March 2017

Going faster doesn’t make you happier; you just drive farther

Speed doesn’t seem to be at all correlated to how happy we our with our local transportation systems.  Yesterday, we presented some new estimates of the average speed of travel in different metropolitan areas developed by the University of California’s Victor Couture. His data shows that average travel speeds in some metropolitan areas (like Louisville)

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Speed: Fast cities

Which cities move the fastest? Does it matter? The raison d’etre of the highway engineer is making cars go faster. That’s reflected in chronic complaints about traffic congestion, and codified in often misleading studies, like those produced by the Texas Transportation Institute. The latest contribution to the literature on inter-metropolitan differences in transportation system performance

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Are restaurants dying, and taking city economies with them?

Alan Ehrenhalt is alarmed. In his tony suburb of Clarendon, Virginia, several nice restaurants have closed. It seems like an ominous trend. Writing at Governing, he’s warning of “The Limits of Cafe’ Urbanism.” Cafe Urbanism is a  “lite” version of the consumer city theory propounded by Harvard’s Ed Glaeser, who noted that one of the

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Twilight of the NIMBYs? LA’s Measure S Fails

La-La Land voters deal a crushing defeat to a “NIMBYism on steroids”  The latest returns show Los Angeles’ Measure S–the self-styled “Neighborhood Integrity Initiative”–failing by a 31 percent “Yes” to 69 percent “No” margin. If it had passed, Measure S was predicted  to bring new housing development in Los Angeles to a screeching halt for the

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