by spudbuddy » Tue 16 Aug 2005, 14:09:53
At 150 miles per week, you're lucky.
I live in the center of a large city, and a lot of people here have the luxury of leaving their cars parked except for certain kinds of trips...usually out of town.
It has always amazed me...if a so-called "bedroom" community outside this city has grown to a population of 50 - 80 thousand people, why the hell do more of those people not work in that community?
Somehow, this puny little burg of 80,000 people has no jobs (except bottom feeder service jobs.)
That in itself illustrates the wastefulness of the suburban and exburban design.
The easy answer to all this is that an oil-based economy has always been based on and encouraged the ramping up of energy use. The more it's used, the more cash flows in certain ways along certain flowcharts and winds up in certain pockets. It has been a kind of inextricable thing, interwoven in mutually supportive ways, yet ultimately destructive, as we are now becoming aware of.
For instance: if a huge corporate advertising budget represents 25 or 30% of the actual consumer cost of an item, there is also a jobs creation factor.
If a young art student who dreamed of becoming a real artist finds out, upon graduation from art school, an advertising agency will pay an art department pretty good money to churn out the stuff that shows up on billboards, in magazines, etc.
I used to know tons of people who dreamed of making movies and aligned their education in that direction.
I'm amazed when I hear their "movie-style" lingo now. They're talking the talk....but it's about making commercials. (which, for them, is where the money is.)
Cheap land (for anything other than food production) and cheap fuel having given us the spread and the sprawl.
This model has been popular for so long...the equation that buys size, floor space at the expense of motoring costs. For a long long time that looked so attractive.
I don't know how many times I've heard this: "Two dependable family cars @ $8,000 each per annum runing costs....but we saved maybe $200,000 on the cost of our home."
I am continually amazed at the amount of space that people need.
In my city, many families in re-sale homes are making do with what used to be the standard amount of living space (1200-1500 sq. ft.) These are still 3 and 4 bedroom homes. The vast majority of these families have between 1 and 3 children.
In the new suburbia, the same number of people are camped in double, sometimes triple that amount of space. And it will all take that much more heating and cooling fuel.
I did a job in an older first generation home yesterday: I walked in the front door (it was a hot day) and assumed they had the central air conditioning on. Nope. Shade trees. (Imagine that.) Plus the fact that the design construction of the home included pretty decent insulation, lots of good air flow. On an 87-dgree day, they were not spending a penny on fuel to make their place liveable.
The entire economic spread of suburbia, and the reasons why people located there, may have made sense when energy was cheap.
I am struck by the "nobility" of the long commute. This has become so interwoven into our culture that for a long time the logistics of it were not questioned.
Myself...I used to drive through suburbia playing this little game:
"I wonder what it will all look like 50 or 60 years from now, when the trees grow up. Will it age gracefully?"
Interesting question. Does anything we build anymore age gracefully?
Has that concept even survived, in the public eye?
In the next 2 or 3 years, I wonder what percentage of the population will actually re-locate...not just seriously reconsider it, but actually do it.
And where will they go?
I've noticed that the demand for inner city houses where I live has shot up sky high. Perhaps there will be a kind of contraction around here, as suburban populations begin to re-concentrate closer to the center.
As with most large cities in North America, here, the greater metro population is about 74% suburban.
The "long" commute is an interesting issue. I know of people who put in 75-100 miles a day or more, to get to their job. These are high-end jobs, and they're not living this way primarily to save money. Their choice has been because they want to live exactly where they live (small town or rural) for esthetic reasons.
And then there are the long commutes from city to city. This seems ridiculous.
We have to seriously consider how we have concentrated job locations, versus where people actually live.
Another little game I play: If I could magicallly "blip out" every private vehicle that I see on my city streets that is registered to an out of town residential address....what would disappear? One vehicle in three? Two out of five?
Why are they here? (work/shopping/entertainment/other)
Why aren't they doing those things in the communities in which they live?
Other than the irritation created by the gridlock and the congestion...when it doesn't make economic sense anymore, it just seems stupidly wasteful.
If a physician could measure all the sources of stress attached to modern living, what percentage of that stress could be attributable to commuting?
I imagine that measurment would be considerable.
On a concord jet...the commute from NYC to Paris can take, what....3 hours? Imagine spending that same amount of time to go 20 or 30 miles to work every day.
Many people spend enormous amounts of the lives just trying to get somewhere. For every hour I work (approx. 55 hours/ week) I spend about 10 minutes per hour worked commuting.
Imagine the difference when that climbs to 30 minutes per hour worked. Over the course of a year, that really adds up.
Trading away that precious commodity just doesn't make sense.
Add to that the necessity to pile on even more working hours just to pay for the means of transport...well, there's the treadmill.