Conclusion: Urban Transportation success in Vancouver, Canada

The story
is long and began back in the 1960s when Vancouver rejected freeways. The city
remains the only major North American city with no freeways within city limits,
says Vancouver’s former chief planner Brent Toderian. Instead of ripping up the
city, and building a bridge across the bay, the citizens instead decided to
create the Sea Bus, a ferry service that takes 10 minutes to cross the water.

Today the plan is multi-modal.
Walking, bikes, and transit all link up so you can travel car-free. And because
almost a quarter of all bike lanes are protected, regular people have started
to ride. Kids and elderly folks can take their bikes without having to share
the roads with cars and trucks.
Cycling is the fasted growing mode of
transport in Vancouver, and it seems that the city is already on target to
easily meet its goal of two-thirds of all trips being
sustainable by 2040.
Vancouver’s story shows that, once
again, transit plans move slowly, and then fast. This can be off-putting to
cities that have still to begin a serious push to grow sustainable transport,
but it also shows that small efforts build to eventually make big differences.
It reminds me of an old proverb I always half-remember: The best time to plant
a tree is 20 years ago. The second best time is now.
by: nur fatihah nabilah
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