- cross-posted to:
- fuck_cars@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- fuck_cars@lemmy.ml
Did you mean car-centrism?
Dammit, clippy!
I bet !fuckcars@lemmy.world would love to read this!
Math is not adding up, there are 365 days in a year, removing weekends that’s 261 days. In Romania you have 20 days of AL guaranteed by law, plus there are 17 holidays but some fall on weekends so let’s say 10, for a total of 231 work days a year.
A work day is 8 hours, so 5 working days a year are 40 hours per year. Dividing by the amount of days of work it’s 0.17h or 10:30minutes, considering people commute two ways that’s 5:15 minutes per trip stuck in jams.
Sure, annoying, but definitely not economy shattering. But if they think so, maybe let people work from home, it would diminish the amount of cars on the road, and completely eliminate jams for some of the people.
5 work days should be about 40 hours.
For 200 work days per year, that’s 1 hour per 5 days.
That means they lose 6 minutes on their way to work and 6 minutes on their way back.
Losing 6 minutes during traffic hours against optimum conditions, that should be better than EU average. That makes me want to move to Bucharest.
As an inhabitant from Bucharest, I can definitely tell you that you’re not spending 6 minutes in traffic going to and from work. Take ~1 hour in advance give/take. Keep in mind that you also need to find a parking spot at your destination because while the number of cars increased, the number of parking spots couldn’t keep up.
Many people resort to park in the most illegal places possible, such as sidewalks or pedestrian crossings, and that’s a practice that has been tolerated for a lot of time by the authorities and has only recently started being tackled through fines and bollards.
Bucharest is in a weird position of being a “car-centric-pedestrian-friendly-ish” city - because while you can easily use public transit and walk to where you need, people are using cars to go everywhere and whoever can own and drive a car, does it, sometimes even for short distances. It’s crazy!
Bucharest is actually a pretty cool city, enjoyed my time traveling there a lot! Obviously being a tourist or a resident in a city are two vastly different things lol
But that’s impossible! We all know that cars=economic growth and, as total idiots with internet access like Andrei Caramitru post daily on FB, that the German economy is now in recession because of the actions of ecofascists against the likes of BMW and that these ecofascists riding bikes and e-scooters are coming to our economy too!!! /s
Edit: holly hell, I just noticed the numbers presented in the article by reading the comments that were not federated to my instance. 6 minutes a day?!? That’s just impossible!!!
No, it’s not heaven on earth, they really got it very wrong. No, this is not village level traffic at all, and all the main arteries are congested almost all the time, even in non-working days. The only times when roads are miraculously free are when there’s a big holiday like Easter or New Year’s Eve, when people basically party all night long, some even back in their hometowns, so they no longer do anything the next day, at least in the first part of it. Don’t believe me? Check out the traffic filter at this very hour on Google Maps (it’s Saturday 11:15 PM at the moment of me editing this comment).
If you’re traveling through Bucharest by car, take at least 1 hour to go from one place to another, especially if you’re going from the outskirts to the city center and back. Also take in mind the time you take to find a parking spot since these are hard to find (you’ll find a paid one easily though, those are like kryptonite to most of the drivers, who would rather park their car illegaly, wherever they can).
If you plan to travel by bike, don’t!!! The traffic is terrible and your life is too precious. Outside the bigger parks (Tineretului, Herăstrău/Regele Mihai I, Carol etc.), the areas where it’s safe to cycle are few and spread out. There’s no comprehensive bike lane network like you see in Paris or in big German cities.
If you plan to travel by foot, outside the touristy areas the streets are absolutely filled to the brim by cars, puddles form on pedestrian crossings when it rains (or like now, when the snow melts) and sometimes you have to take the road in order to go through. It’s better now than it was 5 years ago, but it’s still a hit-or-miss. Public transit is decent though, compared to other cities (despite other people in my city hating it). English signage is lacking lots of the times, but it gets you pretty much wherever you want to go (and we even have some night lines). Use Google Maps or InfoTB to get around or, if you love open source, try Bimba or other FOSS apps using the Transitous API.
five? thats a few minutes per day
“bleeding dry” lol



