How To Fix Traffic Forever

You're driving down the road on your way to work, 
but then, oh no! Traffic jam again?! The minute slowly   pass by as you're stewing in your car, waiting 
for the column to budge. Finally it does. Barely.   But there's good news! The city will widen the road 
to six lanes in order to solve the traffic problem!   And once they do, as promised, traffic starts to 
flow. But then, a few months later, oh no! Traffic jam again?! The road is widened again, this time to 
eight lanes. Again, traffic starts to flow, but a   few months later – you guessed it – traffic jam. Where 
did all these cars come from? How come the roads   always fill up no matter how much we widen them? 
This phenomenon is called Induced Demand.

   It was first discovered in America in 1930. Back then 
it was called traffic generation, and since then   politicians around the world have been doing their 
best to pretend it doesn't exist. Induced Demand, in   the simplest terms means that adding more lanes, 
thus making traffic flow faster, will motivate   more people to get in their cars, leading to more 
traffic. This is why, when we widen the road, more   cars appear on it, seemingly out of nowhere. Those 
extra cars are driven by those people who would   have otherwise chosen alternative modes of transit 
to get around. Some would have taken the train, some   the bus, some the bike, others would have walked, 
as driving was slow due to traffic jams. But as   soon as the road was widened and the traffic 
jams disappeared, thousands of people happily   switched back to their fast and comfortable 
cars for their commute, thereby causing traffic   jams once again. Fair enough, you might say, but if 
the demand is there, we could just keep widening   the road until everyone fits, thereby solving 
the traffic jam problem! Right? Unfortunately no.   In Texas, the Katy Freeway was widen to its current, 
unbelievable 26 lanes in width to ease traffic.   Once the project was completed however, commute 
times in the morning increased by 30%, and in the   evening by 55%.

In other words, the state of 
Texas spent $2.8 billion to make their commute worse.  All because politicians chose to pretend yet 
again that induced demand isn't real. Building more   lanes will not solve traffic. Not in 1930, not now, 
not ever. As urban planner Lewis Mumford said in 1955:   Building more roads to prevent congestion is 
like a fat man loosening his belt to prevent obesity.   Self-driving cars won't get us out of this 
mess either. If anything, they would only make   things much worse. Imagine someone owning three 
cars with a self-driving function. They get into the   first, and go shopping. Then they send the second 
one to pick up their kid from school, and the third   to go to the mechanic. One person just generated 
three cars worth of traffic, so unless you can   find a way to widen the Katy Freeway from 26 Lanes to 
78, self-driving cars are a bad idea. So what's the   actual solution to traffic? Counter-intuitively 
it's the REDUCTION of road capacity, coupled   with providing good alternatives. The more good 
alternatives you provide while simultaneously   scaling down expensive car infrastructure, the 
more people will leave their cars at home, thereby   reducing traffic jams.

Let's take this average six 
lane road. Dedicating two lanes to public transit   and turning two other lanes into safe, separated 
bike paths will actually INCREASE road capacity,   and also reduce traffic as people opt for the 
faster tram, bus or bike, instead of the slow,   jammed car lanes. Because turns out induced demand 
also works in reverse! The more you widen the road,   the more people will choose the car, and the more 
traffic jams you get. The more you NARROW the road,  the less people will choose the car, and the 
less traffic jams you get. As the saying goes,   if you plan your cities for cars and traffic, you get 
cars and traffic. If you plan for people and places,   you get people and places. Of course this requires 
political courage. Initially any such measure will   meet stiff opposition from people used to the 
convenience and comfort of their cars. The same   thing happened in Amsterdam, if you can believe 
it. Back then the population was largely hostile   towards anti-congestion, bike friendly measures, 
but now that people saw what decongestion and   car-free living mean, everyone got on board and 
started demanding even more.

As you can see, the   problem of traffic jams isn't unsolvable. Amsterdam 
has already done it, and there is nothing stopping   your city from becoming the next Amsterdam. In fact, 
chances are your city already is Amsterdam . .    In the 1960s. All it takes to fix traffic is political 
courage. Something increasingly rare these days.   So don't be afraid of decongestion and lane 
reduction measures! They will not make traffic worse!  On the contrary, those are the only solutions 
ever known to finally, once and for all, fix traffic..

As found on YouTube

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