this post was submitted on 03 Aug 2023
0 points (NaN% liked)

Minneapolis - St. Paul Metro

559 readers
5 users here now

About

A community for leftists and progressives within the Minneapolis - St. Paul Metro Area, including all suburbs and exurbs.

Community banner courtesy of @[email protected] ❤️

Guidelines

  1. Be nice

  2. Comment substantively

  3. Probably some other stuff

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

Interesting look at the Minneapolis / St. Paul area from an urban planning and transit standpoint. It mostly focuses on Minneapolis and talks about the good and bad about how the city runs

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Could you expand on this? I've never heard of the one way system issues that you're speaking of -- many metro areas I've been to function similarly -- and would like to learn more.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago

Sure thing, I'll do my best to explain it:

One way systems in downtowns are good at one thing: Moving suburbanites into downtown for work, and out of downtown for the commute home.

The cons of them are numerous:

They distribute vitality unevenly, and cause many businesses to fail due to decreased visibility on cross streets (you can't see a store on the south side of a cross street in the intersection if you are facing north, but you can see it if you are facing south).

They intimidate out of towners, and those not familiar with downtown. It is shown that often a suburbanite will just often just leave downtown all together, rather than loop around the block if they miss their destination.

One way systems move cars faster. This seems like a good thing at the surface, but is actually a really bad thing. A faster car means a car less likely to stop for a pedestrian. A faster car means a higher likelihood of fatality in a pedestrian accident. A faster car means a driver less likely to find a business on a whim they want to purchase from. Simply put, congestion and/or slow driving are objectively good things in downtowns. Slow, two way streets encourage walkability, and they statistically encourage wayyy more sales at local businesses. Slow streets in dense areas are wealth generators.

There's probably more I can think of but this is the main gist of it.

Found an article quickly if you wanted to read up on it.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-01-31/the-case-against-one-way-streets