Quote:
Originally Posted by HarbingerDe
Lmao, where is this inclusive mix you speak of?
This city's rotting car-centric infrastructure is BAD even in comparison to the average North American city's rotting car-centric infrastructure.
People of "your age" tore up the tram lines (you're probably not THAT old but still). You tried to build a freeway around the perimeter of the peninsula (thankfully never occurred). You built anti-pedestrian / anti-cyclist nightmare intersection after nightmare intersection.
Now the HRM builds a few bus lanes / cycling lanes, and you lose your mind. I really am curious where the this inclusive mix that you think exists is hiding itself.
Can you name one of these "planning regimens" you subscribe to. As far as I can tell it's just, "Roads good. Cars good. Me angry when minorly inconvenienced behind the wheel."
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To keep it real, the tram lines were torn up after the transition to electric trolleybuses in 1949. The Harbour Drive (expressway) project dates to 1963. The ‘boomers’ stopped it before what is now known as Historic Properties was torn down (1969, I think).
Those bad planning regimes were following what was considered best practices of the day, yet it’s only retrospectively that we recognize them as being “bad”. Over the decades, mistakes made have led us to what we consider to be best practices “now”, but the reality is that we will likely identify mistakes and further evolve our planning practices as we go.
IMHO, Halifax missed the opportunity a couple of decades ago to go hard on transit planning, and now are trying to take up the slack with more buses when we should now have rail (including elevated and underground) that doesn’t interact with vehicle traffic in any way so that we could have reliable, efficient transit to take you anywhere on the peninsula, with feeders from the suburbs. Our planning habits from just a couple of decades ago have let us down.
Again IMHO, cycling lanes are necessary to protect the safety of cyclists, and absolutely need to be built (they should have started 40 years ago). However, IMHO the idea that they will displace a large chunk of vehicle traffic doesn’t jibe with the fact that people’s schedules are tighter than ever, and not everybody has the luxury of taking extra time to reach their destinations by bicycle, especially in bad weather. We need something better, but unfortunately Halifax’s poor planning practices of the recent past (and current times for that matter), have put us in the position of playing catch up and we’re still not doing enough.