Florence Italy vs. Atlanta’s I-75/I-285 Interchange

Look at Florence above… the blocks are tiny, and the streets are never much more than hairlines. From this high up in the sky, the intersections look like sharp right angles. This is because Florence was laid out for people and horses, which can turn on a dime. Cars drive on these streets today, but they drive slowly, which is far safer for the pedestrians.

The Atlanta interstates are each as wide as 2-3 blocks of Florence. The entire Duomo (the cathedral in the center of Florence that arguably began the Renaissance) could fit in one of the inner loops of the interchange, as you can clearly see. The central core of Florence, from the Duomo to the river, would fit inside the inner box of the interchange. The world was irreversibly changed by the people living and working in Florence who gave birth to the Renaissance. The interchange will never change the world… at best, it gets a small fraction of Atlanta workers to their jobs a bit sooner, barring any accidents.

— Excerpt from The Price of Speed on BetterCities.net

The one quibble I have is with this: “it gets a small fraction of Atlanta workers to their jobs.” I’ll wager it’s more than a small fraction (unsubstantiated hyperbole never helps your arguments, kids). But otherwise I think this a great illustration of the wasteful, car-centric land use we have in much of the Atlanta metro.

This interchange area was once beautiful wetlands and Chattahoochee River-side forest. Now it’s a place where the land area is suited mostly for car traffic and parking. It’s neither an efficient & beautiful built environment for humans nor a natural habitat for the native ecosystem. We’ve got too many acres in the metro that can be described that way and it needs to change for a more sustainable future.

[To be fair to Atlanta, though — all those terracotta roofs make Florence look a bit like a skin rash at this distance. Just sayin’.]

The Health Threat of Car-oriented Places
massurban posts a cool article about a former CDC administrator who “has become one of the leading voices calling for better urban design for the sake of good health.”
Here’s a quote about Dr. Jackson’s epiphany while on Buford Highway:

On the side of the road he saw an elderly woman walking, bent  with a load of shopping bags. It was a blisteringly hot day, and there  was little hope that she would find public transportation.
At that moment, Dr. Jackson says, “I realized that the major threat  was how we had built America.”
…Treatments could come in the form of pills, inhalers, and insulin  shots, but real solutions had bigger implications. “More and more, I  came to the conclusion that this is about how we build the world that we  live in.”

Read the full article:America’s Health Threat: Poor Urban Design

The Health Threat of Car-oriented Places

massurban posts a cool article about a former CDC administrator who “has become one of the leading voices calling for better urban design for the sake of good health.”

Here’s a quote about Dr. Jackson’s epiphany while on Buford Highway:

On the side of the road he saw an elderly woman walking, bent with a load of shopping bags. It was a blisteringly hot day, and there was little hope that she would find public transportation.

At that moment, Dr. Jackson says, “I realized that the major threat was how we had built America.”

…Treatments could come in the form of pills, inhalers, and insulin shots, but real solutions had bigger implications. “More and more, I came to the conclusion that this is about how we build the world that we live in.”

Read the full article:
America’s Health Threat: Poor Urban Design

themidtownarchive:

The Forsyth Building at the corner of Forsyth and Luckie Streets in 1956.  The Rialto Theater is at the extreme left.  The Forsyth Building is now a parking lot, the building next to it was replaced with a parking deck.  Downtown Atlanta.

I walk past the parking lot that replaced this nice building almost every day. It never stops being sad, especially with the added extra gack-ness of the billboards that sit on the parking lot.
Downtown Atlanta, indeed. And yet, on the bright side, there are still many old buildings standing in Fairlie-Poplar and South Downtown. They’re just all surrounded by asphalt hell.
Shudder with me at the end result of our car-centric ways: below is the lot that stands where the above building once did.

themidtownarchive:

The Forsyth Building at the corner of Forsyth and Luckie Streets in 1956.  The Rialto Theater is at the extreme left.  The Forsyth Building is now a parking lot, the building next to it was replaced with a parking deck.  Downtown Atlanta.

I walk past the parking lot that replaced this nice building almost every day. It never stops being sad, especially with the added extra gack-ness of the billboards that sit on the parking lot.

Downtown Atlanta, indeed. And yet, on the bright side, there are still many old buildings standing in Fairlie-Poplar and South Downtown. They’re just all surrounded by asphalt hell.

Shudder with me at the end result of our car-centric ways: below is the lot that stands where the above building once did.

The cost of car dependency in Atlanta

car crash

The Atlanta Business Chronicle reports some sobering stats from AAA’s “Crashes vs. Congestion – What’s the Cost to Society?” publication.

…metro Atlanta’s car crashes cost the area $10.8 billion, or $1,979 per person, in 2009. The report also noted 498 deaths and 62,263 injuries related to car crashes in metro Atlanta.

In one year, car crashes cost each of us $1,979 and took 498 lives in our metro. That’s something to consider when debating 1.) expansions to alternative transit and 2.) the development of walkable neighborhoods.

Photo by John Spink for the AJC

What The Atlanta BeltLine Can Teach Us About Urban Revitalization

We’ve been constructing our lives around automobile-oriented infrastructure for so long that it has not only impacted the physical form of the places we live; it has greatly shifted the way we think about how we build the world around us. The good news is that after almost seven decades of highways, strip malls, and pay-at-the-pump, the lifestyles generated by this brand of infrastructure are increasingly less desirable.

What The Atlanta BeltLine Can Teach Us About Urban Revitalization

We’ve been constructing our lives around automobile-oriented infrastructure for so long that it has not only impacted the physical form of the places we live; it has greatly shifted the way we think about how we build the world around us. The good news is that after almost seven decades of highways, strip malls, and pay-at-the-pump, the lifestyles generated by this brand of infrastructure are increasingly less desirable.