TheRifleman
Banned
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2008
- Messages
- 4,431
- Reaction score
- 0
Re: Congress Street Garage Development
Garage parking $$...........heading North like everything else.
Garage parking $$...........heading North like everything else.
I wouldn't quite say "entitlement", but I would say that if you don't give people price cues messes up people's sense of supply and demand--especially around scarce resources, like city streets and freeways at rush hour.People spend hours looking for parking? Or, they spend hours looking for (free) parking? More entitlement from automobile owners who think their gas taxes should evaporate, tolls disappear and parking be free.
A - Families of any configuration, I would guess, are good for a city (or town, or neighborhood) as they ostensibly provide some long-term stability (trust me, moving a family is a pain in the ass on a number of levels) and lifeblood into their community.
...
B - I say all this because not having a car works well for some. But if you have ever tried lugging more than a couple bags worth of groceries around more than 50 yards under Sunny, dry 68 degree skies, it's a chore. Try doing that earlier this afternoon when it was 95 and humid, or in February with 3 feet of snow and the sidewalks not plowed for 5 days.
...
C - My point is that a car can be a lot faster, and I have found that as time passes, the more important it becomes. Yes, with traffic, there are definitely times where public transit is a quicker option; however, I'd still take a car if I had a couple of young kids and/or a bunch of groceries to lug around.
B - I hate it when people say that it must be a real pain in the ass taking home groceries without a car. Living in the city for the last 6 years has taught me this isn't true.
The trick is to just make more frequent trips.
While that cited census data might say that 1 in 3 residents is 20-35 and does not have a car, that means that the other 2/3rds of the residents are outside that demograph and most of them (especially those 36+) probably do.
That demograph is also more likely to be married and have kids, I would think. As an old fart with a wife and kids, I can also say that I do a lot more consuming now than I ever did as a bachelor--simple math, I now have 4 mouths (and counting) to feed/house/entertain vice only one.
...
I say all this because not having a car works well for some. But if you have ever tried lugging more than a couple bags worth of groceries around more than 50 yards under Sunny, dry 68 degree skies, it's a chore. Try doing that earlier this afternoon when it was 95 and humid, or in February with 3 feet of snow and the sidewalks not plowed for 5 days.
Or if you have to commute beyond your den and show up resembling a semi-professional appearance (particularly if your place of business has no locker/shower facilities), it can be tough relying on bike/public transit. Shoot, my office is in Wilmington and I live in Dedham. If I leave early enough, it is a 40 minute ride in to work. If I take the commuter rails (yes, one into Back Bay/South Station, one out of North Station to Wilmington) and get a friend from work to pick me up 2-4 miles from my office (depending on which train I catch), the whole event can last upwards of 2.5 hours EACH WAY.
My point is that a car can be a lot faster, and I have found that as time passes, the more important it becomes. Yes, with traffic, there are definitely times where public transit is a quicker option; however, I'd still take a car if I had a couple of young kids and/or a bunch of groceries to lug around.
So not everyone that has a car is an entitled nuke the whales antichrist . . . many are just busy raising a family.
P.S. Yes, I live in Dedham, not Boston. Wife wouldn't go for living in the city and it wasn't a hill worth dying on. Perhaps that DQs me from having a valid opinion, but 15 years after the fact, I see her wisdom and am actually more inclined to live further away from the city than closer to it.
Rather it is the limited (but widespread) 3-part practice:
1) Chosing to live in the 'burbs
2) Chosing to work in the CBD
3) Chosing to make your work trip in a SOV.