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The Happy City and our $20 Trillion Opportunity

happycity-coverOne of the joys and frustrations of being an engineer who is also a hopeless dreamer, is that you can see the beauty of what the world could be, while also feeling the burden of every single thing that is in the way of achieving that beauty.

Envisioning this potential (and sometimes even having the opportunity to design some of it) is one of the greatest joys of being alive. But slamming up against the stubborn wall of society’s inertia, all day, every day, can lead to some displays of choice language.

If only we could grasp onto even a tiny fraction of the improvements that are hanging right in front of our faces, our society could bypass decades or centuries of pain, and billions of people could lead happier lives, starting this afternoon.

We can illustrate this problem perfectly with an example from right here in my home town. Take a look at this Google Maps satellite image of where Colorado Highway 287, (also known as Main Street) crosses over the St. Vrain Creek:

main-bridge

Colorado Highway 287 makes a lame leap across the creek.

It’s pretty boring, right? And that is exactly my point. It’s a boring, utilitarian bridge, in a blighted, shitty area of town dominated by parking lots, used car dealerships, traffic, and noise. When you drive along that part of 287, you don’t even notice you are crossing a bridge. It’s just part of the wide, flat road. And besides, you’re busy navigating the ugly, stressful terrain of dense traffic – passing through in a rush to get to somewhere nicer.

Now, I happen to bike right under this bridge quite often, because Longmont’s excellent St. Vrain Greenway path allows you whiz along through the whole town, bypassing all the trouble that the car drivers have to deal with above. Down on the bike path it’s just you, recharging your soul and your muscles, passing a few other cyclists and watching the crystal clear water as it flows over oval multicolored granite rocks, maybe a few ducks and geese building nests along the water’s edge.

In 2013, that Main Street bridge was partially destroyed, along with quite a few other things in town, by an enormous flood. So they decided to rebuild it. And I decided to follow along with the project, because hey, I’m an engineer.

What I learned is that building even the smallest, least noteworthy road bridge is a spectacular project. The engineering calculations alone cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. The machinery involved would fill a football field, and the quantity of soil, steel, and concrete you need to move around is difficult to even comprehend. They have been working on this one insignificant bridge for over three years now, and I’m still waiting for the bike path to re-open.

Here's a peek under the bridge. Although you rarely look at this stuff, you definitely pay for it. Just post and beam like this consumes between 500,000 and 1 million pounds of concrete.

Here’s a peek under the bridge. Although you rarely look at this stuff, you definitely pay for it. Just that one post-and-beam support consumes between 500,000 and 1 million pounds of concrete – releasing equivalent pollution to about 150,000 miles of driving. I would need a bigger tape measure to estimate the whole bridge, but it would be many, many times more than this. Even a small bridge is a huge thing.

The total cost was estimated at 5.6 million dollars, which puts it roughly on par with, say, this 10-bathroom waterfront megamansion compound currently for sale in Florida:

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And if you want a bigger bridge, like the flyovers with cloverleafs that get built every time two highways happen to interconnect, you can spend 100 times more.

How many megamansions will this cost us?

How many megamansions will this cost us?

Do you see the problem here?

This is exactly the same stuff I talk about in personal finance, except applied on a bigger scale.

The average American gets the most expensive car he can afford, and drives it as much as he can – for virtually 100% of trips out of the house. And yet he has a net worth of nearly zero, and subpar physical health, for most of his life.

The average American city builds the largest roads and parking lots it can possibly fund, maximizing the amount of available space for vehicles, in a noble attempt to reduce traffic and serve its citizens. But the result is that cities become nothing but wide, well-engineered, fast, deadly expanses of concrete. These are terrifying places for walkers and cyclists, which builds still more demand for more cars and more roads.

Let’s be clear here: I’m a capitalist, lifelong student of economics, pro-growth techno-utopian, and basically the opposite of a luddite. Efficient transportation is a huge wealth-builder for society, so we will always need bridges and fast roads. But these valuable resources will always be very expensive, so it makes sense not to waste them.

A transport truck full of factory components or food brings great wealth to Longmont when it crosses that bridge over the creek. The problem is the 400 single-occupant personal cars and trucks cramming up the rest of that road, full of people who are only driving because they don’t realize there is a better way.

Since even the most mundane bridge costs as much as a Mega Mansion, we are effectively building millions of mega-mansions mostly to to facilitate our clunky personal transport machines that are about 95% inefficient. And the whole reason we “need” cars in the first place is because we spread everything out by making our roads so big! It’s a circular problem.

Collectively, we spend almost half of our tax dollars on paving over our living spaces, or dealing with the consequences of the lifestyle created by that pavement.

The solution in both cases is so obvious, and yet almost nobody ever talks about it. In fact, many of us are still working to perpetuate and accelerate this stupidity.

Right now, as you read this, millions of people are passionately shopping around for new, better cars, and hundreds of American cities are planning enormous expansions of their road systems – new bridges, wider lanes, bigger parking structures. Politicians whine about our “crumbling infrastructure” and vow to rebuild it with emergency packages of deficit spending. Because we obviously need to build even more of it, even faster.

To Want Something Better, You Must Understand  the Core of Our Problem

Space for cars, or for people? Two ways to use a chunk of city land. (image credit: the happy city book)

Space for cars, or for people? Two ways to use a chunk of city land. (image credit: happy city)

When you’re born into a system, you come to think of it as normal. This was even true for me, growing up in an industrialized area and lusting after nice cars and motorcycles as I passed through my teens, feeling the frustration of heavy traffic jams and the joy of the open road.

But the quest for optimization led me naturally to bicycle transportation and minimizing car commutes, which led me to the study of urban planning, and the forehead-slapping realization that we’re doing everything wrong.

What it didn’t tell me, is how we got to this bizarre place. I mean, here are all of these relatively smart, wealthy people in this incredibly rich country, but our behavior is demonstrably self-defeating. What led us to this point, and how do we fix it?

Recently, I had the joy of reading a book about exactly this subject, from an author who has put much more thought and work into fixing it than I have. To put it moderately, it blew my mind.

Happy City, by Charles Montgomery, pretends to be a book about how cities are laid out, but you very quickly realize that it’s much more – a brilliant and thoughtful book about Everything that Matters – human happiness in the past, present, and future, and just how incredibly powerful our immediate environment is, in dictating this most important thing.

As you read through the book, which I have now done twice over the past six months (something I never do), you realize that city design strongly influences everything about our lives – our health, wealth, social networks, longevity, satisfaction and our tendency towards trust or violence which in turn even dictates how we will vote*.

And yet, for over 50 years we have been designing our cities in almost the most stupid, expensive, ineffective way possible. For example, did you realize that the following stuff is studied and well-documented around the world:

  • Building in the modern North American way (wide roads, big parking lots, wide lawns and plenty of space for every car) is the most expensive way that any group of humans have ever lived. We consume more concrete, water, pipes, wire, sidewalks, sign posts, landscaping, and fuel for this privilege.
  • But we don’t get any value for these dollars: we spend more time and money getting around than ever before, which leaves us with a chronic shortage of time to enjoy any potential benefits of dispersed living.
  • People who live in suburbs are much less trusting of other people than people who live in walkable neighborhoods where housing is mixed with shops, services, and places to work. This is because they have far fewer relationships with people who live nearby. And yet the overwhelming message of happiness research is that relationships with other people have the biggest influence on our happiness.
  • if 10 percent more people thought they had someone to count on in life, it would have a greater effect on national life satisfaction than giving everyone a 50 percent raise.

So we are getting a poor value for our money.

But how can it be a poor value if this is what people chose for themselves? It’s the free market at work, right?

Wrong.

This is the city Houten, just South of Utrecht and Amsterdam in the Netherlands. You can't get around the city by car, because the roads don't connect in the middle. You'd have to drive out to the ring road to get across town. As a result, 66% of in-town trips are by bike. Also, a central train station whisks you to other cities if desired.

This is the city of Houten, just South of Utrecht and Amsterdam in the Netherlands. You can’t get around the city by car, because the roads don’t connect in the middle. A car would have to to drive out to the ring road, and then back in the other side. As a result, 66% of in-town trips are by bike or on foot. Also, a central train station whisks you to other cities if desired. One of my life goals is that we – quite literally you and me – build a city like this here in the USA.

The book goes on to explain the history of suburbia, which I had never quite learned before:

  • Originally, we had big dense cities, small towns, and agricultural areas. The small towns were where people tended to be happiest.
  • Cities expanded to meet the desires of the workers: being close to work, but also having clean air and privacy like their small town counterparts. Housing was built at the edges in “street car neighborhoods” If you have ever walked around residential San Francisco, this is the basic feel.
  • When cars joined the picture, a consortium of GM, Firestone, Phillips Oil, Shell Oil, and Standard Oil bought up street car companies and shut them down. They also lobbied the government heavily and formed “Motorist Associations” to advocate for the rights of drivers – making driving more convenient and thus boosting driving demand for their products.
  • Cars were originally thought of as dangerous intruders in the city. If a driver killed a pedestrian with his car, it was a crime.
    The motorist associations pushed to change this balance: they sought to convince people that the problem of safety involved making sure people did not get in the way of cars.
    They invented the crime of “Jaywalking”, which is crossing a street somewhere other than a controlled crossing area.
    They pushed in the current legal arrangement, where if you kill a person with your car, it’s probably just a traffic violation. In some cases, it won’t be your fault at all as long as you were obeying the rules of the road.
  • Motorist associations also continually push for car-friendly policies like highway expansion, fighting against traffic tickets and speed traps, and even write articles like “Elon’s Carbon Con“, completely misunderstanding (or deliberately misrepresenting?) the entire purpose of Tesla – currently the world’s most influential company in the areas of clean energy storage and transportation.

That last bullet point strays into politics, because you get into a battle of freedom versus regulation. I personally feel that if in doubt, you should err on the side of freedom. And in this regard, the book brought up its most stunning point:

  • Our current city planning method is not the result of free market forces at all. It’s actually an incredibly strict book of regulations which separates functions – residential, commercial, and industrial. It also defines setbacks, lot sizes, intersections, and parking requirements. It is all standardized in a group of standard, downloadable regulations that most cities purchase from Municode, while the road design comes from the Federal Highway Association’s Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUCTD).
  • This is a self-replicating zombie of a system: every new town simply downloads and implements the existing book of rules without thinking about it, because “This is how things work in America”
  • But that original book of rules was built from an almost comical chain of events. The oil companies and motorist associations. Special interests and racism, like a regulation in Modesto, CA which banned clothes washing facilites from the main street, which happened to be run by Chinese people. The desire of rich people to keep away poor people (which is easy to do legally if you just ban duplexes and apartment buildings, or specify a minimum lot size as many suburbs do.
  • Highway subsidies, like the way we build roads with public money, lower the perceived cost of building a dispersed city. Mortgage subsidies from the federal housing association that made it easier to buy new houses than to restore or rebuild existing more central buildings.

This sounds pretty grim, but I look at it with optimism: if we have built this relatively wealthy society even with the boat anchor of horrible living design hanging around our necks, imagine how much wealthier we will become if we shed that useless burden for the next stage of our journey?

In fact, some people are already working on the project. A group called Strong Towns, run by a fiscally conservative engineer named Chuck Marohn, teaches cities about the folly of car-based expansion. From his career as a city planner, he has learned that the honeymoon of developer dollars and easy borrowing quickly fades to become a hangover of massive maintenance costs and low tax revenue. A densely packed city puts a lot of people, business, and money close together. With a dispersed city you get lots of maintenance costs but very few businesses per square mile.

A movement called “New Urbanism” started up in 1993 to bring back some aspects of people-friendly design. There are now neighborhoods popping up with these better design principles in every major city. In Mableton, Georgia they are actually reclaiming big parking lots to build useful islands of denser development, as shown in the earlier picture.

But it has been a long battle, because in order to make a place that is pleasant for people, you literally need to change or disobey the existing suburban building codes.

Here in Longmont, there is a street called “100 Year Party Court” and another called “Tenacity”, named by some frustrated New Urban developers who were dumbfounded by how ridiculous the existing road regulations were: “Why are they forcing us to waste space for THIS MUCH PARKING on the streetside – what are they expecting, some sort of 100-year-party?”

Thus, it is time to stop the madness and start rebuilding our ridiculous infrastructure in a smarter way.

The increase to our personal wealth may be larger than any other possible change we can make. We have about 9 million lane-miles of roads in the US, and over 5,000 notable bridges. It costs about $1 million per mile to make a single lane of road, which means we have at least $9 trillion of roads and $100 billion of bridges, before we even get into 500 million parking spaces, which cost about $4,000 each! 

By Mustachian standards, at least 90% – Ninety Percent – of this pavement is wasted. It’s just there to support the other sprawl, and because we have trained our citizens refuse to walk or ride a bike, even for short distances.

How To Fix It

The good news is that this can be fixed. The reason people keep perpetuating the pointless car model is that they are unaware there is any other option.

If you live in Orlando and want to go out for dinner, you see only a choice of driving, or a long, noisy walk alongside a six-lane road on a narrow grass shoulder. I was there last month and did the walk, noting that they had not even bothered with sidewalks. I could see how Orlandans would assume that cars are superior to walking, if this were their frame of reference.

Now that you know there is a better way, there are practical steps you can take as a citizen:

  • Stop supporting car sprawl with your money. If a potential house, job, or store is in an area that doesn’t support bikes or walking, simply don’t sign the contract.
    After all, would you buy a house in an area that was impossible to reach by road? Probably not, and in fact areas like this are generally called “Wilderness”  because so many people insist on roads.
    Reverse your priorities and insist on living somewhere designed for Humans. There are now thousands of places like this. It’s worth the small effort to find one.
  • If you’re starting or expanding your own company, do it in a walkable area. If the majority of your employees will have no choice but to drive to work, that’s a bad place to start a business.
  • Start voting against any road expansions in your region. Somewhat counter-intuitively, road expansions never alleviate traffic jams – they only make them worse.
    The only solution to traffic is to get people out of their cars. Luckily, this solution also costs less and builds the wealth of your local economy rather than draining it.  Road expansion is to a city like candy and cookies are to your body. It has also been described as “trying to cure obesity by loosening your belt”
  • Channel that money you would have spent on roads – 100% of it – into bike paths, road diets, parks, central city redevelopment and “upzoning”.
  • Fight the “Not in My Back Yard” tendencies of most people, who object to new buildings or higher-density living near where they live. What these people are probably afraid of is not the presence of more people, but the car traffic they would bring. So, support more density, but only if it discourages cars.
  • Push for the removal of minimum parking requirements for new construction. Every time somebody wants to create a new building or business, our traditional building code system forces them to waste a bunch of money and precious land on parking spaces, which sit empty most of the time.
    It makes much more sense to use that extra land for more businesses and housing, eliminating the vast distances that encourage people to drive in the first place. Car parking would be a niche market, built by private companies and charged out at market rates.
  • And of course, just start walking and biking wherever you can. In a dense city, and even in US-style suburban sprawl, a bike will get you there faster than a car most of the time. Sure, there are a few spots that are truly unsafe for bikes, but even right now, with today’s infrastructure, we could eliminate at least 75% of town and city traffic overnight.
    For example, here in Longmont, biking is safe and efficient to 100% of possible destinations, at least 350 days of the year. But bikes represent less than 0.5% of the traffic I see on the roads.
    Every time you drive within a town, you destroy a bit of the feeling of community. Every single time you walk, you build the community, and advertise the idea of walking to every person who sees you.

As I learned from this book, urban planning is far from just a geeky niche topic – it’s really the foundation of most of our wealth and personal happiness.

We can improve everything about our lives, if we all understand a bit about how to arrange our living spaces. So I’ll see you out there this afternoon, as we start making some arrangements.

* (people who have weak bonds with their immediate neighbors will trust them less – and will also disproportionately vote for things like nationalist, anti-trade, anti-immigration policies and be worried about terrorism – sound familiar?)

Here’s a cool passage on this subject from the book:

“Imagine that you dropped your wallet somewhere on your street. What are the chances you would get it back if a neighbor found it? A stranger? A police officer? Your answer to that simple question is a proxy for a whole list of metrics related to the quality of your relationship with family, friends, neighbors, and the society around you. In fact, ask enough people the wallet question, and you can predict the happiness of cities.”

  • Joe February 18, 2017, 7:51 pm

    Interesting read. I think the nationalist comment is off base at the end though. Perhaps it is not a mistrust of neighbors but a respect for sovereignty. Everyone has a little. I don’t expect you have refugees camping in your living room. On the contrary “fair trade” needs to be added to that “free trade” that currently exports jobs. They tax ours but we don’t tax theirs to match and they have cheaper labor. The multinational corporate interests have infiltrated our politics. I find it humorous that the most liberal elements of our political parties know exactly how the whole world should live. The height of all arrogance in my opinion. So is fawning over refugees and illegal immigrants while our own veterans commit suicide, are homeless, and die waiting to see a doctor– all for the support of the petro-dollar. Maybe we should stop bombing people and respect others sovereignty. That will be a lot easier if we are oil independent . But wait global warming is why we need world government that requires us to police everyone– because thats the only way to stop it. Got it

    Reply
  • Mike February 19, 2017, 7:27 am

    I agree with some of this, but not all of it. Cities like Paris or Tokyo prove that denser population works, but people in those cities don’t know their neighbors any better than someone living in LA does.

    That asterisk is absolutely wrong. I barely know my neighbors, but I don’t vote for nationalist or anti-immigration policies. I am worried about terrorism though, because there has been some not long ago in my area (Paris), literally just a few minutes from where I went to college.

    I would also point out that the most intolerant places in every country are the small country towns where everyone knows each other.

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  • Brian Jones February 19, 2017, 7:51 am

    There is some excellent work being done with regards to urban planning and design by Philip Bess, who is a professor of architecture at Notre Dame. Reading Montgomery, along side of Jane Jacobs, Philip Bess, and Wendell Berry, should be required reading for every citizen in this country. Talk about an “education.” Thanks for all your great insight MMM!

    Reply
  • Rebecca Jones February 19, 2017, 8:03 am

    The communities that fit most with your description of bike friendly, human friendly infrastructure and policy are Portland Oregon and New York City; as well as Denmark, and Montreal Canada. All of these communities are very liberal, and have strong regulation. The “free market” pits very powerful entities (such as the fossil fuel industry) against citizens. I am a fan of capitalism but it only works with strong regulation, backed by citizens who understand that there is a difference between regulation defined by human needs (clean water, clean air, protection from toxins, the joys of a safe, clean, walkable community) and regulation put in place to favor big business at the expense of everyone else. The only way to have the former and not the latter is if citizens have bigger voices than corporations.

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  • Tim February 20, 2017, 9:17 am

    In your ‘what you can do’ section, you left off get involved in the local government in your town. I have lived in several small towns here in western NY and have held positions on Planning, Zoning and Conservation Boards in each, eventually as chairperson. What I found was how easy it was to get appointed to a board, even being new in town. Most of the townsfolk don’t want to do the work required. This hit me hardest when I had openings to fill on my boards. I wanted desperately to bring in some new thinkers (I subscribe to ideas like New Urbanism, Strong Towns, Complete Streets, etc..) but faced a parade of the same old people who got us into the sorry situation we were in. Mostly older folks who had some delusional longing for ‘the way it was in the old days’, but also wanted a set of big box stores out on the road that bypasses (and killed) the downtown. Generally Planning Boards write the laws, the Town Council enacts them and Zoning enforces and can vary them. Sometimes Planning and Zoning are combined. Planning Boards, as the stewards of the Town Comprehensive Plan (on which things like zoning categories, setbacks, noise ordinances, infrastructure investment, etc are based) have the biggest bang for the buck. So I encourage you all to find out when your Planning Board meets, go to the meetings and observe them for a while, leave the protest sign and attitude at home. Get the lay of the land, look at the members, get to know them, make it known that you are interested in joining, volunteer to help out on committees (like the one to review and update the Comprehensive Plan). Fight from the inside, but realize you are not trying to steer a car, but a supertanker. It takes a lot of time to turn one of those. Don’t try to change minds, become the minds. Hacking is not just for computers. Usually, by the time I faced a mob of pitchfork wielding townsfolk as Planning Board Chair, it was usually too late to stop the big box from coming.

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    • Nancy L March 26, 2017, 3:26 pm

      I love these suggestions. Great way to get involved.

      Reply
  • John Olaf February 20, 2017, 12:21 pm

    I love the idea of building Happy Cities, but how do we even start? I think what we can begin to do is to incorporate more questions and discussions about the impact our cities have on us within the classroom. I teach middle school English, and I think there is some great opportunity here to create some sort of eco-friendly criticism units that explore how our literature and life are impacted by our cities, and vice versa.

    I live in Sparks, NV, and the bicycle commuting situation is pretty bad. Luckily I have a bike path for part of my ride to work. It can seem so hopeless trying to implement change though. I think I can begin to actually impact the community through the students. Maybe this won’t immediately get more bike lanes built, but I think the long run necessitates that we start changing our culture and our schooling about this topic.

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  • TheHappyPhilosopher February 20, 2017, 10:54 pm

    I just finished the book, and I may have to go back and read it again. It was a great book that gets the mind spinning. When I think back to all the places I’ve lived in my life, a lot of them had similar problems to those outlined in the book. They were not designed for happiness (I freaking love that concept by the way!). I look around the neighborhood and city I live in and can see ways I want to improve it, ways it could be better. I’ve always had a low level urge to move from where I’m living now, and I can finally put a finger on it after reading Happy City. What we struggle with though is there are plenty of good things about where we live, and most days it doesn’t seem worth it to try and overcome that inertia. Many probably live in this grey area…good enough, not quite painful enough to change. I’m inspired to get more involved though, to try and act to make at least some small changes in the community where I live.

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  • Alex February 21, 2017, 3:46 am

    Houten is a commuter town, probably the majority of the working population works outside of the city.
    A lot of them commute by car. You might google “ochtendspits” and look at the pictures to see where they spend 1 to 2 hours each day. Also to go to the cinema or shopping they probably often go to Utrecht (often by train)

    If you design a city, jobs might be something that need to be in the vicinity too. Some focus on building housing near work and recreation would need some attention too.

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  • TinaP February 21, 2017, 7:59 am

    What prevents you from moving to one of these more bike/pedestrian friendly cities or countries? You have swooned the idea of how much money you can make in the US – and you have accomplished that and don’t have that need any longer. Knowing there are car-free communities and much more environmentally friendly locations outside of the US, and knowing your ease in making new friends and keeping in touch with old ones, what continues to hold you where you are?

    Reply
    • TomTX February 26, 2017, 8:13 pm

      A sense of community? Being able to contribute to improving Longmont? Seems pretty obvious to me.

      Reply
      • TinaP February 27, 2017, 7:24 am

        Well sure; that is obvious. My point is that MMM has the personality to find/fit in to a community wherever he is and can obviously contribute anywhere as well – he does that internationally via a blog. As someone who loves where I live but am also intrigued by other places I read about for various reasons – climate, bikability, culture, etc… my question is more about the core of why Longmont – is it not wanting to move Jr, political concerns in other countries, etc. MMM seems to have a conscious decision for his choices and not much is “just because” so my curiosity is deeper than the obvious. Plus, while I have a few years before making any potential move, knowing MMM’s research techniques, I wouldn’t be surprised if he has a response of something I haven’t considered!

        Reply
  • Agata February 22, 2017, 12:38 am

    I find it fascinating how people who think alike in terms of financial sustainability, in the end end up interested in urban planning and social community building.

    Many similar discussions are happening here in Krakow, Poland. The % of trips by bike is growing, and about 25% of all travels within the city occurs daily in public transportation. However, still cars are everywhere, as over 100 000 cars flood into the 800k people city daily, for work commute. With the lack of functional park&ride system, they find random patches of grass, sidewalks or abandoned properties along the public transportation routes and this is how they cope. Every sidewalk in the city can be parked on.

    I feel that the only way to fight that is to make people understand that they have to pay for parking. The closer to the center, or the scarcer the parkings are, the more they should pay. However, still even in the apartment buildings, people would not buy a parking and choose to park “somewhere” – having an average of 503 cars for every 1000 citizens of the city, and a habit of not purchasing a parking space make the city not people friendly, and not car friendly. If an average car space is 10sq m, and it is also an average size of a bedroom, obviously, you’d rather have an extra bedroom (Polish people tend to have rather small, too small apartments). Yet the sense of pride in car ownershis makes us more American in this sense than European.

    I highly recommend digging through Jan Gehl’s books.

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  • Farmer Pat February 22, 2017, 1:42 am

    When I was a kid I could bike on the highway that runs by the farm to get to the wonderful country blacktops where I could go for miles and not meet a car. Now it’s more like Frogger, lots of traffic & heavy trucks zooming by at all hours. You couldn’t pay me enough to ride a bike on the highway now. The country blacktop has a 2 foot bike shoulder, but I’d have to throw a bike in the truck & drive the 1/2 mile to get to it. Cars & pickups are a farm necessity, trucks for farm operations & cars to commute to the 2nd job (or for the spouse to commute to a job).

    A farmer once won a million dollar lottery. The press asked him what he was going to do with it. He said “I guess I’ll just keep farming until it’s gone.” Sadly it’s kind of true.

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  • Daniel February 22, 2017, 1:11 pm

    Have you read John Norquist’s book, The Wealth Of Cities: Revitalizing The Centers Of American Life? If not, I would suggest buying a copy used. It’s an easy read and gives a great historical perspective to the proliferation of urban sprawl and all the obstacles a Mayor has to deal with, in order to avoid it.

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  • Joe Walsh February 22, 2017, 2:11 pm

    I just want to say that as a long time MMM blog fan, this was a tremendous article..not just for what was written in the article itself but for the high quality of the responses..I have already learned about several books I need to read to get up to speed on this very important topic. Maybe Mr. MMM moderates and excludes cranky and irrelevant comments, but regardless, the quality of thought that responders brought to the conversation was very heartening…congrats to all involved in this discussion. As an Irish person who has lived all over the world as an expat, I have always been fascinated by America’s seeming obsession with the automobile. I remember particularly a couple of visits to Houston where it seemed that pedestrian access was entirely an afterthought. Even San Diego which is a beautiful city didn’t appear to have much regard to pedestrian needs. Doubtlessly the European cities which were built prior to the car being the primary form of transport have the advantage of being able to prioritise the cycling /walking experience, even if it means putting city centre parking underground , have an advantage when trying to reclaim the living space for the people. I was struck when visiting Shanghai that even though the automobile traffic was horrendous, they had complelty separate lanes for cyclists and scooters to keep them safely apart when possible. Thanks again for a wonderful article as well as the ongoing awesomeness of this website.

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  • ken February 22, 2017, 4:47 pm

    Have you ever considered running for local office? In my town, it pays $12k per year, so naturally the only people who do it are retirees, or people without families. You’d have a chance to create policy in your town!

    Reply
  • Aaron February 23, 2017, 1:08 am

    You think American cities are bad? Well, South African cities were absolutely destroyed by planning around racial lines during Apartheid. Some people commute from 4 am to get to a job that starts at 8 am. Traffic is a nightmare and public transport (that is safe and reliable) is basically non-existent. Not an easy thing to fix.

    Reply
  • Jordi February 23, 2017, 1:21 pm

    That example layout looks very dense. When buildings get so high (and wrongly positioned towards the sun) you get robbed of the free sunlight and those high windows you build become pretty useless ;-). I assume in the US it can all be a bit denser but I actually live in the Netherlands and here for me it all is already too dense (haven’t been in Houten recently). We still have too much roads and housing is insanely expensive even though you just get a few square meters of living and plot area.

    Reply
  • Mary February 23, 2017, 9:03 pm

    Late to the discussion here, but let me add that I’d like to see a return to the old-fashioned grid pattern:
    you never get lost, and if one street is closed (to bike, to car), you just move to the next.

    We bought a house three blocks from work twenty years ago. My commute is ten minutes by foot, three by bike. There are some drawbacks (sometimes some campus-related noise), but overall it has been well worth it. Our son did K-12 and a few university courses all within three or four blocks of home. I wish many more people had the opportunity to live this way.

    Reply
    • TomTX February 26, 2017, 8:11 pm

      Ah, the demonic curse of the suburban cul-de-sac maze, with only a single egress for the neighborhood – ensuring that most of the time, you have to drive awhile the wrong way to get out of the neighborhood, then circle back, further congesting the major roads outside.

      Demonic. We are still trapped in the Hell wrought by Standard Oil and General Motors.

      Reply
  • Justin February 24, 2017, 12:03 am

    Living in Chicago, I really don’t have a problem with voting for nationalist policies, nor policies that interfere with immigration. I don’t have the luxury of being in a small homogeneous community that works on building projects together and lending a helping hand. Everything is a concrete sprawl and everyone has the “get money, spend it, and chase it more” mentality that you seem to attack in every post. There’s no sense of connection here with human spirit, but it’s still pushed in the social dogma to vote for liberal policies. In truth, if I were in your position, I would probably vote and feel the same way, open up everything and share, learn, create, and build relationships with new people. In the city it just isn’t so innocent and there are racial prejudices rampant, and it’s the status quo to judge thy neighbor. It’s so pointless to preach love and togetherness here when the entire society is built on oppression and hypocrisy. What is your opinion on the forcing of multiculturalism? Do you believe in the idea of survival of the fittest truly? I’d like to here your opinions in greater detail, I respect and look up to you a lot, but I have a tough time relating to some of what you say here as reality tends to disagree.

    Reply
    • Mr. Money Mustache February 24, 2017, 4:06 pm

      Justin, I’ve been to Chicago a lot over the last 10 years, and it’s not the right place for me. It is for this reason that I don’t live in Chicago. It sounds like it might not be the right place for you, either.

      However, if you can find yourself a friend who LOVES living there, rides bikes and walks every day, loves their local friends and neighbors, and shares openly, they can probably help you start getting a happier life for yourself.

      (See some of the other comments in this very thread, talking about living the walkable life in Oak Park).

      Voting for the angry-sounding politicians will do absolutely nothing to make your own life less angry!

      Reply
  • Mp February 24, 2017, 12:16 am

    Hi, in Europe we have holiday villages called Centre Parcs, Dutch in origin and laid out much like the Dutch town in your article. Always struck me as a great way to lay out towns. An easy way for people to experience what things could be like if they want to.

    Reply
  • Travis February 24, 2017, 3:27 pm

    Good article, MMM, but I don’t think it applies to everybody. I, for one, can’t stand to be in cities – too many people, too much craziness. I grew up in Alaska, and I am happiest when I have trees and nature around me. I’m not happy around people, rather, I get frustrated, angry and disappointed. I prefer to have a small, close circle of friends, not hordes of strangers or acquaintances. I don’t care much for restaurants. I avoid “interesting” cultural events like the plague – Hoopfest, Bloomsday and parades are madhouses and pure chaos, IMO. Living constantly inundated by the press of humanity would drive me mad. I don’t know how most people do it.

    I live on a half acre about 10 miles outside of Spokane, Wa. I have an 11 mile drive to the nearby airbase over rural roads for work. I can’t bike it because my kid goes to school on the base, and I have to attend meetings all over the base during the week so a vehicle is a must. I drive a ’99 CR-V, completely paid for, around 100k miles, and gets about 24mpg. It works well for it’s intended purpose, and it’ll keep running for another 150k (another 15 years the way I drive it).

    I live on a half-acre lot, not in a suburb exactly, but not rural either. More like “rural-burbia”. We have a large garden so we spend a lot less on groceries. I did all my own renovations and have plans in the works for installing a rain catch system and solar not because I’m green (a religion to which I’m opposed), but because it’s just good economical sense. I couldn’t do these things in the city you describe, I think.

    I’m at the center of a 20-mile radius circle that has everything I need, but it’s not bikeable or walkable. It suits my family’s frugal lifestyle, and we don’t have to deal with the collective insanity of humanity.

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    • Neoalfa February 25, 2017, 3:15 am

      That’s fine. What you spend from living out of the city you save from not partaking in other luxury activities. The important thing is living a balanced life and getting your bang for your bucks without being a clown about it.

      The issue arise when people live a debt-riddled life so that they can live in a fancy house but work somewhere that forces them to drive a pseudo-tank for hours each day and at the end of the day they are not even happy about it.

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  • jgh February 24, 2017, 5:32 pm

    Sometimes road building allows you to reduce vehicle journeys. In my 15,000-population town the through road used to squeeze through town and over a 400-year-old bridge to get out of the other side. We got a new bridge built just outside town which has allowed us to progressively close many of the streets to vehicle traffic, widen the pavements (sidewalks to yanks), and drop the speed limits. It is now practical to walk anywhere across town (except once an hour when the bridge opens to let boats through).

    Reply
  • Michael Winwood February 25, 2017, 4:59 am

    “The average American gets the most expensive car he can afford, and drives it as much as he can – for virtually 100% of trips out of the house. And yet he has a net worth of nearly zero, and subpar physical health, for most of his life.”

    This really hit home for me. When I was a bit younger, status was an important element of my life. Driving around in a cool and highly impractical car was how I tried to convince myself and others that I had made it. I didn’t invest in my physical health either because the results weren’t instant and my ability to delay gratification was weak.

    Just like in town planning, if you cut corners you’ll have problems. Worse still, these can be difficult or even impossible to undo. You mentioned new developments unquestioningly copying their predecessors and I completely agree: we’re often unthinking or unwilling to go against the grain. The same is true for us as individuals.

    I live in New Zealand and here, everyone wants to live on a quarter acre and live the dream with a lifestyle block. They also want to live inner city and have a short commute. We haven’t quite realised the implications of these two things as a nation yet. Our population is exploding and unfortunately we will have to find a new way (building up instead of out). It’s ridiculous that we’ve let urban sprawl get to where it is in our country. The business case of spending all that money on infrastructure for so few houses just doesn’t stack up.

    Reply
    • Ms Blaise February 28, 2017, 4:27 pm

      I’m also in NZ and agree with you re the change in mindset required. Mind you, I was in the South island recently and was amazed to see the revitalisation of small canterbury towns post quake as the population moved away from the centre.

      Reply
  • TomTX February 26, 2017, 8:07 pm

    New Urbanism significantly predates the 1993 listed in the article. I took a University course on the subject in 1991!

    I highly recommend this video series (total 60 minutes) on the topic. It’s free. And despite the cut of the suit – totally applicable today.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwd4Lq0Xvgc&list=PL01072BB79369B705

    Reply
    • Glen March 7, 2017, 7:19 pm

      Thanks for this link, very interesting and worthwhile presentation.

      Reply
  • Adams February 28, 2017, 10:02 am

    So much yes! As a professional planner for a major southern city, I spend countless hours trying to convince folks of these very points (even though my specialization is in Historic Preservation). The good news for my city is that human scale development and walkability are starting to catch on. In streetcar suburbs like the one I call home things are already very bikeable, but will be getting much more so in addition to being walkable in the coming years.

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  • TwoRoads February 28, 2017, 6:57 pm

    Work cut out for us. See this recent press release from FHWA: https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/pressroom/fhwa1607.cfm

    U.S. Driving Tops 3.1 Trillion Miles In 2015, New Federal Data Show

    Year-End Estimates Show U.S. Drivers Shattered Record Set in 2007

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  • Stafford March 1, 2017, 6:12 am

    I love the idea of a mustache community somewhere. What if we took it one step further and all just traveled the world together staying in different countries for months at a time using airbnb. No more property taxes, no more utility bills, no car, gas, or car insurance. Just some quality geographic arbitrage with a quality group of people.

    Reply
  • kruidigmeisje March 2, 2017, 5:14 am

    Detail in NL housing planning, that helps MMM’s scheme: every living unit (house, appartment) is obliged to have a storage facility for 2-4 bikes on the ground floor. Storage boxes, garages, gardens, all will do. Only historical inner cities are exempt (when not rebuilding the block).
    This combined with road bike facilites (obligaory at every road where this is usefull, so not on country roads) make people take a bike really easily. So shops make sure you can park your bike, because that does increase income/sq-m. Also gov sometimes facilitates by make a bike parking near a shopping hall (where people work who live on benefits. win-win anyone?)

    Reply
  • coopdog March 2, 2017, 6:53 am

    I live in the 11th richest county in the US. It drives me nuts to see public school buses driving all over the rural parts of the county to pick up kids in front of their mega-mansions. These families are not farmers. They choose to live far from everyone else. In effect, I am subsidizing their mega-mansion, long distance living, lifestyles.

    Reply
    • Mr. Money Mustache March 5, 2017, 7:56 am

      I agree with your sentiment wholeheartedly coop – daily motorized transit between the country and the city is almost always a sign of bad lifestyle design.

      But how is it that you are seeing these buses yourself? Hopefully not from the driver’s seat of your car, driving on the roads these rich people subsidized for you :-)

      Reply
  • Peter March 2, 2017, 9:36 am

    I lived in downtown Philadelphia for several years, and then moved to the suburbs. Knowing I was leaving a dense core, we chose our new home carefully. Our suburban home is better than our urban one was…and not because of the space.
    Distance to grocery store went from 1 mile to 500 ft
    Distance to restaurants and bars went from 0.5 miles to 300 ft.
    Distance to train went from 2 miles to 0.3 miles
    Distance to bus stop went from 500 ft to 0 ft (it’s on our property)

    We live in an old and well established suburb, between two 100 year old villages. These places are quite common and amazingly often cost less than the new sprawling suburbs ‘north of the highway’.

    I travel to Europe quite often. Now I walk to the train that takes me to the airport. A well planned suburb is a thing of wonder!

    Our home is beautiful and overly large, yet when I go on and on about how much I love my home, it is about the location, the proximate friends, and the neighborhood. This brings so much value and happiness to my life that I annoy my colleagues by challenging their home location decision.

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  • Dan S. March 2, 2017, 1:17 pm

    I read Happy City right after graduating from a 4-year B.S. City & Regional Planning program, and felt as if it did just as well encapsulating the woes of American planning as my coursework did. As a transportation planner for my currently auto-oriented region, i hope to make a difference in the way we plan our communities.

    I found the following quote in your post particularly compelling: “Collectively, we spend almost half of our tax dollars on paving over our living spaces, or dealing with the consequences of the lifestyle created by that pavement.” Do you have a source? Is it a certain page in the book? I would love to include in my general talking points. Thanks.

    Reply
    • Mr. Money Mustache March 5, 2017, 7:44 am

      Hi Dan – I admit that was a sloppy sentence and I didn’t I did not take the time to back it up, so don’t quote me on it!

      I was figuring, if you take our road and parking expenditures, plus law enforcement, any military spending accounting to petroleum, cost of congestion and delays, AND the 75% of our health care spending that is directly attributable to being lazy, inactive car clowns, you could end up at roughly 1.9 trillion, which is half our federal budget :-)

      Reply
      • Dan S. March 6, 2017, 1:38 pm

        Interesting! Thanks for clarifying.

        Reply
  • Marie March 2, 2017, 7:14 pm

    Hello Mr Money Mustache,

    it’s really great to read about this subject on your blog! I work for an organization which goal is to encourage people biking and using transit to work. A big part comes from the infrastructures the cities offer, but also the amenities offered at work (especially for bikers). The more mainstream ideas like this get, the sooner change will come. Some people I know made a short film adressing these issues (mostly aimed at high schoolers, but still interesting to watch), check it out if you wish : http://sagacitymovie.org

    Reply
  • KBPEA March 3, 2017, 6:22 am

    First time commenter! I am really excited that I just cancelled my monthly cleaning service that costs $115 each visit. My husband and I both work long hours and so decided to outsource this, but I don’t feel it is a good value, and surely we can each find at least an hour every couple of weeks to clean our 1200 sq ft home. I may still have the cleaner come a couple times per year during my super busy season, but this should save me around $1k this year. Next step is to stop being such a wimp about working out and doing more self-education on weight lifting so I can ditch my personal trainer. I don’t think of myself as having an extravagant lifestyle (we keep our grocery budget low, housing costs are much lower than most of our acquaintances, and we are a one-car couple), but as I type this out I feel like it sounds completely ridiculous that I had a cleaning service and have a trainer!

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  • Ruben Solo March 3, 2017, 6:53 am

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  • zut March 3, 2017, 3:01 pm

    Denver is in the beginning stages of creating a 5.280 mile loop around downtown that will be for people and bikes.

    http://www.downtowndenver.com/initiatives-planning/downtown-loop-linking-neighborhoods-connecting-people

    The Downtown Denver Partnership is leading efforts to create the Downtown Loop, a bold, visionary project that will transform how the public right-of-way is used in Downtown Denver. The Downtown Loop will link neighborhoods and connect people through the great urban outdoors, prioritizing people, bikes and our urban tree canopy by turning underutilized streets into the essential Downtown experience while uniting urban life with Colorado’s outdoor culture.

    As a dedicated urban trail, the Downtown Loop will create a safe and stimulating route for the center city’s rapidly growing population of residents, employees and visitors, encouraging them to use active modes of transportation while engaging in Downtown’s cultural and civic facilities and open spaces. It will also add open space to Downtown and provide a safe and beautiful place to actively recreate and engage with the Downtown neighborhoods, cultural amenities and more.

    “The Downtown Loop is poised to connect Downtown’s unique and diverse amenities, while creating a powerful sense of place within the vibrant mixed-use neighborhoods in the center city,” says Tami Door, president and CEO of the Downtown Denver Partnership. “This bold, visionary project will be a game changer for the center city.”

    The Partnership is looking to significantly advance the project in 2017, which has received a $250,000 grant from the Colorado Health Foundation. The Partnership’s Downtown Denver Leadership Program class will focus on the Downtown Loop as their 2017 class project, and several projects throughout the year will demonstrate the project’s potential.

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  • Seasonal Cynic March 3, 2017, 6:22 pm

    Fellow Canadian Moustachians!
    Speaking of happy cities, you should consider moving to Kelowna, BC. Here is a brief sales pitch.
    Kelowna has always had awesome geography and climate (by Canadian standards). However, up until recently it was populated primarily by retirees and tourists. Now it is transitioning to be a thriving and more diverse medium-size city. A few key points:
    – We have a young and progressive mayor who said this regarding his latest book: “The Happy City by Charles Montgomery. I highly recommend it as it will give you great insight as to the type of city we are trying to create in Kelowna.” https://okanaganedge.net/2017/03/03/colin-basran/
    – Kelowna is among the fastest growing cities in Canada. http://globalnews.ca/news/2513322/kelowna-the-fastest-growing-metro-area-in-canada/
    – Kelowna is developing a tech sector! https://www.accelerateokanagan.com/community/blog/media-releases/okanagan-technology-sector-enjoyed-unprecedented-30-growth-two-years/
    – Young people are moving from Vancouver to Kelowna because Vancouver is so absurdly expensive. https://www.biv.com/article/2016/5/some-young-vancouverites-its-kelowna-or-bust/
    – Other great things: Big White ski resort 45 minutes from the city! Over a hundred wineries in the area!

    Of course, Kelowna has some significant flaws and still has a long ways to go to be a “happy city”. But, it looks promising.

    Reply
    • Dave C March 7, 2017, 10:49 am

      Greetings from Calgary!

      This is great to see. I haven’t been to the Okanagan valley in quite some time so it’s interesting to see the changes. The impression I get is that given its natural beauty, mild climate, and amazing recreational activities, the only thing stopping Kelowna’s population from exploding is the job market. I hope the growth doesn’t come too hard and fast and that it avoids some of the pitfalls I’ve seen given the rapid growth in Calgary. By your account, it looks like Kelowna could do just that. Cheers and hope to visit soon.

      Reply
  • Marette March 6, 2017, 6:33 pm

    I live in Christchurch NZ and there has been lots of thinking about building a great happy city since our earthquakes 6 years ago. Lots of happy city ideas have been thrown away because there is heaps of money to be made by developers and landlords. Separated bike paths are coming along busy streets. I long for a city planned by walking people not vehicle needs.

    My questions are this: Car ownership is zooming up in China. Were cities there 20 years ago, bike friendly? I recall seeing photos of wide boulevards jammed with commuting cyclists. Were there set apart bike routes? Were cities pedestrian friendly there?

    What is car desire ? Do 17 year-olds the world over take car ownership as a marker of adulthood?

    Thanks!

    Reply
  • Brett March 7, 2017, 12:10 am

    I live in downtown Tokyo and I don’t miss driving at all. I live on the second floor over a ladies fashion store on a narrow shopping street, that is barely one car wide and is pedestrian only until 8pm. My supermarket is closer than most Americans would walk across a car park, in fact my subway station is closer than that, about 300 meters. I have 4 convenience stores within 300 meters and many wonderful restaurants and with the wonderful internet connection I have (2GB fiber) I don’t have to go anyway for days or weeks! If I do chose to go out, it’s 5 minutes to Ikebukuro, or 20 minutes to any of Shibuya, Shinjuku or Ginza. All stores have excellent delivery services so buying furniture or house hold appliances doesn’t need a car either. Occasionally I drive a hire car for work or we hire a car just to go for a drive in the country.

    Reply
    • Mr. Money Mustache March 7, 2017, 6:14 am

      Thanks Brett, that’s a neat description of life in Tokyo. How is the air quality and the biking/running possibilities in your area?

      After all, my main point in not driving isn’t just “not driving”, but getting the opportunity to spend much more time in the great outdoors working the body. I find that situation is great in a medium-density city like mine, but Tokyo is one of the world’s densest – have they handled the design well for quality of life?

      Reply
  • Lance! March 7, 2017, 9:02 am

    If you’re unfamiliar, ~50 years ago during a period of heavy redevelopment in Philadelphia, the architect Louis Kahn created a redesign of the downtown that barred cars and planned for a series of parking garages on the outskirts. Of course it went nowhere, but it’s an interesting story of “what could have been.”

    Reply
    • Jwheeland March 7, 2017, 10:58 am

      Instead, we got I-95 and 676 as a permanent scar. Although the proposal for the new capped park at Penn’s Landing looks awesome! The Funding is almost there too! See https://billypenn.com/?p=66459

      Reply
  • Victoria L. March 7, 2017, 9:50 am

    I am an urban planner living and working just outside of the GTA [Toronto] in Canada (which I know you’re familiar with) where we have one of the worst ‘sprawl’ and congestion issues in the country and North America.

    I got into Planning as my career for the exact reasons outlined in your post. Why are these other major cities in Europe, South America, etc. functioning at such an extremely higher level than the majority of N.A cities, yadda yadda yadda. ?

    Planning is an interesting and difficult realm. Constantly battling with private financial interests, political BS with local council members and staff, taxes, NIMBYism as you mentioned, etc. I absolutely try my best to live through my ‘professional’ practice and morals i.e living and working within a few blocks of eachother, and driving as little as possible…though of course the transportation system where I am is a whole other pile of BS that will just never change to the degree that it needs to (just like the rest of Ontario…) without a massive overhaul of government policies and tax structuring, and frankly just educating the public on these types of issues and why they are so important to our quality of life. But no, Torontonians are allowing their politicians to OK yet another expansion of the 401 highway. Oh, and the 403. And the 407…(not to mention the disaster of the first ‘airport’ commuter system to Union station that could have been avoiding if the public was more involved in the process.) We in the GTA should be protesting outside of our politicians offices against this insane thinking that is just further destroying the GTA.

    I try and convince my friends and family and people I meet through my work to get involved in these types of processes. Members of the public CAN have an impact on their local communities and how they are built out or protected, I have experienced this first hand. Communities binding together to say NO. But unfortunately, most people cannot be bothered to think of their community outside of their own bubble (But then are typically the ones that are complaining once the foundation is poured down the road for a new townhouse development…).

    Thank you for discussing this topic on your blog and having it be exposed to your great reach.

    Cheers

    Reply
  • The Escape Artist March 9, 2017, 2:15 pm

    Love this subject.

    It turns out that there is no mystery to designing a beautiful city. This Youtube clip gives a neat summary of the principles:

    https://youtu.be/Hy4QjmKzF1c

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  • Karl Hungus March 14, 2017, 10:20 pm

    I happen to work in Longmont (home to MMM) and live in Niwot (small town a few miles away). I enjoy biking recreationally, and pedal commute 10-12 times a year. It’s a pretty ideal situation, I can stay on trails and sidewalks, I have secure bike parking and access to a locker and showers at work. The only sketchy part of my commute was trying to cross a busy highway, but Boulder County installed a pedestrian underpass and at grade signal making it much less daunting http://www.bouldercounty.org/roads/plans/pages/airportroadunderpass.aspx (Been driving by and using it for 2 years, never seen another soul using it. Not once. That seems like the waste of money)

    Even under these pretty awesome circumstances, bike commuting is still a pain in the ass. Waking up 40 minutes earlier in the morning, laying out bike clothes and packing work clothes the night before, showering at work, keeping an eye on the weather, charging lights, putting on still damp bike stuff for the ride home… add in the fact that I have to tote a kid to day care now and the hassle factor goes up 3x.

    This is coming from someone who likes biking and saving a buck, but is still human and enjoys convenience. Jamming a view of the world up everyones backside because we are too dumb to hate our cars starts to feel like a religion.

    Reply
    • Mr. Money Mustache March 21, 2017, 6:16 am

      You’re right Karl – Mustachianism s a bit of a religion, that’s what makes it fun to write about :-)

      The great part about all of this is, we’re free to make our own choices. So while I’m not forcing you here, In your situation, I’d move to Southwest Longmont and have an even shorter commute. Or get an electric bike (under $2k) to make it almost as fast as a car and sweat-free all year round.

      Finally, as for the time consumed – In my view, men of our age needs need at least two solid hours of outdoor exercise every day anyway – biking, walking, digging, or building something. If you don’t pay these dues enjoyably now in the Rocky Mountain Sunshine, you’ll pay them on the hospital bed with tubes in your veins later. So you’re not saving any time by taking a car.

      Good luck!

      Reply
    • Matt March 22, 2017, 8:06 am

      Hey Karl–FWIW, I’m in a similar boat (bring two kids to daycare/school), and have a 5-6 mile commute. I bought an electric Radwagon for $1499 and find it to be just about as easy as driving (actually dropoff is way easier since I can just peddle right up to school rather than deal with parking/lines). My kids also love this time with me each day. I work an office and job and invested in wrinkle-free clothes and because the bike is electric, I never need to shower in the morning.

      Anyway, though you might be interest–good luck!

      Reply
      • Reade March 22, 2017, 1:06 pm

        So I assume you are pulling a trailer with the kids inside? Cool looking bike, what’s the top speed?

        Reply
        • Matt March 22, 2017, 10:37 pm

          Hey Reade,

          The kids just ride on the back of the bike–it’s a lot more simple than a trailer. My oldest can climb on/off himself, my youngest is still in a Yepp seat with a harness. (see pics from a similar set-up here: http://www.lifeasus.com/2016/03/20/bike-with-us-and-rad-power-bikes-promo-code/.

          The electric motor has a governor that cuts off at 20 MPH. I charge it 2/3x week. I’ve put about 1500 miles on it in 9 months with no issues. Also, it’s seriously fun to ride. When the kids get on they yell “Go fast speed, Daddy!”

          Check it out if you’re interested!

          Reply
  • JAMES March 15, 2017, 4:07 pm

    The best part of Happy City is the last chapter where it says that you can implement the Happy City on a small scale in your own neighborhood. Essentially just saying enough is enough. I live in a rural Oklahoma town and it occurred to me that everything I need is within 7 or 8 miles, an easy bike ride. The only problem is that there are no bike lanes and there is a state highway running through the center of town so no-one rides bikes. However after putting it to the test, it turns out that there is connectivity between the different neighborhoods, grocery stores, restaurants, etc. I just never realized it until I started looking for back ways to get to all of these places. My next objective is to get a book exchange going in my neighborhood.

    My point is, we can create our own happy city just by changing behaviors once we understand the benefits.

    Reply
  • dftuttle March 20, 2017, 11:32 am

    Happily, this article reads like a manifesto for modern urban planning academia. I’m a city planning Masters student at Cornell, and programs like ours are doing their best to send an army of people out into the world to work on these issues.
    For some more good reading on traffic solutions, density, induced demand, etc., I highly recommend the work of Donald Shoup and Michael Manville at UCLA. They’ve put out some excellent, well-written articles on the effect of minimum parking requirements on housing costs, the potential benefits of congestion pricing and fair-market-value parking pricing, and much more.

    Reply
  • Heino March 24, 2017, 1:38 am

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  • Przemek March 24, 2017, 7:04 am

    Thanks MMM
    This is a huge eye-opening article for me! I’m talking about the money and resources spent on urban infrastructure.
    I live in Europe so fortunately public transport and walking is always promoted in urban areas, but I feel that things are not getting better and car driving is always a priority for some unknown reason. Now I know why
    thanks!

    Reply
  • Alcuin March 24, 2017, 10:59 am

    My Dad always said we should build up not out, which I thought made a lot of sense. I disagree on your argument for fighting minimum parking requirements. It’s not like everything will then be in a walkable area. I think we need to fight the no-growthers and allow for taller apartment and office buildings. That would go a lot further towards making things more walkable and bikeable than just making it impossible to find parking when you have to drive to the big city to go to some major medical or government facility.

    Reply
  • Little House March 25, 2017, 1:37 pm

    I recently bought a home in a community that isn’t super bike or pedestrian-friendly, BUT I’m making it work for me. Instead of biking to work like I used to, I now take the bus. Thankfully there’s a bus that picks up a couple of blocks away to and from work, so I get a little exercise. It’s also less stressful than driving myself. In my neighborhood, there aren’t very many sidewalks, they are reserved for horses instead. Yet, that’s not stopping me from walking, biking, or taking the bus when I can. It’s pretty crazy how much influence the big oil companies had in terms of designing our present-day cities. It’s a damn shame.

    Reply
  • Nancy L March 26, 2017, 3:00 pm

    Roads are ‘free’ to drive on, ha! ha! This post shows just how expensive it is to drive on a free road. Years ago, I thought we should make transit free and charge for roads and had a big debate with my brother. He was like ‘Not everyone would use transit, it doesn’t go where you want it to go’. True, but why pay for roads, I don’t need, if I only use the road in front my of my house. I know, not a good argument. My little town of Corvallis, Oregon has had free transit for the last couple of years. Because it is a college town, students try to live on the bus routes, because otherwise they have to pay for parking on campus. As much as free transit is an incentive, paying for parking at the university is a disincentive. If there were more money for the transit bus system, it could run more hours and more days (currently does not run on sunday). And my town is not big, it is like 10 miles from one end of town to the other, and 15 bicycle miles to bike the circumference on the bike path that goes all the way around. You still have to pay for roads to run the transit, but for a small town like Corvallis, it is easy to use the combination of bus, walking and biking (bikes can go on buses). It needs to be a combination of incentives to change our behaviors.

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  • Jon March 29, 2017, 1:31 am

    Reading this book now, and its fantastic….especially when you’ve relocated from concrete jungle western canada to one of the EU cities praised in the book!

    Certainly has changed my outlook on things!

    Reply
  • MWD April 1, 2017, 10:16 am

    Great post and something I’ve been interested in for a long time. After reading this, I’m wondering what your thoughts are on Walt Disney’s original concept for EPCOT? What was finally built (after his death) is as close to his original concept as a brick is to an orange. What epitomized Walt and all he accomplished was his refusal to settle, and without his vision and leadership what was ultimately built was 1% original concept and 99% settling. I find his original concept to be fascinating and would move to somewhere like that if it ever existed. It would take another Disney-type personality (Elon Musk?) to make a concept this huge actually happen. Here is a good source of info: https://sites.google.com/site/theoriginalepcot/

    Reply

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