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Brill Bullets were beautiful Interurban Trolleys
that were built by the J.G. Brill Company.
Lafayette Street in Schenectady (Circe 1931).
(Photo: Efner Research Center). |
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I imagine my hometown of Schenectady and Scotia, New
York like it may have looked 85 years ago - with a population
concentrated around the city - around where people worked, shopped and
socially interacted. A trolley running down the State Street with bus
routes to and from the trolly stops. People lived in an urbanized
environment - simply "close". We visited the country on our Sunday car
rides or when we went on vacation. Then came the 40s, 50s and 60s;
cheap gas, a prospering economy, and a DOD project that became our
Interstate Highway System (for moving troops quickly). We went from a
15 minute commute to work to a 60 minute commute to work from the
country / suburbs. I question the differences in quality of life, as a people,
between the times of the early part of the 20th century and what we
evolved into today. Would this have happened if energy had not been cheap,
the Interstate Highway System had not been built and the times been less
prosperous? Maybe we would have been riding
Brill's Baby Bullets to work and around town.

Now
reset the clock to the current day. Expensive energy, an aging
interstate system in need of repair and a changing mindset where time is
more valuable spent with family and friends than commuting on I95 (add
to that the potential of shrinking service / professional wages).

I like San Francisco as my model city. An arterial commuter train system (
BART)
that interconnects several major cities in the Bay Area. A bus/subway
system (MUNI) that connects from BART around and within the major cities
and then free "around town" bus/trolleys that provide in town
transportation between commerce and shopping locations. Oh, and just in
case you need a car for a couple hours - walk up to the corner and get
in a
Zip Car - No more need for a personal vehicle - rent it by the hour
(Zip, now owned by Avis).

People
will say "that they don't live near a city"... then for the sake of
sleeping in the county, they will pay more for energy, pay more for
vehicles, pay more for insurance and drive on roads that will remain in
disrepair as the population will not pass the tax bonds to pay for the
repair and replacement of roads they don't drive. An interesting article >
Why This CEO Doesn’t Own A Car: The Rise Of Dis-Ownership.
Now
imagine inner city (big city) high speed walkways (like in airports), Imagine
convenient mass transportation, like in Portland, Oregon and high speed
railways between large regional cities.
Which cities are ahead of the curve?
List of U.S. cities with high transit ridership from Wikipedia.
Will our cities and communities of the future look more like a Jetson's cartoon?
"Local" will become much more important in out future.
Quality of life will be redefined - In our lifetime.
Bob
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