtel in The New York Times. Even the United States Senate has been moved to sit up and take notice. Of course our […]
Complete Streets Could Help America Lose Weight, Says CDC
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When people who aren’t transportation geeks ask me why transportation policy is a topic worthy of more attention on the national stage, I often start by talking about the public health implications. Not only are tens of thousands of Americans killed and injured in car crashes every year, not only are countless thousands of others […]
How Cars Destroy the Wilderness of Childhood
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It’s the height of summer, the stretch of endless lazy days when — at least in the American dreamworld — kids hunt for adventure in packs through the shimmering heat. A time when they make their own fun. A time of bicycles and improvised games and ice cream, of luxuriant boredom and the discovery it […]
New Jersey Needs to Face Its Pedestrian Fatality Problem
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The other day, a woman on foot was killed by a someone driving a car in New Jersey. Sadly, that isn’t terribly unusual. What made this death more "newsworthy" — elevating it briefly to the CNN headline stack yesterday — was the fact that Alexis Cohen, the woman who was left on the side of […]
The Transformative Potential of Bike Sharing
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Can a bike-sharing program transform a city? To mark the second anniversary of the Vélib system in Paris, Streetsblog Network member World Streets has a post arguing that it can, if it’s done on a sufficient scale: One of the complaints currently being voiced in the UK press about the new public bike start-up in […]