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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2020-10-10 02:11 pm
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Community Building Tip: Car-Free

For my current set of tips, I'm using the list "101 Small Ways You Can Improve Your City.

44. Organize a local car-free day. Every September 22 cities around the world participate in a global Car-Free Day, showcasing the possibilities of a more progressive commute and the advantages of walkable streets and biking infrastructure. Want to be inspired? Check out 14 beautiful car-free cities.

Regrettably, neither of the sites seemed to say anything about accessibility.  Now if you're blind, not worrying about getting run over by a car could be a great thing.  But for anyone with mobility issues, more often than not "car-free" might as well be "on the Moon."  And it's not like we don't have solutions for that, I just didn't see anyone advertising things like palanquins for places where wheelchairs can't easily go.  So if you're lobbying for car-free areas, remember to make them accessible to everyone.  Even normally able-bodied people can be screwed the moment they break a foot, get pregnant, or have a baby carriage to push.
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Mobility Impairment

[personal profile] ravan 2020-10-11 02:29 am (UTC)(link)
But for anyone with mobility issues, more often than not "car-free" might as well be "on the Moon."

Mobility impairment is not compatible with "car-free" or "bikes only" events.

They regularly close streets to vehicle traffic where I live, making walk or bike the only way to access certain areas for an entire weekend. If they do it near my neighborhood, I am almost literally trapped in my house.

They try to emphasize bike and walk, but don't have enough benches to sit on, and those that are there are made "anti-homeless" and uncomfortable for anyone bigger than a size 12 to sit on. They have those damned rent-a-scooters, and enough people4 ride the and bicycles on the goddamn sidewalk that even trying to walk very far means getting run over on the sidewalk. They, and the rental bikes, are supposedly "accessible", but in reality only work for people who have normal balance.

I'd like my city to be greener, but not at the expense of my mobility.

Re: Mobility Impairment

(Anonymous) 2020-10-11 03:47 am (UTC)(link)
>>This is best handled with event planning, because if you make too big of a blob, the center is difficult or impossible for disabled people to reach. Same with large areas of grass instead of pavement; if you put stuff in the middle, it's out of reach. Plus big blobs are also a pain in the ass for emergency services, residents or irrelevant businesses stuck in the middle, and so on. <<

Like how animals depending on oxmosis for oxygenation/hydration/etc are limited in size. Circulatory systems for the win!

Re: Mobility Impairment

(Anonymous) 2020-10-11 05:16 am (UTC)(link)
And thawing or cooking meat...

Monoculture design?

I mean, if you can leave 'car spacing' down the middle of a street fair you coud have people step back, as demonstrated by these nice protesters:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=cwFHZbRZZuQ
thnidu: an elegant ligature, or monogram if you will, of the letters "wtf". lj:wordweaverlynn, from typophile.com (WTF)

Re: Mobility Impairment

[personal profile] thnidu 2020-10-11 05:07 pm (UTC)(link)
What the fuck were they even thinking?

¿¿¿"Preferred" and "VIP" and "Staff" and "Vendor Sponsor" parking, but no Handicapped parking???

Re: Mobility Impairment

[personal profile] fianna9 2020-10-11 09:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Handicapped parking appears to be hiding back in the Preferred parking. behind the VIP and Vendor Sponsor parking. Good luck finding it.

Good luck getting from there to the bathrooms.

they also misspelled parking in the "Handicapped Parkiing Area" of the map legend.
Edited 2020-10-11 21:48 (UTC)