This is the neighborhood in Amersfoort Netherlands, I grew up in. Red roads are higher traffic, orange is local access calm roads, the yellow are parking areas. Blue is a canal. The rest is all pedestrian infrastructure that children can safely walk around.
Everything is walkable. 4 minutes to the closet supermarket. 9 minutes to a small shopping mall. 10 bike ride to the center of the city with all shopping/eating and entertainment options. Obviously with dedicated safe bike lanes.
I feel like my independence has a child was greatly improved because of the safe infrastructure that allowed it. My parents didn't worry we would be hit by a car, as much as I am worried about my children walking in NYC streets.
There were three bus stops 3 min walk from my house, that give you a direct connection to the Amersfoort main train station or center city. The busses run every 15 minutes, and very (a bit too much) on time.
This is the sidewalk, a pedestrian square in front of small one floor houses, mostly used by the elderly. This is where I learned to bike without training wheels.
30kmh zone, no parking at the raised intersection. Underground Garbage Receptacles, pedestrian only path. A safe and convenient place for a family to live.
Many pedestrian only bridges over the water, and a special bike lane under the highway to a Nature Reserve on the other side.
By having to walk and having pedestrian friendly infrastructure, you create a better connected community, with more opportunities to casually communicate with your neighbors. It's a city with all city advantages + the advantages of a suburban environment.
The strip malls have parking, but prioritize bike parking closest to the stores. The cycling infrastructure gives you a straight direct route to the center city, while cars need to go around the outer ring. Emergency services have access to remove the red bollards.
A covered bus stop with seats, a Bus bulb to keep people on bikes safe. and a speed bump to slow down drivers.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
My @delta flight got canceled from JFK. The customer service line was huge, so I google a Delta JFK phone number. The number was 1888-571-4869 Thinking I reached Delta, I started telling them about getting me on a new flight.
After a minute the line broke up, but they called me back... from the number +33-4-56-38-67-82 (French number that came up as DTI Publishing in Caller ID). First Red flag. He had a very strong Indian Accent (Red Flag), and was overly eager to help me
By providing him with my confirmation number and name, he was able to look up my Trip information on delta. He found al alternative flight from Newark, leaving later in the evening. But he needed me to confirm.