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Comment by astura

13 hours ago

For dumb Americans like me - that 18.641 miles/hr.

For dumb Americans like you who haven’t heard of significant figures, it’s 20 mi/hr. Mayybe 18 mi/h but that’s stretching it.

That is infuriatingly slow, driving 25mph in my hometown kills me.

Probably would be fine if I was in a self driving car and could just play on my phone going that speed, but actually driving that slow would suck.

  • I agree, but if the streets are set up accordingly, it's about as fast as you'd normally want to drive anyway.

    For the standard US road with 12-foot-wide lanes and generally straight-ahead routes, 20mph does feel very slow. I've driven on some roads though where narrower lanes, winding paths, and other "traffic calming" features contribute to a sense that 20mph is a reasonable speed.

    • Yes narrower lanes is "traffic calming" in itself. Residential roads and city streeets should have different lanes than highways.

  • Making drivers miserable is part of the intention, they want people to drive less because it's annoying as hell for everyone else.

    • The intention is to prevent accidents. Encountering 30kmh zones in strange places means there have been loads of them.

    • That's fine if the public transport is up to scratch, as well as the cycling infrastructure.

      Where I live it's woefully inadequate making driving the only viable option for most journeys.

      This has a knock on effect of making cycling down right dangerous in places, because of all the cars + relatively high speed limits, like I wouldn't want to cycle from my house to work, it would be at best unpleasant, and I would be taking my life in my hands on some of the roads.

      5 replies →

  • i think a large part of this that often goes unstated is the suburban sprawl that causes people to need to drive longer distances near pedestrians to begin with -- do you live in an area with wide streets, many single-family homes, and parking lots? when i've lived in city neighborhoods with dense housing i've only had to drive far/fast to leave, and when i've lived in the middle of nowhere i wasn't at risk of flattening pedestrians

  • Try checking the average speed (total distance / total time) on your next outing. You might be surprised.

  • It may feel like you aren’t going very fast, but at the end of the day you’re probably only arriving at your location a couple of minutes later than you normally would and when applied at scale this could potentially save thousands if not tens of thousands of lives a year depending on how widely this is adopted. Hell maybe hundreds of thousands, but I don’t know the numbers well enough to make a claim that high, seems steep at first glance.

    Surely we can agree the pros outweigh the cons here? I can wake up 5-10 minutes earlier for safer roads.

  • Sorry to say but if we can reduce traffic accidents by a significant margin this way, people being annoyed at having to drive slower is a fine price to pay.