http://blogs.forbes.com/christopherhelman/2011/05/10/americas-biggest-and-least-gas-guzzling-cities/ I really like this area but I'm sick of driving everywhere.
5/14/2011 3:11:02 PM
2nd - Charlotte Area6th - TriadGo North Carolina!
5/14/2011 3:54:56 PM
Really don't have many other options than driving.
5/14/2011 4:04:03 PM
Hmmm $4200 a year in gas and 200k for a 2500 sq ft house....or $0 a year in gas and $2 million for a 2500 sq ft house. Decisions, decisions.
5/14/2011 4:52:15 PM
Talage, albeit not entirely accurate, wins.
5/14/2011 5:22:50 PM
5/14/2011 5:30:52 PM
probably east raleigh.but yeah, not typical of the triangle at all.$100/sq.ft is on the lower side of typical.
5/14/2011 5:52:35 PM
I might as well plan to move to a larger city if I ever want to do anything other than drive everywhere. Not even planning to have light rail implemented in the triangle until 2025. And traffic is only going to get worse until then.
5/14/2011 7:30:34 PM
5/14/2011 9:02:09 PM
There are no options other than driving, but when you try to fund alternative modes of transportation everyone says "but everyone drives here!"And the cycle continues.
5/14/2011 9:41:23 PM
Everyone bemoans the lack of good mass transit in the area, but even what is there doesn't get used. I'm the worst kind of offender on this--I could take the bus to work, every day, for free since I work for the university. But I'm lazy and don't want to get up at 6 AM to get on the bus at 6:59 as opposed to getting up at 7 to get in my car at 7:40, since both get me to work at 8. Yes, I'm costing myself money and yes, I'm destroying the environment. But dammit, I like to sleep that extra hour.
5/14/2011 11:03:36 PM
That's because what is there is rarely effective, as you have illustrated in your post by pointing out that you can get to work 3 times faster by taking the car than a bus.
5/14/2011 11:07:53 PM
what is this mythical light rail all of you are referring to? in what skewed perspective on reality does this make any sense?
5/14/2011 11:23:00 PM
In the perspective where moving around is actually possible in some areas without having to have a car. For examples of this perspective, see most of the rest of the world.
5/14/2011 11:25:09 PM
I don't own a car, and strictly rely on public transit/cabs. For 90% of my adventures I get by fine this way, it's that other 10% that make me want to get a car. Can't quite ride the subway to the ski hill. I live in Boston.
5/15/2011 9:02:43 AM
Zipcar
5/15/2011 10:29:40 AM
5/15/2011 10:54:29 AM
5/15/2011 10:59:02 AM
5/15/2011 11:33:50 AM
5/15/2011 11:37:05 AM
5/15/2011 11:54:07 AM
ibquagtalksaboutgetting115mpg
5/15/2011 12:31:16 PM
^^
5/15/2011 1:09:41 PM
^ you shouldn't need to. That paragraph alone sums up neatly why light rails are ridiculous notions that only a whacko liberal could get behind.
5/15/2011 2:00:09 PM
I think the people in the triangle just need to drive more fuel-efficient vehicles. The majority of people around here are driving SUV or trucks.
5/15/2011 2:27:27 PM
If you are going to make an argument that it is a waste of money, demonstrating you have no concept of capitalizing an asset over it's lifespan is a great start. In other news, look at those idiots spending $200K on a house when they could rent 12 houses for a year for that price!
5/15/2011 2:30:05 PM
^ you are correct there are more assumptions that need to be made.Are you assuming there are no maintenance costs on the rail???With $1 billion in savings you better find a whole hell of a lot "lifespan capital" to sway anyone.
5/15/2011 2:49:38 PM
5/15/2011 3:06:18 PM
Obviously there are lifecycle and maintenance costs on the rail. I'm just saying "we could buy everyone cars for what we spent to built the rail, case closed!" is not a good argument. Especially when you are accusing the people you disagree with of having the facts-be-damned attitude, based on flawed "analysis".Also, I doubt even the biggest proponents of light rail are going to argue that it will pay for itself with no public subsidy, especially before land use catches up. A better metric for the fiscal costs would be comparing the impact on congestion against the cost of additional highway miles that would be needed to accommodate those trips. That doesn't even get into the tourism/economic development, convenience and environmental goals that are often touted as well, but is necessary if you are going to take the fiscal responsibility angle.Also, the cost-effectiveness and time to build ridership won't be the same in every community. It is in general harder to add efficient transit after developing without it than developing around transit, and that shouldn't be news to anyone.
5/15/2011 3:10:45 PM
5/15/2011 3:42:24 PM
^^^foreclosure market[Edited on May 15, 2011 at 5:21 PM. Reason : .]
5/15/2011 5:21:28 PM
NRR is to blame for driving couches all around the triangleI'm AstralAdvent and i approved this message.
5/15/2011 5:27:46 PM
correct me if i am wrong, or if this source isn't credible, but wouldn't this:http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2011/real_estate/1103/gallery.Fastest_growing_metro_areas/4.htmlhave a lot to do with us being the most gas guzzling?30% is a lot. i mean it seems like to me that raleigh was never meant to be a city of +1 million people. and we're struggling to keep up.
5/15/2011 7:01:38 PM
Well, the original figure is per capita.So supposedly our population has already been taken into account.But, yes, our rapid population growth has contributed to the gas-guzzling situation because the development hasn't been wisely planned, and we haven't kept up by providing alternative transportation options. But that's exactly what we're being called out for.
5/15/2011 7:52:37 PM
^^It does, but it doesn't have to. Poor planning (or lack thereof) policies allowed it to.
5/15/2011 8:00:06 PM
BTW Lynx has had tons of controversy too, and the Democratic mayor trying to unseat McCrory was running on the fact that LYNX was cited as an "inefficient use of federal taxpayers dollars". For another example of wonderful light rail in the area look at the clusterfuck known as The Tide. That has also been managed to shit with a hidden cost overrun of over $100 million! But hey, at least the taxpayers dollars keep flowing in to pay for it.
5/15/2011 9:05:57 PM
Of course it has controversy. Anything that doesn't involve striping down more automobile lanes in this country is going to have controversy. There is an overwhelming majority that see LYNX as a giant success.As for the The Tide, I don't see how you can cite cost overruns on that project as a problem with light rail in general rather than mismanagement and misinformation on one particular project. If we're doing that, I could say the Big Dig in Boston is evidence why no more highways should ever be built.
5/15/2011 9:09:45 PM
It depends on your definition of "success". Can you call it a success b/c ridership is quite high? I suppose, but success is probably best judged by ridership revenue and how that factors into operational costs. And it fails there.There isn't a rail system in the country that doesn't operate at a loss. Even NYC's subway system doesn't turn a profit.
5/16/2011 12:09:17 AM
5/16/2011 12:10:30 AM
^^Actually, there is. Amtrak turns a profit on the northeast corridor, especially with Acela which returns 169% of its operational cost. But, you were talking about local rail I assume. No one is denying that mass transit receives a government subsidy. Of course it does. That is one of the main reasons why it is a service that the government must provide to begin with. But, why is it okay for roads to operate at a loss but not rail? There isn't a road system in the country that doesn't operate at a loss.
5/16/2011 12:11:37 AM
I know you loved that zinger on the end
5/16/2011 12:31:23 AM
5/16/2011 12:37:38 AM
I bike for 90% of my daily adventures. Then I drive my pickup truck for the remainder, mainly to haul stuff from Costco or out to the farm. I moved to Durham because it was more bike friendly, and easier to get around. But yeah, light rail would compel me to go to Chapel Hill or Raleigh more- we drive there like 3x a year.
5/16/2011 12:47:38 AM
5/16/2011 12:51:41 AM
okay then forget i said roads. the point is that the gov't is not a business. if the choice is between making the country so polluted that you can't live in it, or spending money on public transit the latter should win.
5/16/2011 12:54:21 AM
5/16/2011 7:30:56 AM
^^ No such choice exists. The only two uncontrollable outputs of an internal combustion engine burning gasoline is water and CO2, everything else is an engineering problem that can be regulated away. In fact, that is why gasoline has historically been the fuel of choice in America: diesel engines could not meet America's stringent air pollution standards without expensive modifications until recently. ^ And when gasoline is $10 a gallon then the most cost effective mode of transportation remains a bus. At some point it becomes reasonable to run the buses on natural gas or even overhead wires. But as I understand the engineering and economic challenges, at no point does light rail become cheaper.
5/16/2011 8:18:58 AM
5/16/2011 8:27:41 AM
5/16/2011 8:42:16 AM
i want a dirigible service between downtown raleigh, durham, greensboro, charlotte, etc.
5/16/2011 9:13:00 AM