It has struck me repeatedly recently that there are some very odd things about how we do infrastructure around cars: and particularly the ways in which building our cities around cars have made them significantly less safe.
1. The Obvious
The most obvious point is probably that cars do, demonstrably, kill people.
A death machine.
Now, of course, trains kill people too. So do bikes. So does walking.
But not in the same way or at the same rate.
So maybe it would be better to not build our cities around vehicles that do that.
2. Individual Operation
Part of the reason for that deadliness is that cars are driven by individuals, often licensed only once early in their lives, and pretty much every vehicle is single operated or carrying one passenger at most.
Tired? Still gotta drive yourself. Sick? Same. Drunk? Well...
Yes, you can carpool, you can call a cab, you can phone a friend, but...the default is to drive yourself. And there is societal and economic pressure to do that: cabs aren't cheap, and it's generally considered a bit odd to ask someone else to drive you unless you have a particularly close relationship or a very distinct and obvious impairment.
Plus if you're tired, drunk, sick, etc. somewhere other than home, your car is going to be stuck wherever you are if you call someone else. That's not insuperable, but it's a barrier, and a major one if you're far from home--which in turn incentivizes driving yourself precisely when you have the furthest to go, regardless of impairment.
Pictured: a bunch of vehicles that definitely aren't driving themselves yet.
Pictured: a vehicle that allows one driver to transport multiple people regardless of their fitness to drive (and a car).
The view from a vehicle that allows zero drivers to transport a great number of people (thank you Vancouver SkyTrain).
3. The Law
And of course, as you might imagine, all those individual operators aren't the best at actually following the law, even if our laws were ideal for safety.
It's great that Islington is a 20 kmph borough. And given congestion, maybe it actually is. But people don't actually follow the speed limits, do they, unless there's another car in the way?
If the driver of this speeds, there's an awful lot of signals and supervision that tell him to stop--and we can easily identify the individual driver who did it. If a car speeds--well, so's everyone else.
And don't get me started on stop lights and turn signals and all the other ways that individual drivers don't actually stick to the rules that might make the road safer.
Cars are good at one thing: allowing you to go from one point to another while only caring about other people's presence when they're actively in your way.
They're not good at actually moving people around a city. And it would be nice if we stopped building cities pretending they are.
































