by jrob8503 » Mon 27 Sep 2004, 17:54:42
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')in most of the 'burbs around here you would have to walk 2-5 miles to the nearest store - 5+ to the nearest hospital, and at least 1/2-1 mile to wait for the crappy, late, and poor coverage of the bus system....
So a commute to work (I've actually done this once upon a time) would be - walk 3/4 mile... wait at bus stop for 35 minutes... bus stops 10 times down one line... wait 15 minutes for next bus... bus stops 6 times down next line.... get off at stop and walk 1/2 mile to office... lather rinse repeat....
yikes!
It's about a 10 min walk to the nearest hospital. Ditto for the three grocery stores. Why there are three is beyond my comprehension. My part-time job, at the evil empire known as Walgreens (my nickname around town is "cash money"

) is about a 15 min walk. There is a mass of shopping/fast food crap and a waste of space "car mall" within a 25-30 min walk.
I drive a 98' Ford Taurus whenever I need to get somewhere out of walking distance or in a rush. I agreed to take over payments this summer when my dad wanted to get a new car. The kick in the nuts was that I found out about peak oil two weeks later. Up until then, I didn't have a DL. I go through about 1/2 a tank a month. I hate the god damn car now, but would still have to pay $2k if I sold it. Considering my situation, it's a piss poor investment.
Northeastern Illinois is serviced by Metra (suburban commuter trains), Pace (suburban buses) and the CTA (Chicago's buses and the "L"). It's all referred to as the RTA (
www.rtachicago.com). It's probably not as good as European mass transit, but I guess it's better than most of this country.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')'m guessing you're in one of Chicago's early suburbs, which themselves are quite different from much of the newer stuff. They were oriented around rail, and are walkable at their residential point.
I don't even know how you would describe this area. Cook and Du Page County are pretty much a concentration of villages surrounding Chicago. Compare that two the rest of Illinois, which is probably the most boring place in the country to drive through.