4 ways to make a city more walkable Jeff Speck

So I’m here to talk to you
about the walkable city.

What is the walkable city?

Well, for want of a better definition,

it’s a city in which the car
is an optional instrument of freedom,

rather than a prosthetic device.

And I’d like to talk about
why we need the walkable city,

and I’d like to talk about
how to do the walkable city.

Most of the talks I give these days
are about why we need it,

but you guys are smart.

And also I gave that talk
exactly a month ago,

and you can see it at TED.com.

So today I want to talk
about how to do it.

In a lot of time thinking about this,

I’ve come up with what I call
the general theory of walkability.

A bit of a pretentious term,
it’s a little tongue-in-cheek,

but it’s something
I’ve thought about for a long time,

and I’d like to share
what I think I’ve figured out.

In the American city,
the typical American city –

the typical American city
is not Washington, DC,

or New York, or San Francisco;

it’s Grand Rapids or Cedar
Rapids or Memphis –

in the typical American city
in which most people own cars

and the temptation
is to drive them all the time,

if you’re going to get them to walk,
then you have to offer a walk

that’s as good as a drive or better.

What does that mean?

It means you need to offer
four things simultaneously:

there needs to be a proper reason to walk,

the walk has to be safe and feel safe,

the walk has to be comfortable

and the walk has to be interesting.

You need to do all four
of these things simultaneously,

and that’s the structure of my talk today,

to take you through each of those.

The reason to walk
is a story I learned from my mentors,

Andrés Duany and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk,

the founders of the New Urbanism movement.

And I should say half the slides
and half of my talk today

I learned from them.

It’s the story of planning,

the story of the formation
of the planning profession.

When in the 19th century
people were choking

from the soot of the dark, satanic mills,

the planners said, hey, let’s move
the housing away from the mills.

And lifespans increased
immediately, dramatically,

and we like to say

the planners have been trying to repeat
that experience ever since.

So there’s the onset
of what we call Euclidean zoning,

the separation of the landscape
into large areas of single use.

And typically when I arrive
in a city to do a plan,

a plan like this already awaits me
on the property that I’m looking at.

And all a plan like this guarantees

is that you will not have a walkable city,

because nothing is located
near anything else.

The alternative, of course,
is our most walkable city,

and I like to say, you know,
this is a Rothko,

and this is a Seurat.

It’s just a different way –
he was the pointilist –

it’s a different way of making places.

And even this map of Manhattan
is a bit misleading

because the red color
is uses that are mixed vertically.

So this is the big story
of the New Urbanists –

to acknowledge
that there are only two ways

that have been tested by the thousands

to build communities,
in the world and throughout history.

One is the traditional neighborhood.

You see here several neighborhoods
of Newburyport, Massachusetts,

which is defined as being compact
and being diverse –

places to live, work, shop,
recreate, get educated –

all within walking distance.

And it’s defined as being walkable.

There are lots of small streets.

Each one is comfortable to walk on.

And we contrast that to the other way,

an invention that happened
after the Second World War,

suburban sprawl,

clearly not compact, clearly not diverse,
and it’s not walkable,

because so few of the streets connect,

that those streets that do connect
become overburdened,

and you wouldn’t let your kid out on them.

And I want to thank Alex Maclean,
the aerial photographer,

for many of these beautiful pictures
that I’m showing you today.

So it’s fun to break sprawl down
into its constituent parts.

It’s so easy to understand,

the places where you only live,
the places where you only work,

the places where you only shop,

and our super-sized public institutions.

Schools get bigger and bigger,

and therefore, further
and further from each other.

And the ratio of the size
of the parking lot

to the size of the school

tells you all you need to know,

which is that no child
has ever walked to this school,

no child will ever walk to this school.

The seniors and juniors are driving
the freshmen and the sophomores,

and of course we have
the crash statistics to prove it.

And then the super-sizing
of our other civic institutions

like playing fields –

it’s wonderful that Westin
in the Ft. Lauderdale area

has eight soccer fields
and eight baseball diamonds

and 20 tennis courts,

but look at the road
that takes you to that location,

and would you let your child bike on it?

And this is why we have
the soccer mom now.

When I was young, I had one soccer field,

one baseball diamond and one tennis court,

but I could walk to it,
because it was in my neighborhood.

Then the final part of sprawl
that everyone forgot to count:

if you’re going to separate everything
from everything else

and reconnect it
only with automotive infrastructure,

then this is what your landscape
begins to look like.

The main message here is:

if you want to have a walkable city,
you can’t start with the sprawl model.

you need the bones of an urban model.

This is the outcome
of that form of design,

as is this.

And this is something
that a lot of Americans want.

But we have to understand
it’s a two-part American dream.

If you’re dreaming for this,

you’re also going to be dreaming of this,
often to absurd extremes,

when we build our landscape
to accommodate cars first.

And the experience
of being in these places –

(Laughter)

This is not Photoshopped.

Walter Kulash took this slide.

It’s in Panama City.

This is a real place.

And being a driver
can be a bit of a nuisance,

and being a pedestrian
can be a bit of a nuisance

in these places.

This is a slide that epidemiologists
have been showing for some time now,

(Laughter)

The fact that we have a society
where you drive to the parking lot

to take the escalator to the treadmill

shows that we’re doing something wrong.

But we know how to do it better.

Here are the two models contrasted.

I show this slide,

which has been a formative document
of the New Urbanism now

for almost 30 years,

to show that sprawl and the traditional
neighborhood contain the same things.

It’s just how big are they,

how close are they to each other,

how are they interspersed together

and do you have a street network,
rather than a cul-de-sac

or a collector system of streets?

So when we look at a downtown area,

at a place that has a hope
of being walkable,

and mostly that’s our downtowns
in America’s cities

and towns and villages,

we look at them and say
we want the proper balance of uses.

So what is missing or underrepresented?

And again, in the typical American cities
in which most Americans live,

it is housing that is lacking.

The jobs-to-housing balance is off.

And you find that when
you bring housing back,

these other things start to come back too,

and housing is usually first
among those things.

And, of course, the thing
that shows up last and eventually

is the schools,

because the people have to move in,

the young pioneers have to move in,
get older, have kids

and fight, and then the schools
get pretty good eventually.

The other part of this part,

the useful city part,

is transit,

and you can have a perfectly
walkable neighborhood without it.

But perfectly walkable cities
require transit,

because if you don’t have access
to the whole city as a pedestrian,

then you get a car,

and if you get a car,

the city begins to reshape itself
around your needs,

and the streets get wider
and the parking lots get bigger

and you no longer have a walkable city.

So transit is essential.

But every transit experience,
every transit trip,

begins or ends as a walk,

and so we have to remember to build
walkability around our transit stations.

Next category, the biggest one,
is the safe walk.

It’s what most walkability
experts talk about.

It is essential, but alone not enough
to get people to walk.

And there are so many moving parts
that add up to a walkable city.

The first is block size.

This is Portland, Oregon,

famously 200-foot blocks,
famously walkable.

This is Salt Lake City,

famously 600-foot blocks,

famously unwalkable.

If you look at the two,
it’s almost like two different planets,

but these places were both built by humans

and in fact, the story is that when
you have a 200-foot block city,

you can have a two-lane city,

or a two-to-four lane city,

and a 600-foot block city
is a six-lane city, and that’s a problem.

These are the crash statistics.

When you double the block size –

this was a study
of 24 California cities –

when you double the block size,

you almost quadruple
the number of fatal accidents

on non-highway streets.

So how many lanes do we have?

This is where I’m going to tell you
what I tell every audience I meet,

which is to remind you
about induced demand.

Induced demand applies
both to highways and to city streets.

And induced demand tells us
that when we widen the streets

to accept the congestion
that we’re anticipating,

or the additional trips
that we’re anticipating

in congested systems,
it is principally that congestion

that is constraining demand,

and so that the widening comes,

and there are all of these latent trips
that are ready to happen.

People move further from work

and make other choices
about when they commute,

and those lanes fill up
very quickly with traffic,

so we widen the street again,
and they fill up again.

And we’ve learned that
in congested systems,

we cannot satisfy the automobile.

This is from Newsweek Magazine –
hardly an esoteric publication:

“Today’s engineers acknowledge

that building new roads
usually makes traffic worse.”

My response to reading this was,
may I please meet some of these engineers,

because these are not the ones that I –

there are great exceptions
that I’m working with now –

but these are not the engineers
one typically meets working in a city,

where they say, “Oh, that road
is too crowded, we need to add a lane.”

So you add a lane, and the traffic comes,

and they say, “See, I told you
we needed that lane.”

This applies both to highways
and to city streets if they’re congested.

But the amazing thing
about most American cities that I work in,

the more typical cities,

is that they have a lot of streets
that are actually oversized

for the congestion
they’re currently experiencing.

This was the case in Oklahoma City,

when the mayor came running
to me, very upset,

because they were named
in Prevention Magazine

the worst city for pedestrians
in the entire country.

Now that can’t possibly be true,

but it certainly is enough
to make a mayor do something about it.

We did a walkability study,

and what we found, looking
at the car counts on the street –

these are 3,000-, 4,000-, 7,000-car counts

and we know that two lanes
can handle 10,000 cars per day.

Look at these numbers –
they’re all near or under 10,000 cars,

and these were the streets
that were designated

in the new downtown plan

to be four lanes to six lanes wide.

So you had a fundamental disconnect
between the number of lanes

and the number of cars
that wanted to use them.

So it was my job to redesign
every street in the downtown

from curb face to curb face,

and we did it for 50 blocks of streets,

and we’re rebuilding it now.

So a typical oversized street to nowhere

is being narrowed, and now
under construction,

and the project is half done.

The typical street like this, you know,

when you do that,
you find room for medians.

You find room for bike lanes.

We’ve doubled the amount
of on-street parking.

We’ve added a full bike network
where one didn’t exist before.

But not everyone has the money
that Oklahoma City has,

because they have an extraction
economy that’s doing quite well.

The typical city is more
like Cedar Rapids,

where they have an all four-lane
system, half one-way system.

And it’s a little hard to see,

but what we’ve done – what we’re doing;
it’s in process right now,

it’s in engineering right now –

is turning an all four-lane
system, half one-way

into an all two-lane system, all two-way,

and in so doing, we’re adding
70 percent more on-street parking,

which the merchants love,

and it protects the sidewalk.

That parking makes the sidewalk safe,

and we’re adding a much more
robust bicycle network.

Then the lanes themselves.
How wide are they?

That’s really important.

The standards have changed
such that, as Andrés Duany says,

the typical road
to a subdivision in America

allows you to see
the curvature of the Earth.

(Laughter)

This is a subdivision
outside of Washington from the 1960s.

Look very carefully
at the width of the streets.

This is a subdivision from the 1980s.

1960s, 1980s.

The standards have changed
to such a degree

that my old neighborhood of South Beach,

when it was time to fix the street
that wasn’t draining properly,

they had to widen it
and take away half our sidewalk,

because the standards were wider.

People go faster on wider streets.

People know this.

The engineers deny it,
but the citizens know it,

so that in Birmingham, Michigan,
they fight for narrower streets.

Portland, Oregon, famously walkable,

instituted its “Skinny Streets” program
in its residential neighborhood.

We know that skinny streets are safer.

The developer Vince Graham,
in his project I’On,

which we worked on in South Carolina,

he goes to conferences and he shows
his amazing 22-foot roads.

These are two-way roads,
very narrow rights of way,

and he shows this well-known philosopher,

who said, “Broad is the road
that leads to destruction …

narrow is the road that leads to life.”

(Laughter)

(Applause)

This plays very well in the South.

Now: bicycles.

Bicycles and bicycling
are the current revolution underway

in only some American cities.

But where you build it, they come.

As a planner, I hate to say that,
but the one thing I can say

is that bicycle population
is a function of bicycle infrastructure.

I asked my friend Tom Brennan
from Nelson\Nygaard in Portland

to send me some pictures
of the Portland bike commute.

He sent me this. I said,
“Was that bike to work day?”

He said, “No, that was Tuesday.”

When you do what Portland did and spend
money on bicycle infrastructure –

New York City has doubled the number
of bikers in it several times now

by painting these bright green lanes.

Even automotive cities
like Long Beach, California:

vast uptick in the number of bikers
based on the infrastructure.

And of course, what really does it,

if you know 15th Street
here in Washington, DC –

please meet Rahm Emanuel’s
new bike lanes in Chicago,

the buffered lane, the parallel parking
pulled off the curb,

the bikes between the parked
cars and the curb –

these mint cyclists.

If, however, as in Pasadena,
every lane is a bike lane,

then no lane is a bike lane.

And this is the only bicyclist
that I met in Pasadena, so …

(Laughter)

The parallel parking I mentioned –

it’s an essential barrier of steel

that protects the curb and pedestrians
from moving vehicles.

This is Ft. Lauderdale;
one side of the street, you can park,

the other side of the street, you can’t.

This is happy hour on the parking side.

This is sad hour on the other side.

And then the trees themselves
slow cars down.

They move slower when trees
are next to the road,

and, of course, sometimes
they slow down very quickly.

All the little details –
the curb return radius.

Is it one foot or is it 40 feet?

How swoopy is that curb to determine
how fast the car goes

and how much room you have to cross.

And then I love this,
because this is objective journalism.

“Some say the entrance to CityCenter
is not inviting to pedestrians.”

When every aspect
of the landscape is swoopy,

is aerodynamic, is stream-form geometrics,

it says: “This is a vehicular place.”

So no one detail, no one speciality,
can be allowed to set the stage.

And here, you know, this street:

yes, it will drain within a minute
of the hundred-year storm,

but this poor woman
has to mount the curb every day.

So then quickly, the comfortable walk
has to do with the fact

that all animals seek, simultaneously,
prospect and refuge.

We want to be able to see our predators,

but we also want to feel
that our flanks are covered.

And so we’re drawn to places
that have good edges,

and if you don’t supply the edges,
people won’t want to be there.

What’s the proper ratio
of height to width?

Is it one to one? Three to one?

If you get beyond one to six,
you’re not very comfortable anymore.

You don’t feel enclosed.

Now, six to one in Salzburg
can be perfectly delightful.

The opposite of Salzburg is Houston.

The point being the parking lot
is the principal problem here.

However, missing teeth, those empty lots
can be issues as well,

and if you have a missing corner
because of an outdated zoning code,

then you could have a missing nose
in your neighborhood.

That’s what we had in my neighborhood.

This was the zoning code that said
I couldn’t build on that site.

As you may know, Washington, DC
is now changing its zoning

to allow sites like this
to become sites like this.

We needed a lot of variances to do that.

Triangular houses
can be interesting to build,

but if you get one built,
people generally like it.

So you’ve got to fill those missing noses.

And then, finally, the interesting walk:

signs of humanity.

We are among the social primates.

Nothing interests us more
than other people.

We want signs of people.

So the perfect one-to-one ratio,
it’s a great thing.

This is Grand Rapids,
a very walkable city,

but nobody walks on this street

that connects the two
best hotels together,

because if on the left,
you have an exposed parking deck,

and on the right,
you have a conference facility

that was apparently designed
in admiration for that parking deck,

then you don’t attract that many people.

Mayor Joe Riley, in his 10th term,
Mayor of Charleston, South Carolina,

taught us it only takes
25 feet of building

to hide 250 feet of garage.

This one I call the Chia Pet Garage.
It’s in South Beach.

That active ground floor.

I want to end with this project
that I love to show.

It’s by Meleca Architects.
It’s in Columbus, Ohio.

To the left is the convention center
neighborhood, full of pedestrians.

To the right is the Short North
neighborhood – ethnic,

great restaurants,
great shops, struggling.

It wasn’t doing very well
because this was the bridge,

and no one was walking
from the convention center

into that neighborhood.

Well, when they rebuilt the highway,
they added an extra 80 feet to the bridge.

Sorry – they rebuilt the bridge
over the highway.

The city paid 1.9 million dollars,

they gave the site to a developer,

the developer built this

and now the Short North
has come back to life.

And everyone says, the newspapers,
not the planning magazines,

the newspapers say
it’s because of that bridge.

So that’s it. That’s the general
theory of walkability.

Think about your own cities.

Think about how you can apply it.

You’ve got to do all four things at once.

So find those places
where you have most of them

and fix what you can,

fix what still needs fixing
in those places.

I really appreciate your attention,

and thank you for coming today.

(Applause)

所以我在这里和你
谈谈适合步行的城市。

什么是步行城市?

好吧,为了更好的定义,

它是一个城市,其中汽车
是一种可选的自由工具,

而不是一种假肢装置。

我想谈谈
为什么我们需要步行城市

,我想谈谈
如何建设步行城市。

这些天我做的大部分演讲
都是关于我们为什么需要它,

但你们很聪明。 一个月前

我也做了那个演讲

,你可以在 TED.com 上看到。

所以今天我想
谈谈如何做到这一点。

在考虑了很多时间之后,

我提出了我所谓
的一般步行性理论。

有点自命不凡的说法
,有点半开玩笑,

但这是
我想了很久的事情

,我想分享
一下我认为我已经弄清楚的事情。

在美国城市中
,典型的美国城市

——典型的美国城市
不是华盛顿特区,

也不是纽约,也不是旧金山;

它是大急流城、
锡达拉皮兹或孟菲斯——

在典型的美国城市
中,大多数人都拥有汽车

,而且
总是想开车,

如果你想让他们走路,
那么你必须提供步行

这和驱动器一样好或更好。

这意味着什么?

这意味着你需要同时提供
四件事:

步行需要有适当的理由

,步行必须安全且感觉安全

,步行必须舒适

,步行必须有趣。

你需要同时做这
四件事

,这就是我今天演讲的结构

,带你了解每一件事。

步行的原因
是我从我的导师

Andrés Duany 和 Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk 那里学到的一个故事,

他们是新都市主义运动的创始人。

我应该
说我今天

从他们那里学到的一半幻灯片和一半的演讲。

这是规划

的故事,
规划职业形成的故事。

在 19 世纪,当
人们被

黑暗、邪恶的磨坊的烟灰窒息时

,规划者说,嘿,让我们
把房子从磨坊移开吧。

寿命
立即显着增加

,我们想说

的是,从那时起,规划者一直在尝试重复
这种体验。

所以
我们称之为欧几里得分区的开始

,将景观
分成大面积的单一用途。

通常,当我
到达一个城市进行计划时,

这样的计划已经在
我正在寻找的房产上等待着我。

像这样的计划

保证你不会有一个适合步行的城市,

因为没有
任何东西靠近其他任何地方。

当然,另一种选择
是我们最适合步行的城市

,我想说,你知道,
这是罗斯科

,这是修拉。

这只是一种不同的方式——
他是点滴主义者——

这是一种不同的方式来创造场所。

甚至这张曼哈顿地图
也有点误导,

因为红色
是垂直混合的用途。

所以这
是新都市主义者的大故事——

承认只有两种

方式经过成千上万人的考验

来建立社区,无论是
在世界上还是在整个历史上。

一是传统街区。

你在这里看到
马萨诸塞州纽伯里波特的几个社区,

这些社区被定义为紧凑
和多样化——

生活、工作、购物、
娱乐、接受教育的地方——

都在步行距离之内。

它被定义为可步行。

有很多小街道。

每个人走路都很舒服。

我们将其与另一种方式进行对比,

这是第二次世界大战后发生的一项发明,

郊区蔓延,

显然不紧凑,显然不多样化,
而且不适合步行,

因为很少有街道相连,

那些确实相连的街道
变成了 负担过重

,你不会让你的孩子在他们身上。

我要感谢航空摄影师亚历克斯·麦克莱恩,感谢

我今天向你们展示的许多这些美丽的照片。

因此,将蔓延
分解为其组成部分很有趣。

很容易理解,

你只住
的地方,你只工作

的地方,你只购物的地方,

还有我们超大型的公共机构。

学校越来越大

,因此
彼此之间的距离也越来越远。

停车场的大小与学校的大小之比

告诉你所有你需要知道的,

那就是没有一个孩子
曾经步行到这所学校,也

没有一个孩子会步行到这所学校。

高年级和低年级学生驾驶
着新生和大二学生

,当然我们
有撞车统计数据来证明这一点。

然后
是我们其他公民机构的超大规模,

比如运动场——伦敦金融

时报的威斯汀酒店真是
太棒了。 劳德代尔地区

有 8 个足球场
、8 个棒球场

和 20 个网球场,

但看看
带你去那个地方的路

,你会让你的孩子骑自行车吗?

这就是为什么我们
现在有了足球妈妈。

当我年轻的时候,我有一个足球场、

一个棒球场和一个网球场,

但我可以步行去,
因为它就在我附近。

然后
是每个人都忘记计算的蔓延的最后一部分:

如果您要将所有
事物与其他事物分开


仅将其与汽车基础设施重新连接,

那么这就是您的景观
开始的样子。

这里的主要信息是:

如果你想拥有一个适合步行的城市,
你不能从蔓延模式开始。

你需要城市模型的骨架。

这是这种
设计形式的结果,

就像这样。


是很多美国人想要的。

但我们必须明白
这是一个由两部分组成的美国梦。

如果你梦想着这个,

你也会梦想着这个,
通常是荒谬的极端,

当我们首先建造我们的景观
来容纳汽车时。

还有
在这些地方的体验——

(笑声)

这不是 Photoshop 处理的。

Walter Kulash 拍摄了这张幻灯片。

它在巴拿马城。

这是一个真实的地方。

在这些地方,当司机
可能会有点麻烦,

而当行人
可能会有点麻烦

这是流行病学
家已经展示了一段时间的幻灯片,

(笑声

) 我们有这样一个社会
,你开车到

停车场乘自动扶梯到跑步机

,这表明我们做错了什么。

但我们知道如何做得更好。

这是对比的两个模型。

我展示这张幻灯片,

它是

近 30 年来新都市主义的形成性文件,

以表明蔓延和传统
社区包含相同的东西。

只是它们有多大,它们之间的距离

有多近,它们是

如何穿插在一起的

,你是否有街道网络,
而不是死胡同

或街道收集系统?

因此,当我们看到市中心区,

在一个有
希望步行的地方

,主要是我们
在美国

城镇和村庄的市中心区,

我们看着它们并说
我们想要适当的用途平衡。

那么缺少什么或代表性不足呢?

再一次,在大多数美国人居住的典型美国城市

,缺乏的是住房。

工作与住房之间的平衡已经关闭。

你会发现,当
你把住房带回来时,

这些其他的东西也开始回来了,

而住房通常
是这些东西中的第一位。

当然,
最后出现并最终出现的

是学校,

因为人们必须搬进来

,年轻的先驱者必须搬进来,
变老,生孩子

,打架,然后学校
最终会变得很好。

这部分的另一部分

,有用的城市部分,

是公共交通

,没有它你可以拥有一个完全
适合步行的社区。

但是完全适合步行的城市
需要交通,

因为如果你不能
作为行人进入整个城市,

那么你就有车

,如果你有车

,城市开始根据
你的需要重塑自己

,街道变得 更宽
,停车场变得更大

,你不再有一个适合步行的城市。

所以过境是必不可少的。

但是,每一次过境体验,
每一次过境旅行,都

以步行开始或结束

,因此我们必须记住
在我们的中转站周围建立可步行性。

下一个类别,最大的一个,
是安全步行。

这是大多数步行性
专家所谈论的。

它是必不可少的,但仅靠它
不足以让人们走路。

有这么多的活动
部件加起来构成了一个适合步行的城市。

首先是块大小。

这是俄勒冈州波特兰市,

著名的 200 英尺街区,
著名的步行街。

这是盐湖城

,著名的 600 英尺街区,

以无法步行而闻名。

如果你看这两者,
它几乎就像两个不同的星球,

但这些地方都是由人类建造的

,事实上,故事是当
你有一个 200 英尺的街区城市时,

你可以有一个双车道的城市,

或者 一个两到四车道的城市

,一个600英尺的街区城市
是一个六车道的城市,这是一个问题。

这些是崩溃统计信息。

当你将街区规模扩大一倍时——

这是一项
针对加州 24 个城市的研究——

当街区规模扩大一倍时,非公路街道上

的致命事故数量几乎翻了两番

那么我们有多少条车道呢?

这就是我要告诉
你我会告诉我遇到的每一位观众的地方,

这是为了提醒你
关于诱导性需求。

诱导需求
适用于高速公路和城市街道。

诱导需求告诉我们
,当我们拓宽街道

以接受
我们预期的拥堵,

或者
我们

在拥堵系统中预期的额外行程时
,主要是

拥堵限制了需求

,因此拓宽来了 ,

并且所有这些潜在的
旅行都准备好了。

人们离工作更远,


在通勤时间做出其他选择,

这些车道
很快就会被车流填满,

所以我们再次拓宽街道
,它们又会被填满。

我们了解到,
在拥挤的系统中,

我们无法满足汽车。

这是来自《新闻周刊》杂志——
几乎不是深奥的出版物:

“今天的工程师

承认修建新道路
通常会使交通变得更糟。”

我对阅读这篇文章的回应是
,能否请我见见其中一些工程师,

因为这些不是我的——

我现在正在与之合作的有很多例外——

但这些不是
通常会遇到的工程师 一个城市

,他们说,“哦,那
条路太拥挤了,我们需要增加一条车道。”

所以你增加了一条车道,车流来了

,他们说,“看,我告诉过你
我们需要那条车道。”

这适用于高速公路
和拥挤的城市街道。


我工作的大多数美国城市

,更典型的城市,令人惊奇的

是,他们有很多街道
,实际上

由于
他们目前正在经历的拥堵而过大。

俄克拉荷马城的情况就是这样,

当时市长跑来
找我,非常沮丧,

因为他们
在《预防》杂志上被评为

全国行人最糟糕的城市

现在这不可能是真的,

但它肯定
足以让市长对此有所作为。

我们做了一项步行性研究

,我们发现
了街道上的汽车数量——

这些是 3,000、4,000、7,000 辆汽车

,我们知道两条车道
每天可以处理 10,000 辆汽车。

看看这些数字——
它们都接近或低于 10,000 辆汽车

,这些街道

在新的市中心规划

中被指定为四车道到六车道宽。

所以你在

车道数量和
想要使用它们的汽车数量之间存在根本性的脱节。

所以我的工作是重新设计
市中心的每条街道,

从路缘面到路缘面

,我们为 50 条街道做了这些,

现在我们正在重建它。

所以一条典型的超大街道

正在变窄,现在
正在建设中

,项目已经完成了一半。

像这样的典型街道,你知道,

当你这样做时,
你会找到中间的空间。

你会找到自行车道的空间。

我们将
路边停车位增加了一倍。

我们添加了一个完整的自行车网络
,以前没有这个网络。

但并不是每个人都像
俄克拉荷马城那样有钱,

因为他们的开采
经济做得很好。

典型的城市
更像锡达拉皮兹,

那里有全四车道
系统,半单向系统。

有点难以看到,

但我们做了什么——我们正在做什么;
它现在正在进行中,

现在正在工程中——

正在将一个全四车道
系统,一半单向

变成一个全双车道系统,全双向

,这样做,我们增加了
70% 更多商家喜欢的路边停车位

,它可以保护人行道。

停车使人行道安全

,我们正在增加一个更
强大的自行车网络。

然后是车道本身。
它们有多宽?

这真的很重要。

标准已经
改变,正如安德烈斯·杜尼所说,

在美国通往细分市场的典型道路可以

让你看到
地球的曲率。

(笑声)

这是
1960 年代华盛顿以外的一个分区。

仔细
观察街道的宽度。

这是 1980 年代的一个细分。

1960 年代,1980 年代。

标准已经发生
了如此大的变化,

以至于我在南海滩的旧社区,

当需要修复
排水不畅的街道时,

他们不得不加宽它
并拿走我们一半的人行道,

因为标准更宽了。

人们在更宽的街道上走得更快。

人们知道这一点。

工程师们否认了这一点,
但市民们知道这一点,

因此在密歇根州的伯明翰,
他们为更窄的街道而战。

俄勒冈州波特兰市以适合步行着称,在其住宅区

制定了“瘦街”计划

我们知道狭窄的街道更安全。

开发人员 Vince Graham

我们在南卡罗来纳州开展的 I’On 项目中,

他参加了会议,并展示
了他令人惊叹的 22 英尺长的道路。

这是两条路,
非常狭窄的通行权

,他展示了这位著名的哲学家,

他说:“宽
是通向毁灭

的道路……窄是通向生命的道路。”

(笑声)

(掌声)

这在南方演得很好。

现在:自行车。

自行车和骑自行车
是目前

仅在美国一些城市进行的革命。

但是你建造它的地方,它们就来了。

作为一名规划者,我不想这么说,
但我能说的一件事

是,自行车人口
是自行车基础设施的一个功能。

我请
来自波特兰 Nelson\Nygaard 的朋友 Tom Brennan

给我发一些
波特兰自行车通勤的照片。

他给我发了这个。 我说:
“那辆自行车是工作日吗?”

他说:“不,那是星期二。”

当你像波特兰那样
在自行车基础设施上花钱时——

纽约市通过粉刷这些鲜绿色的车道
,骑自行车的人数现在已经翻了好几倍

即使是像加利福尼亚长滩这样的汽车城市
:基于基础设施

的骑自行车的人数也大幅增加

当然,

如果你知道
华盛顿特区的第 15 街——

请见见 Rahm Emanuel
在芝加哥的新自行车道

、缓冲车道、从路边拉出的平行停车场

停放的汽车之间的自行车
和 路边——

这些薄荷自行车手。

但是,如果像帕萨迪纳那样,
每条车道都是自行车道,

那么没有车道是自行车道。

这是我在帕萨迪纳遇到的唯一一个骑自行车的人
,所以……

(笑声)

我提到的平行停车场——

它是一个重要的钢铁屏障

,可以保护路边和行人
免受移动车辆的伤害。

这是英尺。 劳德代尔;
街的一侧,你可以停车,

街的另一侧,你不能。

这是停车场的欢乐时光。

这是另一边的悲伤时刻。

然后树木本身会
减慢汽车的速度。

当树木靠近道路时,它们的移动速度会变慢

,当然,有时
它们会减速得非常快。

所有的小细节
——路缘返回半径。

是一英尺还是40英尺?

路边有多猛烈,以确定
汽车行驶的速度

以及您必须穿过多少空间。

然后我喜欢这个,
因为这是客观的新闻。

“有人说市中心的
入口不吸引行人。”

当景观的每一个方面
都是俯冲的,

是空气动力学的,是流形的几何图形时,

它会说:“这是一个车辆的地方。”

因此,任何一个细节,任何一个专业,都不
能被允许搭台。

在这里,你知道,这条街:

是的,百年风暴过后,它会在一分钟内排干

但这个可怜的女人
每天都必须爬上路边。

所以很快,舒适的
步行与

所有动物同时寻求
展望和避难所的事实有关。

我们希望能够看到我们的掠食者,

但我们也希望
感觉到我们的侧翼被覆盖。

所以我们被吸引到
具有良好边缘的地方

,如果你不提供边缘,
人们就不会想要在那里。

高度与宽度的正确比例是多少?

是一对一的吗? 三比一?

如果你超过一到六,
你就不会很舒服了。

你不会感到封闭。

现在,萨尔茨堡的六比一
可以非常令人愉快。

萨尔茨堡的对面是休斯顿。

停车场
是这里的主要问题。

然而,缺失的牙齿,那些空地
也可能是问题

,如果你
因为过时的分区代码而缺失了一个角落,

那么你附近的鼻子可能会缺失

这就是我们在我家附近的情况。

这是分区代码,说
我不能在那个站点上构建。

您可能知道,华盛顿特区
现在正在更改其分区,

以允许这样的
站点成为这样的站点。

我们需要很多差异来做到这一点。 建造

三角形房屋
可能很有趣,

但如果你建造了一座,
人们通常会喜欢它。

所以你必须填补那些缺失的鼻子。

然后,最后,有趣的散步:

人性的迹象。

我们属于社会灵长类动物。

没有什么比其他人更让我们感兴趣了

我们想要人的迹象。

所以完美的一对一比例,
这是一件很棒的事情。

这是大急流城,
一个非常适合步行的城市,

但没有人走在这条

将两家
最好的酒店连接在一起的街道上,

因为如果在左边,
你有一个暴露的停车场

,在右边,
你有一个会议设施

,显然是
为欣赏那个停车场而设计的,

那么你就不会吸引那么多人。 南卡罗来纳州查尔斯顿

市市长乔·莱利 (Joe Riley) 在他的第 10 届任期内

告诉我们,只需
25 英尺的建筑

就能隐藏 250 英尺的车库。

这个我叫Chia Pet Garage。
它在南海滩。

那个活跃的底层。

我想以
我喜欢展示的这个项目结束。

它是由 Meleca 建筑师事务所设计的。
它在俄亥俄州哥伦布市。

左边是会议中心
附近,到处都是行人。

右边是 Short North
社区——民族风情、

一流的餐厅、
一流的商店,挣扎着。

它做得不太好,
因为这是桥

,没有人
从会议中心

走到那个街区。

嗯,当他们重建高速公路时,
他们在桥上增加了 80 英尺。

抱歉——他们重建
了高速公路上的桥。

该市支付了 190 万美元,

他们将场地交给了开发商

,开发商建造了这个

,现在 Short North
已经恢复了生机。

每个人都说,报纸,
而不是策划杂志

,报纸
说是因为那座桥。

就是这样了。 这就是
步行性的一般理论。

想想你自己的城市。

想想如何应用它。

你必须同时做所有四件事。

所以找到那些
你拥有最多的地方

并修复你可以

修复的地方,修复那些地方仍然需要修复
的地方。

非常感谢您的关注

,感谢您今天的到来。

(掌声)