Judging by the advertising, an average day of an average inhabitant of Las Vegas consists of washing their car, fueling and driving it, crashing into another person's vehicle, suing that person, and buying a new car.
@Sp4mMe2 жыл бұрын
At least you can grab some fast food in-between.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
So good.
@bbgun0612 жыл бұрын
Those businesses have to go somewhere. Where would you put them?
@aegisofhonor2 жыл бұрын
while eating a burger they got from the many fast food joints on the strode they crashed their car on.
@adventurefaps95712 жыл бұрын
You forgot about the buying fast food thru the drive thru in their car, then eating that fasting also in the car.
@NotJustBikes2 жыл бұрын
I literally had to watch this twice because I was laughing so much the first time. I'm really glad you made this video though, because I thought I was overdoing the dry sarcasm in my videos. You've just shown me that I should be doing more of it, not less.
@DennisDeSlager2 жыл бұрын
Hi Jason, you here too? lol
@chikitronrx02 жыл бұрын
oh please :P
@justinoboyle57672 жыл бұрын
Please do more of it.
@miguelbarov22412 жыл бұрын
We need a collab between you two guys, the more dry sarcasm against stroads, the better
@bobstroud91182 жыл бұрын
@@miguelbarov2241 There but for the sake of an “a” go I.
@JuanWayTrips2 жыл бұрын
I think what's even crazier is that these stroads end up having more lanes than actual highways...
@saxmanb7772 жыл бұрын
7 lanes for one direction…yup.
@georgobergfell2 жыл бұрын
Because they are bad at being a street and bad at being a road at the same time. Very inefficient traffic design. Edit: Also stroads are also bad from an environmental standpoint. Highways save gas by keeping the traffic flowing while these stroads are a constant stop and go.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
On the other hand, think what you could do with these amazingly wide rights-of-way!
@jermaineraymer15792 жыл бұрын
I think my favorite part are the stroads that have sidewalks that randomly end and give you nowhere to go but that NARROlW Strip between the white line and the ditch. @CityNerd - I think the videos need more sarcasm and dry humor
@LucarioBoricua2 жыл бұрын
@@CityNerd There's major city boulevards, typically 6 and sometimes 8 lanes wide (outside intersections), in which the outer lanes are used for unauthorized curbside parking along business corridors. It would be safer and more efficient to close the outermost lane and turn it into curbside parking, and perhaps ideally slim down the remaining travel lanes from 12ft to 10ft (3.6m to 3.0m). That would result in a space saving of 8 to 12 ft (2.4 to 3.6m), which can be used to widen each sidewalk by 4-6 ft (1.2-1.8m).
@liamtahaney7132 жыл бұрын
We've all been there: driving down the road with your windmill blade in the back, and suddenly you get the call that you urgently need to deliver it to the wind farm on the other side of town.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Completely plausible and an ironclad justification for urban arterials with a 200' ROW
@sabretooth19972 жыл бұрын
Funny you should mention that. I was delivering some power plant equipment and a subway car (not in the same load) just last week and that very same thing happened each time.
@SofaKingShit2 жыл бұрын
At least theres ample parking if you want to stop at a Mc Donald's for a break or something. Simply blame the delay on a traffic jam and the need for more lanes.
@celluskh60092 жыл бұрын
@@SofaKingShit As an Aussie, and half-cut, your user name is pure poetry.
@sabretooth19972 жыл бұрын
@@SofaKingShit The problem is, those windmill blades don't get along very well with a McDonald's drive-thru.
@psychic_beth2 жыл бұрын
"Left to their own devices, traffic engineers will always build New Jersey" - Justin Roczniak
@stink17012 жыл бұрын
A "well there's you're problem" fan? Or anything from Donoteat!
@psychic_beth2 жыл бұрын
@@stink1701 WTYP mostly because Justin barely does anything on his own channel anymore
@Default783342 жыл бұрын
ALL TURNS FROM RIGHT LANE
@vulcan_thunder2 жыл бұрын
Nice
@PhillyBagel2 жыл бұрын
Is it still a stroad if it has jughandles?
@zekecaldon50562 жыл бұрын
Indicator species of a stroad: 20 cars waiting in a center left turn lane to get into a DQ. Also, getting lost in a signalized left turn lane because there are two of them.
@MrTaxiRob2 жыл бұрын
you need to (grill &) chill bro
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
On the one hand, 20 cars in the CLTL = traffic consultant that analyzed the drive-thru blacklisted by the city. OTOH, blizzards are objectively delicious, so what can you do
@hobog2 жыл бұрын
@@MrTaxiRob there's nothing chill about stroads
@MrTaxiRob2 жыл бұрын
@@hobog DQ has a lunch special you should check out sometime... at participating restaurants
@tekuaniaakab20502 жыл бұрын
I’d add strip malls as a part of the stroad environment. The nesting ground of species such as “Drug Stores”, “Generic Pizza Places”, and more “Nails Salons” than a city can probably support
@p1mason2 жыл бұрын
This is very funny to me because strip malls (in all seriousness) are an outgrowth of the same logic as the stroad. Specifically, the primary design philosophy of a strip mall is to minimize the amount of walking that occurs. If the strip mall is functioning correctly, a customer will arrive in a car and park more or less right in the front door of the business they are patronizing. With a little luck, they will be able to traverse the frightful outdoors between the business entrance and their vehicle with less than five steps. In fact a properly designed strip mall should allow you to get from your bed to the nail salon and back again without being outside for more than 10 seconds in total.
@DiogenesOfCa2 жыл бұрын
We have miles and miles of tattoo parlors and smoke shops in our beat down strip malls.
@MrTaxiRob2 жыл бұрын
@@p1mason all of this is especially helpful in anti-human environments like Las Vegas
@fabes892 жыл бұрын
Don't forget low end liquor stores, Mattress stores, and DMV offices!
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I kind of glossed over strip malls in this video (there's footage, but I didn't really dwell on it), but I totally agree. Don't forget vape shops!
@tannermalone2782 жыл бұрын
Can you talk about how to “de-sprawl” a city? A city like houston seems so reliant on a car that I wonder if there are any ways that we can reverse the massive suburban sprawl
@LongBranches2 жыл бұрын
Love this video idea It would make for a great point of reference on grassroots urban reformation
@MrTaxiRob2 жыл бұрын
You have to make cities attractive for people to live in. You have to build more than just dense housing, but services and green spaces as well. Block after block of five-over-ones is just gross. I imagine it would all be about finding the magic number of primates per hectare.
@MatthewHoHiWorld2 жыл бұрын
Yes! A solutions video
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
I'll put it on my list, but I'm not sure there's a snappy/sarcastic 12-15 minute video that would address this adequately!
@hobog2 жыл бұрын
Allow mixed-use development, for one, and remove parking+offset minimums
@coleslaw23942 жыл бұрын
Coming from a transportation engineering perspective, it's a breath of fresh air (pun intended) to see people realizing the mistakes of the past and trying to design cities to be more efficient and human-friendly not car friendly. Thankfully the group in the company I work for take on projects that remove lanes instead of adding more to the struggling network like our highway group does
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
There's a huge business in retrofitting these bad boys, that's for sure.
@kevinmsft2 жыл бұрын
Isn't fast driving cars efficient? I think we need to consciously make priority decisions. If getting rid of Stroad is the highest priority, then accessibility and efficiency are *not* priority... All these very quaint, beautiful European cities were built 500 years ago when mode of transportation was different, and mainly built for Aristocrats and rich people... Just keep that in mind.
@kain0m2 жыл бұрын
@@kevinmsft sounds like you've never been to Europe...
@kevinmsft2 жыл бұрын
@@kain0m many times...
@tessabakker6622 жыл бұрын
@@kevinmsft But it's extremely bad for the local economy. Cars that drive fast are cars that are not going to be parked nearby for the driver to go shopping, they are through-traffic that could have just as easily been routed *around* the city center. Cities are not liminal spaces, they should be destinations. The Dutch "autoluw" philosophy limits throughfare in city centers to encourage locals and visitors to shop on foot. In this setup, car traffic should, idealy, consist of destination traffic only (with cars encouraged to park within multi-story car garages). Autoluw traffic calming methodology discourages drivers who aren't in the area for the area itself from adding to city congestion, by making through traffic take more car-centric roads on the further-out bands of the city. It's been proven time and time again that limiting car throughput in city centers makes for better business, because bicyclists do not demand much road space (meaning 4 cyclists could fit in roughly the same amount of space that a car would demand, regardless of how many occupants it boasts - and the bicycle is over all a less hazardous object from the perspective of other road users, and makes for a quieter vehicle which also means more pleasant public spaces). Pedestrians will window-shop, and are generally more amiable to stopping by a local eatery or bar to get a bite or drink with friends. (Bonus: having fewer people driving cars in the city center will mean fewer people drunkenly stumbling out of bars and into their car to cause vehicular accidents.)
@nathanielmackler72252 жыл бұрын
I don't understand how people aren't getting walkability. In Silicon Valley, we closed the streets that make up downtown to cars in a bunch of our cities (Murphy in Sunnyvale, Castro in Mountain View, and I think University in Palo Alto as well). People love these places, and the parking garages next to all three of these downtowns (each and every one of which has a major CalTrain stop) are always full. Yet, when anyone talks about shrinking El Camnio Real, our arterial stroad which runs parallel to two freeways, it's shouting and screaming and loud opposition. Even a bus lane for the 522 Rapid gets shouted down. I do not understand how both these things are happening in the same places at the same times.
@DiogenesOfCa2 жыл бұрын
Weird how all those places you mention have money.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
It's extremely weird how common it is for people to drive to and park at a place where they can walk around and enjoy a vibrant urban setting. I get it, but it's weird!
@JasonMcCarrell2 жыл бұрын
@@DiogenesOfCa This. They have money, therefor they have power. A lot of the arterial stroad areas are poor as heck, and so the suburban white assholes bully them so they cna have their segregated shopping district. I live in Ottawa, and even though the entire ward is against a new ugly pencil tower in our little italy, it'll be passed, and without any opposition from council, because the rich ass suburban white blue-lives-matter idiots will vote yes on the project without a single consession. They want to shove the poors into our ward and they have the power to do it. The solution? activism and mutual aid. I imagine a place like Las Vegas much worst than Ottawa, and the poor inner city wards are likely stuck never getting any of their infastructure stuff passed.
@nathanielmackler72252 жыл бұрын
@@CityNerd In a way, the indoor mall is the ultimate example of this.
@jmlinden72 жыл бұрын
@@nathanielmackler7225 Actually I'd argue that Disneyland is the ultimate example
@thekingoffailure99672 жыл бұрын
One of my favorite indicator species is the Bench No One Sits On, and its close relative The Bench Thats Actually Just a Billboard. Both are placed facing the oncoming traffic and are close enough to the stroad to feel the air currents of the speeding cars. Bonus points when the billboard is an advertisement for the bench itself. I once saw giant Tiger eyes staring down the traffic with something akin to "YOU LOOKED! See, these work!" and was purely there to distract the drivers as they went through the intersection.
@michaelstratton52232 жыл бұрын
My favorite sidewalk obstacles are the abandoned giant metal construction barricades laying on their sides, which workers forgot about after their project, forcing cyclists and pedestrians into the traffic lanes (which at that point have not been under construction for over a week).
@henrybrown64802 жыл бұрын
This is a masterpiece, even by lofty CityNerd standards. Could not have been better
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate that -- it's different from my usual!
@connecticutmultimodaltrans82262 жыл бұрын
I agree!
@KevinLynch17172 жыл бұрын
Yes I second that
@just_jon962 жыл бұрын
I third that this is his best work!
@RobertBloomquist2 жыл бұрын
One of the main takeaways I got from reading Marohn's book, Confessions of a Recovering Engineer, was the curve of vehicle speed vs likelihood of pedestrian fatality in vehicle-pedestrian collisions, and I think it was around 19 miles per hour where a pedestrian is about 50% likely to die from the collision. I mention this, because for me, the main indicator of a stroad is token pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure (narrow sidewalks, painted but unprotected bike lanes, few and mostly unprotected crosswalks) combined with lethal vehicle speeds. Clearly, there is at least an admission that people are supposed to be able to walk here (unlike, say, highways, where bike and foot traffic are usually banned, at least in non-emergency situations), but are given little protection from cars. One example that stood out to me in your video was the bus stops, where the sides of the bus stop were angled inward because if they were squared like normal, they would take up the *entire* sidewalk and riders would have to move into the road just to enter the bus stop.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
The transit stop design is super-tortured. I feel for RTC -- they're working with what they've got, but people who ride transit just deserve so much more respect -- I have to make jokes to conceal my white-hot anger.
@thexalon2 жыл бұрын
I think it was NotJustBikes who pointed out how North American excuses for bike infrastructure are designed so that if something bad happens with a car, any person on a bicycle in the bicycle lane is very likely to be severely injured or killed. But there are also stroads where there's clearly no conception of the idea that somebody might use anything other than a car to move from one place to another, e.g. author Bill Bryson describes a situation where he was on one side of the stroad and wanted to visit a shop on the other side, and it was abundantly clear through the lack of sidewalks, signalling, and crosswalks, that nobody had considered the possibility of somebody wanting to cross said stroad on foot.
@KyurekiHana2 жыл бұрын
@@thexalon This is because in North America, cars are considered safer and more accessible by the general populace. Whenever such discussions come up, people tell me that not everyone can walk long distances or ride a bike, but everyone can drive. When I bring up I can't drive, they then switch to asking why I even attempt to live on my own, as if driving is an indication of whether one is an adult or a dependent child. Unfortunately, I personally think it all stems back to how easy it is to get and maintain a driver's license in the USA.
@ethanstump2 жыл бұрын
@@KyurekiHana it goes further back than that. it has to do with the creation of the highway system as a way to maintain the economy after world war 2, ya know, when a ton of highly unstable murder machines called soldiers came back home and needed a way to keep busy while having Normandy flashbacks. not just bikes has a great piece where he talks about how there where many early cities that had great bike infrastructure until the great cargasm. car's are considered safer because the infrastructure was built so that was the case, and it was built so that was the case with the help of a hefty amount of lobbying and kickbacks on the behalf of the car industry, so that they could profit more. we have the most expensive system available, because that's what allows corporations to suck more profits out of you. neoliberalism baby.
@onlycorner55652 жыл бұрын
@@KyurekiHana capitalism is not inclusive if your population thinks about squeezing out more profits/numbers 5 times a day it begets exclusion zones blacks can live outside an landmark ,pedestrians cant perform the daily chores ,the safety of every living thing near those 7 lane things kzbin.info/www/bejne/bWqpeGh3h8SXrrs
@JM-gf7el2 жыл бұрын
Would absolutely love a "solutions" video! So often these kinds of videos leave me depressed and hopeless about our cities, so I'd love to hear what kind of things we may be able to do to incrementally make things better
@coweatsman2 жыл бұрын
The Netherlands.
@coweatsman2 жыл бұрын
Really a solution may be imposed by geology and nature. #PeakOil has arrived as of November 2018. Oil production is only going to decrease. But the problems will be immense and unsolvable.
@bellairefondren73892 жыл бұрын
The silver lining of the stroad is that there's a lot of space to work with. You could widen the sidewalk, add in protected bike lanes and BRT down the middle and still have enough room for 2-3 car lanes per direction.
@makelgrax2 жыл бұрын
Another similar thing you can do is change the inner 3~4 roads in any stroad with more than 8~9 lanes into bus-only lanes + stations (or a train railway if you're feling fancy). This helps with bus issues, and provides a "safe" middle-ground between one part of the stroad and the next. To make it for busses you don't really need much (in relative terms of infraestructure): just some raised ground for the bus stops, plus concrete barriers to delimit the bus lanes. The main challenge will come in the form of making buses travel there with _proper_ routes and frequency, then getting people to use them. To make it for trains would add an interesting challenge, as the intersection lights should be timed pretty toughtfully to minimize time spent waiting: - Be green for straight movement while the train stops at the station, then passes. - Be green for all left turners while pedestrians cross the other sidewalk. - Be green for all right turners while pedestrians do the other crossing. - Be green for the intersecting street... ...Or well, whatever the best option is for each intersection. Honestly, just having a *good* train along a stroad that connects cities/towns will probably make a big number of non-public-transit-crippled people forced to use cars switch onto it fast.
@GregoryMurphyIsNotYou2 жыл бұрын
My city (San Jose, California) has been removing lanes from some stroads. We call it a "road diet". There are a few near me that went from two lanes in each direction, to one lane in each direction with a nice wide bike lane on each side, with a painted buffer zone. I'm loving it.
@keving55642 жыл бұрын
Would have been happy walking away with the phrase "stroad on stroad violence," but you gave us so much more than that! Your commentary is top notch.
@kennyjeong64622 жыл бұрын
Very insightful to tie the prevalence of personal injury advertising to a facility clearly not designed with safety in mind. Nice.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Kenny. It's something that definitely jumps out at you if you come from a city where personal injury law isn't a highly visible industry.
@TarenNauxen2 жыл бұрын
Phoenix is the exact same way- grid system of arterial roads and a cluster of law offices and attorney billboards in the lower-income parts of town. It's kind of depressing when you notice the pattern
@kennyjeong64622 жыл бұрын
@@TarenNauxen Billboards in general are problematic. They are normally located in poor areas and used to almost always advertise for things like cigarettes or alcohol targeting lower income folks.
@VoxelLoop2 жыл бұрын
@@CityNerd As a European, I'm not sure how much those billboards say about the safety of the road versus the law system if you are in an accident... 😅
@Default783342 жыл бұрын
@@CityNerd You know they're serious and can get things done when they're holding a baseball bat or sledgehammer on their billboard or ad on the side of the city bus.
@marcelmoulin33352 жыл бұрын
Albeit a Dutchman, I grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area in the '60s and '70s. I am all too familiar with these off-putting, soulless, deeply depressing stroads that are ubiquitous in the US. I left the US in 1986 to work in the UK. Upon retirement in 2018, I returned to my native Netherlands. I have found my rightful place in the world. I often feel as if I am in paradise in beautiful Middelburg. Despite the urban sprawl in this country, there are, fortunately, many lovely sites and places to savour. Pedestrian and cycle oriented town centres teem with activity, cafés, shops, flats, and historic buildings; they have an identity... a soul. Those elements are missing far too often in the US.
@ethanstump2 жыл бұрын
i am living in the US. my soul missing is confirmed.
@carravogue2 жыл бұрын
My city has the worst stroad I have ever seen in my life so far: it's a 3 lane stroad with a 55 mph speed limit and endless strip malls directly to the right, no turning lanes so people are constantly slowing down to a near stop to turn into businesses, and on the left cars are streaming in from the parallel major interestate. The lanes are also extremely tight with barely any clearance between you and the curb.
@wwsciffsww37482 жыл бұрын
Sounds like half of Atlanta
@passatboi2 жыл бұрын
Like Kingston Pike in Knoxville, which is US-11/70 that runs parallel to I-40 and is all strip malls and fast food.
@MarisaClardy2 жыл бұрын
Are you talking by Austin? Cause it sounds like Austin.
@jackfordon77352 жыл бұрын
Sounds like Detroit, too. And Cleveland.
@carravogue2 жыл бұрын
@@MarisaClardy it is in Texas - El Paso. I was used to stroad hell in AZ but this is next level awful infrastructure.
@NathanRixThroughGlass2 жыл бұрын
A City Nerd and Road Guy Rob colab would be interesting
@prestoncline93912 жыл бұрын
Yes lol
@Theincredibledrummer2 жыл бұрын
The tonal clash between loud, enthusiastic and very american vs dry, intellectual humour would be awesome. Definitely down for it
@passatboi2 жыл бұрын
That's when they work together in the same laboratory, right?
@edwardmiessner65022 жыл бұрын
Or a triple collab with Not Just Bikes: American enthusiasm + dry, educated wit + educated reasonable takedown
@p1mason2 жыл бұрын
I think those obstructed footpaths highlight something quite profound. Specifically, streets are the spaces between properties, belonging to everyone and set aside for the various uses and conveniences that everyone needs. The transit operator needs a place for people to wait, that's what the street is for. The electric company needs a place to string powerlines, that's what the street is for. Water utilities need a place to bury pipes, that's what the street is for. It's more than just pedestrians and cyclists, it's delivery drivers, the cable company, even the DOT who needs space to place directional and regulatory signage. Philosophically, we provide the street for all these people and uses. And yet.. And yet, a lot of people have this notion that the street is provided for cars. (Well they have that notion until the cable company wants to put a utility pole in the middle of their front garden - then suddenly they can think of a whole cornucopia of things that might be better off in the street). Seeing all these non-car uses crowded into the last metre between the carriageway and the property line just emphasizes the fact that "streets are for cars" isn't true. And it never was.
@EricJCaraballoso2 жыл бұрын
I'd love to hear a solutions take on this. Like many, I recently discovered NJB's Stroads video that sent me down a rabbit hole, and now I realize why I hate driving in my town, even though I'd consider myself a car enthusiast. We just had an election in my town and the person who lost had some really great ideas for more pedestrian focused changes to our downtown, but they lost. I feel like not enough people know about this, and anyone who I do talk to, I don't have enough "ammunition" to say what we should do besides bringing out the bulldozers. Thanks.
@sagoamicably64862 жыл бұрын
as someone who loves cities and also loves cars, roads (not streets) are where cars are enjoyed. ways forward are 1) zoning changes allowing intesification to the next level (single-family home turning into a duplex or 4plex). 2) allowing multi-use buildings so denser communities can make cafes and corner stores without having to drive to 100% of activities. 3) this means streets need to be safer and slower. street parking and protected bike/walk lanes can help slow street traffic. 4) the main arterial stroad might evolve to become a road and start removing access slowly over time (organically, probably)
@pappy94732 жыл бұрын
The private and commercial vehicle dominance in the USA is scary. I love my bicycle(s) for quick trips to the bar, to the book store, to the convenience store, to the stationery store, to work...
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
If you live somewhere where that's possible, consider yourself fortunate!
@pappy94732 жыл бұрын
@@CityNerd Dublin, Ireland. Not Northern European standards yet but getting there. Thank you for your contribution to the increasingly vocal global debate on better living.
@eliteultra92 жыл бұрын
We have a lot of those in Mexico too! Another indicators would be confusing jurisdiction in the mind of the people using it, because the stroud just to be a highway that then became the states jurisdiction and than the city's. Also dealerships! There's always dealerships while entering the stroad, so many of them even one in front of the other and here we also have just random billboards with huge phone numbers, not even someone's number, just the phone number to purchase the billboard!
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Oh, I've got a whole idea about confusing jurisdictions!
@Not_Sal2 жыл бұрын
If you make a solutions video, you should take a look at Queens Blvd, arguably the most infamous stroad in New York. It used to be called the boulevard of death, but over the years there has been many improvements to make it safer.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I reviewed Queens Boulevard briefly for Workhorse Streets -- but you're right, it would be interesting to do a Stroads success story, if such a thing exists!
@camdentrain2 жыл бұрын
Great video! I really liked the "out in the wild" aspect. a video about solutions would be very exciting! I'd particularly love to see ways to turn Stroads into Roads. There are lots of examples and ideas that come to my mind when thinking about turning a Stroad into a Street, but going the other way seems to be a bit more involved. Thanks, and keep up the great work!
@derekc51752 жыл бұрын
To add to your point I think it would be interesting to see light rail considered in a video about solutions, specifically a road like MLK Way in Seattle before and after the light rail. It's definitely still a stroad but there's a lot of infill around stations and it feels a bit safer with slower speeds and reduced opportunities for dangerous left turns.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the suggestion! I'll put it on the list.
@hobog2 жыл бұрын
@@derekc5175 the light rail there is now too high in demand to be compromised by so many level crossings, but I know it's the first stretch opened so it couldn't have been built otherwise
@bootmii982 жыл бұрын
Make it happen to CA-1 between Princeton and Moonridge, it's on the "road" end of the stroad spectrum (for now) but the constant lights and driveways are just...
@donaldjmccann2 жыл бұрын
20 years ago I rode my bicycle from Morro Bay, CA to Palm Beach, FL. Over half of my trip was done on the I-10, Passing through El Paso, Phoenix, Tucson, San Antonio, Houston, New Orleans. Mobile, Pensacola, Tallahassee and Gainesville. If I wanted to shop, I had to lock my bike in my motel room and try to get to a shopping centre on foot, that was typically only accessible by car. 15 years later I moved to Haarlem in the Netherlands, where everything was accessible by bike. The difference could not be more pronounced. The USA is made for cars, while Holland is made for people. I applaud you trying to get this message across.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing -- great comment!
@jimbo16372 жыл бұрын
I'd love to see a "solutions" video cause to be honest, I have no idea how you'd go about fixing the typical North American strode....
@jreilly22132 жыл бұрын
I live along "Street road" in the suburbs of Philadelphia and I think it is a quintessential stroad, even named appropriately.
@georgobergfell2 жыл бұрын
Here in Germany the maximum speed within city Limits is 50 Km/h (~30mph). More and more places even get 30 Km/h (~18mph) speed limit now. Exceptions are only for highways within city limits. And yes, they also do exist here, but are quite rare, thankfully.
@juliocorrales8628 Жыл бұрын
Being a native Vegas sociologist you just blew my mind! Incredible to see how proper urban planning could have potential positive impact on the upward mobility of our population. Thank you for all of your videos!
@michaelthomas86772 жыл бұрын
The most absurd stroad animal I've seen: a chain of dental clinics with multiple locations along a single stroad. I saw this on a family road trip while passing through a big Texas city (Houston?). For some reason a major interstate in the city was closed and we ended up taking an unbelievably long stroad across the city and its suburbs. For more than an hour along this stroad we counted at least 7 instances of all the chains: McDonalds, Wendy's, CVS, and... that chain of dentist clinics with their big gray signs showing a picture of a tooth! The franchises kept repeating among a streetscape filled with strip malls. A fun thing we experienced: somewhere in the city the lights were timed such that for over 10 blocks just as we arrived at a red stop light it'd turn green. It was so dependable that Dad would snap his fingers and the light would change. A whole line of stop lights (on a weirdly empty stroad) timed to go green one by one in a big long line. The whole minivan was thoroughly amused! It's a bit surreal to remember this now!
@frafraplanner92772 жыл бұрын
That traffic light phenomenon is called "signal progression" or a "green wave"
@danieldaniels75712 жыл бұрын
That’s how traffic lights are supposed to work. Unfortunately in most places they aren’t timed that well.
@pgiatrakis2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for these videos , they are very important and should be shown to every city town council
@adilbari19832 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad that my subscrption to the "Not Just Bikes" channel brought me to your channel. Both of you (as well as City Beautiful) are doing excellent work! Having recently (and very reluctantly) moved to a suburb in Northern Virginia, I relate so much to this video. Stroads have become the bane of my existence. Unnecessarily wide roadways with dangerously high speed limits. And if that isn't bad enough, barely any transit options and pedestrian infrastructure. I've been in the US for 7 years and this is the first time I'm experiencing suburban life. It is soul-crushingly terrible!
@PizzaPartify2 жыл бұрын
English is my second language and I live in Canada. I remember the 1st time I saw an injury attorney ad on American tv as a kid. The ad had big bold text saying things like BROKEN BONES and BURNS. I was in complete shock; I was convinced that the man in the ad was a hitman that was advertising his torturing services.
@iman23412 жыл бұрын
Actually belly laughed at the 45mph zebra crossing.... How on earth is that allowed!
@jobw2 жыл бұрын
In France there are many pseudo zebra crossings as well on busy arterial roads.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
There's literally a widely-used government report (NCHRP 562) that explicitly tells you that untreated crossings on 45 mph streets are awful. It shocked me to see it.
@Anonymous-sb9rr2 жыл бұрын
This stroad is not just trying to combine a street and a road, but a highway as well. That's some next level stroad you've got there.
@jimzecca39612 жыл бұрын
I think the main traffic issues with many stroads are caused by the fact there are a lot of people using the stroad as a road trying to get from A or B and not looking to patronize the businesses along the route. Because they are passing by, they are looking to drive as fast as possible and the frequent traffic lights are a problem. Unfortunately, they don't have a good alternative in most cases, such as a good limited access highway, that would let them bypass the area entirely both improving their travel time as well as reducing traffic for those accessing the businesses.
@jamesreitz32932 жыл бұрын
Fabulous video! Loved every minute! I grew up between two Stroads in outer borough SE Portland (between McLoughlin Blvd 99E and 82nd Ave Hwy 213). Both Stroads were deadly for bus riders, pedestrians and bike riders! I loved the comments about injury lawyer bill boards! Really scary crossing these streets. The worst Stroads I have ever seen are in greater Kansas City (NW Barry Road and NW Prairie View in front of the Zona Rosa shopping center and Metcaff and 117th in Overland Park). Good luck crossing those intersections as a pedestrian! Thanks for the insights!
@seannajera12652 жыл бұрын
Las Vegas definitely wins the "Weird Lawyer" billboard prize. In comparison, Philadelphia ads just have people in suits, lame. One of them is just a tshirt dude riding a motorcycle with flames in the background. If it didn't say LAWYER on it, you'd think it was an ad for Harleys
@chuck24532 жыл бұрын
I'd love to see a video on solutions and retrofits for these type of areas. Especially how do you balance the need to move people through the area efficiently without turning it into a wasteland and techniques traffic engineers can use to support that without blowing everything out.
@richardtaylor88622 жыл бұрын
Your humor and delivery is amazing! I love your dry wit.
@angusb992 жыл бұрын
“Placed that spell Town with an E” lol that line made me laugh because it’s pretty accurate as far as what I’ve seen, even being in the opposite site of the country
@UserName-ts3sp2 жыл бұрын
or "shoppes", as one of my local shopping centers calls itself
@Carmen4ever2 жыл бұрын
And yes, I think you should do a solutions video. Im excited for whatever content you provide, judging by how perfectly this video was put together. I even got riled up about the 7 STREET LIGHTS! what????? I was shook.
@McMurdoStation2 жыл бұрын
If it exists, maybe a video on cities that were stroad heavy but transformed to stroad lite or at least stroad-not-as-bad. And how they did it.
@phillipsmith67042 жыл бұрын
What happens if you put a light rail system down the middle of a stroad and then bike lanes on either side adjacent to sidewalks? It seems like that would help pedestrianize the stroad.
@matthays78002 жыл бұрын
If you mean cut 8 lanes to 4 lanes and add those things, sure. But you might need to accomplish that via decades of other incremental changes. Like more streets, more transit, etc.
@danieldaniels75712 жыл бұрын
I for one hate street level light rail in the middle of stroads. It’s very inconvenient for pedestrians and causes an excessive amount of car/train/ped conflict. Unfortunately placing the rail elsewhere is difficult unless it goes into abandoned freight rail right-of-ways like they mostly did in Denver.
@eliteultra92 жыл бұрын
I believe a good way to quickly have this stroads to proper streets would be to add a BRT with dedicated lanes. This is what my state did to some huge stroads with 6 lanes going each direction. 2 Brts lanes going each direction and increase sidewalk size
@neurofiedyamato87632 жыл бұрын
I think 2 lanes either direction is the upper limit for walkability and at that width, a signal with a median is needed for pedestrians to feel comfortable from my experience. So to me a 2 lane(4 lane both direction) is the target goal if we want to downsize a stroad. As you said, have the two center lane on either side turn to BRT lanes which may mean widening the median too. Eliminate the right turn lane and turn it in to a widen sidewalk. The right most through lane turn into a protected bicycle lane. And the lane next to that can be used for street parking to protect said bicycle lane. So from the video's 7 lane, it is now a 3 lane road in each direction. Which is going to be about as good as it is going to get I think. The reduced car capacity would be easily made up with the new BRT line and the enhanced pedestrian/cycling infrastructure.
@mariusdufour91862 жыл бұрын
Or just build light rail instead. BRT is such a half-arsed solution, it's still just a bunch of busses, but now they get their own lane, which is better than having them run in traffic. Similar or higher max capacity, lower operating cost per passenger (fewer drivers per passenger thanks to larger vehicles), and vehicles that last longer (no tires, no internal combustion engine, means less vehicle maintenance cost). Also, powered by electricity without the need to lug massive batteries around.
@MrTaxiRob2 жыл бұрын
@@mariusdufour9186 BRT is about lower infrastructure cost. Converting existing lanes is often just a matter of repainting the lines. CNG buses aren't as terrible as diesel, you can do articulated buses all day and increase capacity of each by 50% SRO. That's a lot cleaner than city buses in traffic. And you could even electrify them if you want, not sure how long it would take to recover the cost on that but the lack of emissions would be a nice bonus.
@mariusdufour91862 жыл бұрын
@@MrTaxiRob Indeed the upfront cost is lower, but not everything is about upfront cost. If a city is serious about providing reliable public transport long term, rudimentary BRT should be a short term, temporary solution while the light rail system is being worked out, at least on the main lines of your system. The problem is that once you start incrementally improving infrastructure for your BRT (beyond some painted lines), you're going to add raised platforms, lane dividers etc. Basically locking in it's right of way. And then when you want to step up to light rail, you'll be forced to follow the alignment of your bus lanes or to start from scratch. Converting an existing BRT system into light rail always results either in a sub-optimal light rail system (the 'cheap' option), or in a light rail system that costs just as much as it would have if you had built it from the start. If you're going to be providing high capacity public transport on main arteries, the investment in light rail or tramways will more than pay for itself in the long run over BRT, even if we disregard environmental impact, trams and light rail are just so much more cost-efficient to operate once the system is built.
@plattypus422 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, the county signed a franchise agreement with a private company who is exploring a privately-funded light rail line on Charleston, and until that inevitably implodes, there won't be any high capacity transit on the corridor. Keep in mind, these are the same county officials who were impressed by Musk's absurd Tesla tunnel.
@dummerikan2 жыл бұрын
CityNerd is reading the girls today 😆😆 On a more serious note though, this kind of development is so frustrating, because short of complete redevelopment including the commercial corridors on either side, (at prohibitive cost) there isn't much to be done about a megastroad like this. It's like trying to put infill densification into a neighborhood of mcmansions on cul-de-sacs; the paradigm of exclusion which inspires this kind of development actively works against density-focused intervention.
@matthewdavis46292 жыл бұрын
Yes, I would love a solutions video. I would like to hear your opinions on how to make car-centric sprawl more walkable and transit orientated.
@enjoyslearningandtravel79572 жыл бұрын
Yes agreed, I’d like to see and live in A more walkable area and more transit orientated. I become very stressed driving with drivers who are drunk, paying attention to their phones, paying attention to anything but driving. Or driving too fast and weaving
@jasonreed75222 жыл бұрын
Solution 1: if you really need to have a stroad the most it should be is 1 lane each way with a turning lane (suicide lane) and place the sidewalk 3-6 feet back from the curb so its atleast viable to walk down. Ideally you don't build stoads but this is the most palatable hybrid for the weirdos who don't find a 4lane road with people going 40+ stressful even as the driver. In my hometown Mainstreet is a total of 4 lanes because it is also a US route and several state routes merged into 1 and the turning lanes are very useful for keeping the traffic free flowing and not intimidating. In the nieghboring town there are a couple of 4 lane roads including a proper stroad on outer market street but the traffic isn't bad cause the towns are population 6,000 ish each and the nearest interstate is an hour drive away. (And its paradise, although car dependency is kinda a given for such low density rural areas. But the county does have a bus service that is probably insanely underused) What everyone, including traffic engineers get wrong about the interstate is that its not meant for civilians, it was built because in 1900 it took 60days to drive from NYC to LA, then 2 world wars happend and president Eisenhower (who drove on that test that took 60days, and on the german Autobahn) created the interstate for national defense reasons. Then the 60s happened and they got built in places they don't belong (cities).
@govtpeaches2 жыл бұрын
This is the best. It's all the best parts of being in grad school -- a hilarious classmate explaining the world to you, making you laugh, and permanently adding to your mind's toolkit. Where's the accent from? Did he go to my high school?? Love it.
@harktischris2 жыл бұрын
the idea of an "indicator species" for stroads is hilarious and also made me realize the stroads i have in my local environment.
@Theincredibledrummer2 жыл бұрын
As a New Zealander, it is so weird seeing 'personal injury attoney' billboards. They aren't really a thing over here. Also loved the sarcastic tone of this video. Your incredibly dry sense of humour is always a delight
@tonywalters72982 жыл бұрын
The us does not have a universal healthcare system, and even if you have health insurance, the insurance company may require you to sue the at fault party in order for treatment to be covered
@Carmen4ever2 жыл бұрын
As soon as you said something about the algorithm sending us over from not just bikes, I subscribed. I absolutely love these kinds of videos. My city is strange, we have a bit of everything. Some of the streets are somewhat inconvenient for drivers, because most of the road is dedicated to pedestrians/bikers. Then, there’s streets that are posted 45mph with a 2 foot wide sidewalk with heavy foot traffic. Then, it’s gridlock, with somewhat acceptable walking conditions, and comfortable driving conditions. Don’t even get me started on the suburbs, in my city, there’s 2 kinds. The flat suburb, and the mountainside suburb. I do food delivery, I drive a lot, and I have seen it all. The amount of planned obsolescence, is extraordinary. Don’t get me wrong, I love a freshly paved highway, I couldn’t ask for more. But driving in the city shows just how Terrible city planning can be. Anyway…. F*ck Strodes! Why do we need suburbs to be 7 miles away from the nearest anything. Come on. We can do better. These engineers are so far from reality.
@corbenhavener75312 жыл бұрын
I’m in Indiana and a lifelong Hoosier. Our stroads mostly don’t bother with mast arms. It’s mainly all about the span wire. Nothing like seeing traffic signal heads bounce around in a windy day.
@adamcapets2 жыл бұрын
If there's one thing I'd like all jurisdictions to quit doing is using span wire. Every signal looks temporary!
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Some of the nicest traffic signals I've ever seen are in -- wait for it -- Tijuana.
@livingbeings2 жыл бұрын
love the deadpan comedic tone
@AndrewTran-bleh6 ай бұрын
@2:58 This hits hard bc I'm a traffic intern doing different syncro alternative designs and my alternatives differ in number of left turn lanes :P
@fabes892 жыл бұрын
I'd be interested in an entire video on the topic of intersection design. Bonus points if it touches on the concept of a "Michigan left".
@nhannguyen21902 жыл бұрын
I've watched about 10 videos of your channel and this is the best so far. Really really well done!
@Patrick_from_Youtube2 жыл бұрын
"Stroad on Stroad violence" lmao, I love these videos so much.
@ozgirl452 жыл бұрын
Delightful video - a really high level of snark this week. Well, now I know that there is a name for these places. Who knew? They are often also home to mattress stores and nail salons. And, yes, I would like to see your solutions!
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Mattress stores! How could I forget!
@eliteultra92 жыл бұрын
I just love your sense of humour!!! Very funny yet sad and informative. An example of what not to do!
@CautiousDavid2 жыл бұрын
Welcome to Vegas! I don’t drive a huge amount, but Charleston is one of my most-used streets, so this video was super neat to see! Vegas is full of over-built streets (in terms of width and lanes), personally I don’t mind it as it leaves a lot of room when driving, but I will not dispute that the walking experience is unpleasant. A note in the personal injury billboards, you do find them everywhere but they are particularly prevalent in Nevada because unfortunately, liability claim amounts are not capped here. There is a massive incentive to be overly-litigious, especially when insurance would rather just settle the claims than fight them in court. I’m originally from Hawaii though where billboards are banned, and I wish that was done everywhere, they are just such an eyesore and honestly a terribly way to advertise in the first place.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Didn't know that about the particulars on liability claims. Thanks!
@nunyabidness30752 жыл бұрын
These vids are fun. Nobody really likes Stroads, but we keep building them. I’d really love a video on a realistic plan to get rid of them. How do you do the transition? If your plan includes getting more people to use alternative transportation by force, it’s likely a fail. Build it and they will come (you better have parking because they are coming by car! We could raise the gas tax to actually pay the cost of car infrastructure, but nooooo, that would be unfaaaaaaair. So, twenty years from now, we will still be getting Stroad videos.
@seannajera12652 жыл бұрын
When I moved to Philly from LV, I never realized that lights could change faster than 1.5 minutes.
@contentedbuddha2 жыл бұрын
Your snark is unrivaled, thanks for a great video 😂😘
@doktarr2 жыл бұрын
The strip is really unique and definitely deserves its own video.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
I have so many thoughts.
@maidbloke2 жыл бұрын
6:50 yay! Bikes on the front of a bus! No wonder, there's nowhere safe to actually cycle them. And how do you get a wheelchair down that obstructed sidewalk? A truly dreadful place to travel if you don't have a car. 😳
@andrepoiy11992 жыл бұрын
What's interesting is that in Toronto, for newer stroads, the sidewalk isn't right up against the curb, there's always a little strip of grass in between, I guess that's for storage of snow. That small strip of grass also makes it just a teeny bit less scary to walk on since the cars aren't literally one feet away. And also allows for bus stop space.
@sonnystaton2 жыл бұрын
Unless you change the housing density issue, the other changes to get rid of stroads is futile. The natural progression of suburbs to dense cities was artificially arrested by 1950s philosophy zoning. Suburbs always existed, but property value increased as access to the city became more demanded, & suburbs organically became part of the city. But zoning keeps aging suburban property owners from expanding their property into multi unit properties of multiple stories.
@gabrielebursi55092 жыл бұрын
That thing of the bus carrying the bycicles was just so genius. And it comes from Las Vegas. I want it in the entire world right now. I am absolutely amazed
@jmchristoph2 жыл бұрын
At least in the Phoenix area, a great stroad indicator is 5-over-1 apartment blocks. We've done the standard thing w/ these buildings: outside the downtown core, the only places where density is permitted by zoning are along the arterial streets, which are all stroads. I've lived in one of these for 5.5 years and I'm still not used to the surreal feeling of contradiction. What's most maddening is the difference in age among these apartments. The older ones are dramatically over-parked, which is strange in its own way. But the newer ones are being built intentionally under-parked b/c developers have caught on that lots of apartment dwellers don't own cars. That winds up accumulating huge numbers of people who get places by ridehailing, cycling, scootering, riding transit, & walking. One could easily design the street to accommodate all of those different user modes (maybe not ridehailing), but there's no incentive to do so by the city government. So all these hundreds of people living in a given apartment building all get forced into the totally inadequate sidewalk gutters, until they just get jam-packed with conflicting users. It is truly maddening.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
That's super interesting (and of course maddening). You can find some form of this dynamic playing out in every city -- we remove parking requirements, which is great, but we don't introduce other requirements that improve adjacent transportation facilities. A lot of this comes back to ITE trip generation and parking generation manuals, which are "how things have been done" (professional inertia) and are explicitly motor-vehicle based methodologies, and how they're used in development review -- and the relative lack of similar tools for ensuring "concurrency" of active transportation / light transportation facilities. Love your comments and insight as always -- thanks.
@jmchristoph2 жыл бұрын
@@CityNerd oh it's even worse than that: the City gov't refuses to remove parking minimums even though staff keeps telling them we need to implement a parking maximum, & it's the developers themselves asking for exemptions from parking minimums, & the development review commission just keeps rubber-stamping those exemptions b/c they know we need more housing. It's absolutely wild.
@foreverspice1982 Жыл бұрын
I watched STROADS from Not Just Bikes ages ago (the algorithm failed to point me to you) … in Toronto (you are so excited to get ANOTHER Toronto comment from me) *EVERYTHING* north of Eglinton, west of Jane or east of Leslie [*] is a STROAD. The "original city" (broadly defined as INSIDE the Waterfront-Jane-Eglinton-Victoria Park borders) are the inner suburbs: Scarborough in particular, North York and Etobicoke notably secondarily as they are older; of the City of Toronto. Some more egregious than others, but bless my soul, I have never seen [in Canada] SEVEN lanes in one direction on a "street" featuring multiple DEDICATED lanes to LEFT and RIGHT turns!
@TessHKM2 жыл бұрын
I have honestly never in my life seen a "school zone" with a 25 mph speed limit *while the lights are flashing.* Every school zone I've ever seen is 15 mph. That's horrifying lol
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Yes, it's very weird. Maybe they think (probably correctly) there's no hope of compliance here with a 15.
@jasonreed75222 жыл бұрын
My school was 20 which is reasonable for how far back it was set from the road and it had crossing guards. (Also a small town and not a main road so a bunch of kids walked if they lived in town and all schools should be expecting students to walk/bike to school and locate themselves accordingly) The idea of placing a school on a main road/stroad is crazy to me, and at a minimum a fence should be put up along a busy road that would be problematic.
@Newspeak.2 жыл бұрын
All these stroad videos practically give me PTSD from growing up in the Tampa Bay Area where I feel like every road is a stroad.
@steven.l.patterson2 жыл бұрын
As a frequent wheelchair user I noticed so many violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act. If I lived there and had to put up with that I’d be finding a lawyer to sue property owners. The ADA requires an accessible route to every business. Every business! An ADA-compliant accessible route isn’t a parking lot either. This is why at 6:25 and 6:32, Wendy’s and Dutch Brothers respectively, you see a walk connecting to the awfully narrow public sidewalk. This is to prevent ADA lawsuits. Businesses in out lots near the sidewalk are easier to comply, it’s the big boxes and strip malls behind that are a challenge. More affluent areas get significantly better pedestrian infrastructure. CityNerd, please visit St. Louis. I’ll show you around give you plenty of ADA violations to demonstrate the problems of connecting bus stops to business entrances.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
There's an amazing lack of ped connections (much less ADA-compliant ones) to a lot of these retail areas. I've been to St. Louis many times, and hope to come back again soon!
@riblets1968 Жыл бұрын
Sardonic wit throughout on a topic that richly deserves it. Well done, sir! I very much enjoyed this video.
@alejandrocastillotrujillo60552 жыл бұрын
This video is a true masterpiece
@amantedabahia2 жыл бұрын
Amazing and fascinating conclusion, “so much of this is about vicious cycles and virtuous cycles" it's exactly about that! Great video anyway!
@markandersson2 жыл бұрын
Video suggestion: My wife keeps wanting a train from Nogales (actually Hermosillo) to: Tucson, Casa Grande, Phoenix, Flagstaff, Grand Canyon and Vegas. Millions and millions of people go to Grand Canyon and Vegas every year and why wouldn't this be a great thing? Maybe it continues onto LA? Second suggestion: do a video on why the proposed I-11 is just a bad idea. If the intent is to move goods across the country when why not build rail lines? I'd love to see these videos. And since you're in Vegas now, maybe now's the time???? Love you channel and humor and insights!
@kiraogola60432 жыл бұрын
I would love a train to Phoenix! I don't think it would work as of now as Phoenix is crazy car dependent and there would be pretty much nowhere to go because you went their by train and are now carless.
@markandersson2 жыл бұрын
We live in Tucson and totally understand that. The thinking is if you're going to the GC or Vegas you might not need a car at those places. And how many millions are going from Tucson or Phoenix (residents and tourists) to those two places? Lots, I'd say!! Even going to Flag you could do it without a car and just uber where you want to go. @@kiraogola6043
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
Great suggestions. Thanks!
@UserName-ts3sp2 жыл бұрын
trucking is a big part of the infrastructure to move goods. and id be surprised if they dont have cargo rail lines between the two cities
@jolly77282 жыл бұрын
Stroad vids are great! Many of us have wondered for years why we scoff at driving our cars and bikes -- or even walking outside of our upscale, secluded, suburban neighborhoods and gated communities. We thought something was wrong with us. Now, thanks to these vids, we know it's the stroads and the inescapable and persistent challenges they bring to our daily lives. But, somehow, they must be good for businesses, making it possible to try to live the "American dream." At least we have that to work toward. And in big countries like Canada and the United States, there certainly are many places where you could live and almost never encounter a stroad. If you can make living comfortably in a remote area a reality, this might be a good way to go, as I don't see and why a municipality would be motivated enough to make significant changes to the "stroadification" of our urban areas.
@adamcapets2 жыл бұрын
Another great piece of content! Keep up the good work. I do have a question that hopefully makes it to a Q&A. What advice do you have for a traffic engineer turned born-again urbanist who deals with single-occupant vehicles all day but wants to break through into more projects that prioritize bike/ped/transit infrastructure? Have I sealed my fate with my career choice?
@TheModdedwarfare32 жыл бұрын
I came from a small town to a small city and my first time driving on a stroad I accidentally turned too sharply onto opposite direction of traffic on a divided road. That was terrifying but luckily I was able to quickly u turn to the correct direction of travel.
@Jondude112 жыл бұрын
This video was beyond brilliant. Thank you for this!
@davissae2 жыл бұрын
I love the snarkyness delivered in such a wholesome way!
@AbsolutePixelMaster2 жыл бұрын
Considering the asininity of it all, if I hadn't had to deal with stroads my entire life, I wouldn't believe such an environment could exist, let alone be considered a normal approach to building a living environment.
@VulcanTrekkie452 жыл бұрын
Yes please do a solutions video. It absolutely brought to mind some stroads around here that definitely need fixing.
@aaronfield78992 жыл бұрын
"The point is it's very telling that the price of billboard advertising space on these crash-prone facilities appears to bid up by an industry that makes more money when there are more crashes." Someone call an ambulance, I'm dying.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
OK, but call one of those lawyers first
@willantvan2 жыл бұрын
This video was great. I am a civil engineering student at UNLV, and my wife and I were shouting the entire video because we felt so seen. Thank you for highlighting what many of us have to go through every day. Please make a potential solutions video, we'd love to hear your thoughts on how fixing any of this nightmare is possible, and your thoughts Elon's single lane traffic generation tube.
@CityNerd2 жыл бұрын
"traffic generation tube"? I love it
@allws96832 жыл бұрын
What I don't understand with so many stroads in US is : Why do they build the houses and businesses with the driveway to the stroad ?! Why ?!... In Holland you'll find Ring roads and 2x2/3x3 roads, but usually residential houses and business are built with their back towards the 'stroad' (bordered with bushes or a earth/concrete wall). You have to leave the stroad and enter a neighbourhood or a commercial/business park. And if there are houses/shops towards the road there will be , separated by a tree lined grass/hedge strip, low speed parallel street with driveways and parked cars (and useful for bikes too..). Last year's US election night I had been watching (the totally non-explanatory crap on) Fux News. What astounded me was how much (incredibly agressive) ads there were. Mostly on cars, medication/insurance and legal services.... This video explains well how these are connected..😬....🙄
@UserName-ts3sp2 жыл бұрын
many of the houses were there prior to big development coming in. as for businesses... yeah i dont get that. usually you can access them in some way from an off street or parking lot though
@ethanstump2 жыл бұрын
foax news is an American Dante's inferno. since tv is going the way of the dodo, the lowest quality stuff goes there to die. also the lowest information and lowest iq person actually takes it seriously.
@RayT3142 жыл бұрын
"I mean, if you don't have at least 7 signal heads on your mast arm, then what are you even doing?"....🤣
@mk-oc7mt2 жыл бұрын
Top tier stroad content. I love the ecology.
@josiahclagett11052 жыл бұрын
I personally would love a solutions video!!!! How do we fix this? Also the dry humor here was more satisfying than the office 👌
@yuriydee2 жыл бұрын
Solutions video would be interesting. Id like to know what are some realistic changes we can start with, because obviously we cant get rid of all stroads over night :(
@jasonreed75222 жыл бұрын
A basic step 1 is sometimes called a "diet road" which basically just means take a 4 lane stroad (2 each way) and reduce it to 1 each way + center turning lane (aka sucide lane). This is proven safer than a 4 lane stroad. As a bonus you get to remove 1 lane worth of width from the road for whatever you want including just buffer space as shoulder between the old danger sidewalk and the new white line. (Crappy painted bike gutter anyone?) As for any stroad with over 4 lanes total just find a way to steal lanes back from the cars for any other purpose like dedicated bus & service vehicles, bike lanes, wider sidewalks, ect. Part of the problem is that the immediate off ramp of every highway is always a stroad, sometimes its the genuine middle of nowhere which is honestly better.
@whostheplum17112 жыл бұрын
This is an amazing way to explain stuff in an ecosystem
@wiesorix2 жыл бұрын
Normally when I watch urban planning videos about the US, I try to use them as a lense to analyse and critisize the place where I live and not be the guy laughing "haha cities in the US are sooo bad, glad I live in Europe". But this is just too absurd, too terrible, too different from anything I know so I can't help it. I'm glad I don't have to live there.
@MrGlendale1112 жыл бұрын
I know what you mean. The USA has some beautiful scenery, and different climates. However it's lack of infrastructure and its many serious problems are a turnoff.
@sheakennedy17452 жыл бұрын
I really like this guy's voice for some reason.
@themusicman6622 жыл бұрын
Ah yes the stroad... Which is seemingly the only type of road in my city. Yet we are ranked among the best cities to live in in the entire US somehow
@carravogue2 жыл бұрын
Wow! Which city?
@ginaelisa032 жыл бұрын
I liked this before the personal injury indicator species and now I wish I could like this again.
@Coltoid2 жыл бұрын
My least favourite part of visiting The US is those massive signs, very thankful we don't have those in Canada. Also thankful we don't have a culture of suing, we don't really have those lawyer billboards either.
@daveharrison842 жыл бұрын
If you have universal health care then you don't need to hire lawyers to fight over who has to pay the medical bills.
@passatboi2 жыл бұрын
It depends on the state. They have a lot of them in the midwest, but in the SF Bay Area, for example, they're banned. Like on the 280 freeway, there are no billboards at all. But agreed, America is the land of the lawsuit. And anti-abortion billboards right beside adult porn superstores....
@jobw2 жыл бұрын
In Germany they also do not exist. Damages (pain and suffering) are much lower and there is universal healthcare and minimum amount insured is high.
@susanamunera85732 жыл бұрын
You see them in Edmonton sometimes lol
@UserName-ts3sp2 жыл бұрын
hell is real
@Earth1218 Жыл бұрын
Your videos are a master class of sardonic delivery. Dry with just a touch of burning disgust for urban planning malpractice. I was about to mention personal injury lawyer billboards when you asked for more examples. I should have known.
@Droidman12312 жыл бұрын
I thought the road was just recently paved at first, but it looks like they never paint actual lines on the streets in Las Vegas? I couldn't imagine ever road I drove or walked on just having the little white bumps instead of actual painted lines, especially in low visibility weather.
@plattypus422 жыл бұрын
Fortunately, it's rare for us to see low visibility weather. Ironically, the only lane markings they paint are bicycle lane markings, which means drivers treat them as "right tire here" lines and they get covered in rubber. Would love for some dots on the bike lanes!
@pghrpg40652 жыл бұрын
They are called Botts' dots and were invented by Caltrans. They're not generally used where I live, but I kind of like them as a driver.
@juliansmith42952 жыл бұрын
Your dry wit is the only thing that made it possible for me to watch this without throwing up. God these places are hideous.