Quote:
Originally Posted by tech12
What? SF is very dense and walkable, with at least one commercial strip in almost every neighborhood (and corner stores and whatnot scattered around) and the vast majority of the street grid was also laid out before cars were a thing. Muni has great coverage too (mostly buses nowadays, not trains, though the entire city used to be covered in an extensive streetcar network), which is why so many people use it.
Downtown hasn't recovered yet, which explains most of the drop in ridership on muni metro, where all lines converge on downtown.
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When I said "friendlier to cars," I was referring to neighborhoods like the Sunset District, Ingleside, Bayview, even Noe Valley, as compared to Chinatown, Nob Hill, North Beach, Russian Hill, and Telegraph Hill. Places where the roads tend to be wider, and there are blocks of single-family homes rather than apartment buildings.
Car friendly doesn't necessarily mean pedestrian unfriendly, but being car unfriendly generally lends itself to pedestrian friendliness. SF is car unfriendly enough to make pedestrianism viable, but not to the degree where having a car is both unnecessary and a total liability like it is in, say, Paris. Nobody is saying that SF has Parisian-level urbanism — I know. I'm just using an extreme example to make my point.
Going back to what I said earlier, U.S. cities are structured (i.e. blocks and blocks of rowhouses anchored by a main retail strip) in ways that allow cars to be part of the equation. Urbanism works best with mid-rise typologies (Paris, Barcelona, Madrid) that achieve high enough densities to demand/support more amenities and robust transit infrastructure while also keeping to a human scale.