[travel] Awesome public transit
May. 11th, 2009 10:23 pmIn the US, cities that went through big growth spurts prior to 1920 or so (New York, Washington DC, Boston) have excellent public transit, while those that bloomed later (LA, Houston etc) have dismal public transit. This is in part due to the rise of the automobile and the construction with cities with the focus on cars as the primary means of transport.
However, it seems that in Europe, public transit is *especially* good in cities that had their growth spurts prior to 1920 *and* were subject to Communism. Communism effectively held off private car ownership for an extra 50 years.
Budapest and Prague both had amazingly efficient systems, especially given their small size. Subway trains are often less than a minute apart, and there's an excellent surface tram system to supplement the subways.
Amusingly, the people of Budapest never learned the "walk on the left, stand on the right" principle of escalators. Instead, they *all* stand, and some of the escalator rides are over three minutes long. In Prague everyone neatly segregates even when there's a huge crowd funneling in.
However, it seems that in Europe, public transit is *especially* good in cities that had their growth spurts prior to 1920 *and* were subject to Communism. Communism effectively held off private car ownership for an extra 50 years.
Budapest and Prague both had amazingly efficient systems, especially given their small size. Subway trains are often less than a minute apart, and there's an excellent surface tram system to supplement the subways.
Amusingly, the people of Budapest never learned the "walk on the left, stand on the right" principle of escalators. Instead, they *all* stand, and some of the escalator rides are over three minutes long. In Prague everyone neatly segregates even when there's a huge crowd funneling in.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-13 09:26 pm (UTC)