Fight the power ... of smog.Fred Camino via flickrLos Angeles, Calif. Pop. 3.8 million
The city known for smog, sprawl, and freeways has been working for two decades to reinvent itself as a transit-friendly place, spending $11 billion on a comprehensive rail network and creating a Metro Rapid bus line that uses low floors, traffic signal priority, and limited stops to minimize travel times. The work is paying off: despite its bad rap for public transit, L.A.‘s ridership ranks among the top in the nation. “We want to rethink what the city looks like,” Mayor Anthony Villaraigosa (D) has said, “to focus on a new urbanism that makes transit-oriented development and mixed-use development the future of L.A.”
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Emily at Sustainable Business Consulting Posted 2:37 pm
15 Jun 2009
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EdwardPDX Posted 9:58 pm
15 Jun 2009
Portland inaugurated its three MAX light rail lines over 20 years ago,
and has since integrated a street car and suburban commuter line
(WES). The system is set to expand substantially this year, and
frankly puts cities like L.A. to shame. We now build the cars that run
on Phoenix's rails. Most of the cities you list come to Portland first to see how its done. Thanks, Grist for journalism by Wikipedia...
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stinkycheese Posted 5:27 am
16 Jun 2009
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squier13 Posted 6:26 am
16 Jun 2009
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jessimonster Posted 8:46 am
16 Jun 2009
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StLGal Posted 7:43 pm
17 Jun 2009
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jessimonster Posted 12:37 pm
18 Jun 2009
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Design New Haven Posted 7:22 am
19 Jun 2009
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