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Welcome to Car Free Seattle
Cars are at best a necessary evil. They have no place in cities, where pedestrain malls, mass transit, and wide smooth human-powered-vehicle paths could serve all urban transportation needs. We can all work towards this goal bit by bit and day by day--by driving less, carpooling, biking, or riding the bus. Every little bit helps to reduce congestion, noise, and pollution.



Bookmark this website now or contact us to find out how you can get involved in reducing automobile dependency for yourself and others.


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Annihilation of Auto: Kunstler on Cars: ''All of them contribute to make my everyday world a worse pla
Car Free Cities *************** INFEKTION GROUP ***************

 

 

Posted by zverina on Wednesday, November 27 @ 23:23:16 EST (747 reads)
(Read More... | 507 bytes more | 1 comment | Annihilation of Auto | Score: 1)




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Infektion
Car Free Cities Anonymous writes "*************** INFEKTION GROUP ***************

 

 

"
Posted by zverina on Thursday, October 24 @ 14:44:00 EDT (267 reads)
(Read More... | 501 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0)




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Public Transit Could Reduce Oil Dependency by 40%
Car Free Cities Use of Public Transportation by One in Ten Americans Would Lead to Cleaner Air and Reduce U.S. Oil Dependency by 40 Percent

Study Proves Increasing Public Transportation Is the Best -- and possibly only -- Non-Regulatory Strategy for Major Environmental and Energy Gains

WASHINGTON, DC (July 17, 2002) - A new independent study by three top economists demonstrates that increasing public transportation use is the most effective, and possibly the only way to improve air quality and reduce energy consumption without imposing new taxes, government mandates or regulations.

Based on the findings of the new national study, energy and environmental savings have been calculated for more than a dozen major metropolitan areas in the United States.

"Conserving Energy and Preserving the Environment: The Role of Public Transportation," released today in Washington, DC, concludes that public transportation generates 95 percent less carbon monoxide (CO), 92 percent less in volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and about half as much carbon dioxide (CO2) and nitrogen oxide (NOx), per passenger mile, as private vehicles.

The report was authored by: Dr. Robert J. Shapiro, Managing Director of Sonecon, LLC, and non-resident Fellow of the Brookings Institution and the Progressive Policy Institute, Dr. Kevin A. Hassett, Resident Scholar of the American Enterprise Institute; and Dr. Frank S. Arnold, President of Applied Microeconomics, Inc.

In energy conservation, the study shows that public transportation already saves more than 855 million gallons of gasoline or 45 million barrels of oil a year. This number is equivalent to the energy used to heat, cool and operate one-fourth of all American homes annually, or half the energy used to manufacture all computers and electronic equipment in America annually.

"We all know that a rail car or bus carrying 40 people is far more efficient than a car moving just one person. What people may not realize is exactly how much energy is being saved, and how these savings add up to millions of barrels of oil conserved and millions of tons of harmful emissions avoided each year," said Dr. Robert J. Shapiro, co-author of the study. "Increased use of public transportation is an important answer to two national challenges -- greater energy independence and a cleaner environment -- that our nation has been grappling with for decades."

The study also shows that if one in ten Americans used public transportation regularly, U.S. reliance on foreign oil could be cut by more than 40 percent. This is nearly equivalent to the amount of oil we import from Saudi Arabia every year. Environmental benefits would also be significant. Without any new government mandates, regulations or taxes, the United States would be able to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by more than 25 percent of the standard set under the Kyoto Agreement.

Among the study's other major findings:
+Even small increases in transit usage would help many of the 16 major U.S. cities, which currently fail to meet EPA air-quality standards for CO or smog, improve air quality.

+For every passenger mile traveled, public transportation is twice as fuel efficient as private automobiles, sports utility vehicles (SUVs) and light trucks.

+If one in seven Americans used public transportation for their daily travel needs, they would help prevent global warming in the United States by cutting CO2 by the equivalent of nearly 20 percent of the CO2 emitted from fuel burned for residential uses and more than 20 percent of all CO2 emitted by commercial enterprises.

+If one in five Americans used public transportation daily, it would help reduce CO pollution by more than all the CO emitted from the entire chemical manufacturing industry and all metal processing plants in the United States.

"This study clearly shows that more energy is used getting people from place to place than in producing all goods or running all the homes in America," said William W. Millar, President of the American Public Transportation Association (APTA), the non-profit organization that commissioned the study. "We can continue to debate domestic oil exploration, emissions requirements, and the stability of foreign sources of energy, but any serious plan to reduce oil dependency and clean up the air must include ways to increase public transportation use. This is simply our country's greatest opportunity to conserve energy and improve the environment."

"Increasing the use of public transportation needs to be an essential element of our national energy and environmental policies," said Millar. "If we don't make transit a national priority by increasing investment, America's enduring economic and environmental health will be in jeopardy."

Noting that the report is especially timely because of today's designation as a "Code Red" day, Washington Metro Chief Executive Officer Richard A. White said, "Our Washington Metro region is on the verge of reclassification by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as a "severe non-attainment area" for air quality. Unless the region can show it can meet federally imposed air quality standards, construction of new transportation projects will be postponed. I believe fervently that the Metro system offers our region the most immediate opportunity to improve our air quality. If we get can get more people out of their cars and onto the Metro system, we will notice a marked improvement in the region's air quality."

To view a full copy of the study please visit www.apta.com or www.publictransportation.org.
Posted by zverina on Thursday, October 24 @ 14:40:34 EDT (297 reads)
(comments? | Score: 5)




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Venice: an acoustical paradise
Car Free Cities

Quiet, Please

by Joe Wolfe. Joe Wolfe Is An Associate Professor of Physics At The University of Nsw, Where He Researches The Acoustics of Musical instruments, the voice and the ear.

Sydney Morning Herald June 16, 2001

The exhausts of Venice are mixed with water. This is bad news for any fish, but great news for the rest of us. Venice, you see, is an acoustical paradise.

I had noticed it on my first visit to this magical city. Having a quiet meal in the evening, I realised I had spent a day not only without the noise of cars, but a day unmarred by loudspeakers. The Venetian supermarket did not have that offensive mix of distorted music and advertising that pollutes their counterparts in other cities. Venetian cafes and restaurants either have real music with real musicians, or else are pleasantly quiet. Even the least sensitive tourist in Venice seems to have decided to walk the streets without the tish-tica-tish-tica-tish of the elsewhere omnipresent Walkman. And in the evenings, the tenors in the gondolas sing without amplification. They have no need for them, thanks to their good voices and the low-level background noise.

There is more to Venice's magic than this: the absence of cars means an absence of speed, aggression and foolishness, and that puts both residents and tourists in a better mood. But the absence of broadband noise that comes with car exhausts is a balm for the ears.

Almost every little courtyard in Venice is a haven of peace. The tourist returns from a day of this quiet, calm existence and collapses onto a hotel bed and hears ... the gentle lapping of water in the canals, or the breeze in the leaves of the window plants.

But these are memories of an earlier time, and I wondered to what extent they had been filtered by nostalgia? Perhaps I had selectively forgotten some details in the general euphoria induced by la Serenissima (Venice's traditional name, which would translate as the very serene''). I didn't think so, but on my next visit I keep my ears open and my pen ready.

First I noticed birdsong: the occasionally raucous cry of gulls, the low rumble of pigeons, the cheerful sparrows.

Then the sound of my shoes on the paving. In Venice I am often conscious of footsteps: my shoes are soft-soled and I don't always hear them, but I notice the steps of hard soles and the different rhythms of different pedestrians. Are Venetians more sensitive to this, I wonder, and do they recognise the walks of their friends from the next alley?

Sometimes there is a background of voices in the soft musical language that I am later to learn is Venetian, whose speakers proudly note its differences, in prosody and vocabulary, from Italian.

Twice in my walk on this Friday afternoon I hear pianists practising, one doing technical exercises and the other an early prelude from the Well Tempered Keyboard. Both are using the sordino or una corda pedals, as though they are worried about disturbing the calm. A lovely place for musicians, I think, until I see a bass player lugging his instrument over the bridges.

A boat with an outboard passes. It is a 10kW motor, but as it passes at three or four knots, almost at an idle, its sound is inoffensive. And, unlike a motor bike, the exhaust is mixed with water, which softens the percussive shock of the exhaust stroke. Most of the boats are diesels and in virtually all of them the motor turns barely above an idle.

The sound of water lapping against the banks of the canals is omnipresent, as is the sound of water pouring endlessly from the drinking fountains. welcome, cool sounds in this heat. Often these are the dominant sounds.

In one narrow alley, the breeze is a little stronger and the loudest sound I hear is the turbulence of the air in my ears. It is not like this in Sydney at 4pm on a Friday.

A little further along, a man is painting the gate at the entrance to a courtyard. Here the loudest sound is that of his brush as he spreads the thick, dark green enamel itself a cool and quiet colour.

Later I hear, for the first time, an air-conditioner. It is somewhere near a laundry and it must be working hard on this summer's day. I realise that quite a few places (supermarkets, restaurants, printers, hairdressers) have air-conditioners, but that the heat exchangers must be on the roofs and so well baffled that, even in this quiet city, they cannot usually be heard. I also hear a phone ring. And then the laughter of children. (On reflection I realise that I have heard much laughter, and I don't remember any crying. Selective memory? Or are the children all happy here?)

A bell begins to toll, followed a little later by another, pitched a second below, and ringing just a little more quickly, as though set to a different metronome marking.

Then, for the first time, I hear a song which will become more familiar in this summer season of university graduations: a new graduate is being paraded through the city and subjected to various traditional indignities, presumably so as to preclude his assuming that the new title carries distinction. Dottore, Dottore,'' they sing, before finishing the chant with a highly disrespectful phrase.

On a bridge over the next canal a postman is dragging his trolley, and the dominant sound is the bounce of the tyres on the stone stairs. This is not a great town for wheels. Nor for wheelchairs. Still, with no motorcycles and no cars, I expect that there are fewer paraplegics here than in ordinary cities.

The laughter and conversation from a working men's bar drift to me as I walk across the next campo, to be displaced by the steady thump-thump of the slow-going diesel of a construction boat. But its motor has very little noise in the high frequencies (where our ears are most sensitive), and the sound of its gentle bow-wave is clearly heard over the almost pleasant engine.

A violinist practises articulation exercises. (All the musicians I hear practising are good. Where is the Twinkle, Twinkle of a Suzuki student? Or the raucous, out-of-tune saxophonist?)

There is a woodworking shop and I hear the sound of a small lathe producing one of the art forms for which the city is famous. Later I visit the workshop of a man who makes fucole, the elaborate rowlocks'' of the gondola and of other boats here. These intricate pieces of walnut are also works of art. I imagine the neighbours listening to the regular scraping of the different chisels and the occasional use of power tools and judging from the sound how the work is coming along.

After a longer stay in Venice, I revise my original description a little.

There is noise to be found: one day I passed the workboat that replaces rotten mooring posts. A pile driver is noisy, even here. And there is recorded music in some restaurants and bars, particularly along the big tourist route (Ferrovia-Lido-San Marco-Accademia). These routes are themselves relatively noisy during daytime just from the numbers of tourists, which is why I have largely avoided them. And the vaporetto (ferry) that brings me home along the Grand Canal is not quiet, either.

But for Venice as a whole, I stand by my original assessment: this calm, car-free city is an acoustical paradise.

Posted by mwatson on Monday, April 15 @ 17:10:40 EDT (363 reads)
(comments? | Score: 5)




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