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Street Smart

The Rise of Cities and the Fall of Cars

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
On a Saturday morning in December 1973, a section of New York's West Side Highway collapsed under the weight of a truck full of asphalt. The road was closed, seemingly for good, and the 80,000 cars that traveled it each day had to find a new way to their destinations. It ought to have produced traffic chaos, but it didn't. The cars simply vanished. It was a moment of revelation: the highway had induced the demand for car travel. It was a classic case of "build it and they will come," but for the first time the opposite had been shown to be true: knock it down and they will go away. Samuel I. Schwartz was inspired by the lesson. He started to reimagine cities, most of all his beloved New York, freed from their obligation to cars. Eventually, he found, he was not alone.
Since the turn of the twenty-first century, a surreptitious revolution has taken place: every year Americans are driving fewer miles. And the generation named for this new century — the Millennials — are driving least of all. Not because they can't afford to; they don't want to. They have better ideas for how to use their streets. An urban transformation is underway, and smart streets are at the heart of it. They will boost property prices and personal fitness, roll back years of congestion and smog, and offer a transformative experience of American urban life. From San Francisco to Salt Lake, Charleston to Houston, the American city is becoming a better and better place to be. Schwartz's Street Smart is a dazzling and affectionate history of the struggle for control of American cities, and an inspiring off-road map to a more vibrant, active, and vigorous urban future.
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    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2015
      How to fix our transportation nightmare? Former New York City traffic commissioner Schwarz ventures some ideas-and while many are oddly counterintuitive, they just might work.One projected infrastructure improvement in which "Gridlock Sam" took part would have rebuilt the Williamsburg Bridge into lower Manhattan, costing $700 million and adding a maintenance bill of $20 million per year precisely in order to add more cars to the traffic mix on the most crowded streets in America. "You could say the costs of the bridge outweighed the benefits, if there had actually been benefits," writes Schwartz, who casts a jaundiced eye on much of the received wisdom, economic and social, around infrastructure improvement. The author instead offers a program that many cities use in part but none in whole. For example, he advocates congestion pricing, a New York innovation applied across the Atlantic in London, to the chagrin of Top Gear but the relief of traffic-trapped drivers. Schwartz's economic lesson is unimpeachable: "when you give something valuable away for free, demand is essentially infinite. As a result, urban traffic congestion just keeps getting worse." Other planks in the platform include multimodal transport systems that facilitate a smooth switch from rail to light rail to bus and the like. Overarchingly, though, a livable city, from a transportation standpoint, is one in which people walk and bike. Schwartz allows that cars are unlikely to disappear anytime soon, but he looks to Internet-smart millennials to create demand for a system in which an individual needs not a car but a smartphone. Traffic circles, streetcars, diagonal crossings: they're all here. And so is Uber, even though Schwartz warns that such an unregulated ride-matching service will mean yet more gridlock: "the numbers won't add up to more mobility, but less." A readable and provocative book making the convincing claim that the best city is one in which people can move around easily.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2015

      New York Daily News columnist and former New York Department of Transportation chief engineer "Gridlock Sam" debuts with this lighthearted but comprehensive history of Americans' ten-mile average trip to work, shopping, school, and recreation. While Schwartz isn't antiautomobile, he does predict the further decline of the use of private cars, as the linked trends, in the United States and globally, toward walkable cities and shared transportation (trains, carpools, Uber, etc.) continue to increase. Schwartz weaves his experiences in a folksy, effective manner and is unapologetic about his Brooklyn bias. His major themes include "active transportation" (using muscle power), multimodal transportation solutions, accessibility, and the use of intelligent systems to plan traffic routes, while discussing transportation regulations such as the Model Municipal Traffic Ordinance of 1927 in an entertaining way. Historical sections highlight the heroes and villains of U.S. traffic planning as well as key roadways such as the first freeway, the Arroyo Seco Parkway, which connects Los Angeles and Pasadena. VERDICT Anyone interested in how people get from place to place will find this first-person narrative instructive and entertaining.--Sara R. Tompson, Jet Propulsion Laboratory Lib., Archives & Records Section, Pasadena, CA

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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