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by netzone 3215 days ago
Now, I don't know what Houston looks like, I've never been there, but you never gave a reason for the impossibility of Houston transit. Your post is based on your assumption that you would have to drive to any transit stop. Why would you have to do that? What makes Houston so unique in that a transit infrastructure is impossible?
4 comments

Houston is hot. There are few trees, sidewalks, crosswalks, or other improvements that could make pedestrian travel easier. Relative to other cities at similar latitudes (e.g. Cairo or New Delhi), Houston's residents are rich, fat, and unaccustomed to walking. Therefore they are much less willing to walk or bicycle. Asinine development habits created neighborhoods with no through streets, so any local trip is about 60% longer than the Cartesian distance.

There are many cities in USA that also need more public transit, in which it would be much easier than in Houston to encourage that. People who care about public transit don't live in or care about Houston.

A big contributor is population density.

I lived in Northern Virgina, just outside DC for ten years. You can look at the surrounding cities' skylines and based solely on the size of office buildings, number of apartments, etc, you can get an idea of where the Metro stops are. The Metro opened 40+ years ago and the buildings clustered around them. Now opening additional lines - like the comparatively new Silver line - is easier because the infrastructure is there, they just have to extend it to the right places.

In Houston, outside the downtown core, things are distributed all over the place. Since there are less "obviously right" neighborhood choices to expand into, you need parking for people from nearby but not close aears. Oh, and since there isn't already the infrastructure, every inch of tunnels have to be dug, track has to be laid, staff trained, etc.

Extending an existing system is relatively cheap compared to starting one from the ground up.

Is that more concrete? (no pun intended.. this time)

Most of the time when people talk about "Houston" they're really talking about Houston + suburban sprawl. Pearland to Kingwood is 40 miles. The area is huge, and there aren't common trip starts and trip ends.

I'll compare to two cities I do know that have more public transit:

* SF/Bay area handles similar distances with BART and Caltrain. Try to imagine the bay area (and transit) if there was no bay, the western part of the peninsula was as heavily developed as what's along the bay, and the metro area went further inland. Although the bay causes many transportation woes, it does linearize transit which means more overlapping commute patterns

* Chicago. Buses and trains within the city supported by density and the huge fraction of jobs in the Loop area (small geographic area, huge fraction of jobs). Metra rail serves the suburbs, and taking Metra generally involves driving to a Metra station.

I don't think that Houston is unique; it is my focus because it is the article's. I think there are many places in the US where transit infrastructure is hopeless. I don't say impossible because I have no doubt that we could get Houston to the point of functioning if, for example, we diverted 10% of the military budget to fixing Houston for the next 10 or 20 years. But I would agree that it is functionally impossible, because there exists such a multitude of places in the US where money would be better spent.

I also don't state that you have to drive. Looking back:

>That in turn means that you have fewer riders, because they have to drive (or walk several miles in ditches or dangerous sidewalks along the sides of boring, high speed roads with no shade in Houston climate) to the station.

I portray the walk to would-be transit as really unpleasant. I wholeheartedly believe that it would be. Given the option, I expect a lot of people would choose to drive to transit. You could refuse to build parking around the stop. As a general rule, you should do just that, but in Houston I think you're going to lower your ridership even further by doing so.

To be clear, I don't think all walking to transit is unpleasant. Not even in hot climates. I've spent months happily walking to the subway in Madrid on 90-degree days. I've spent weeks happily walking 20 minutes to work along highways in Dallas on 105-degree days. What's different about those two places?

In Madrid, there were interesting things to look at along the way, trees, and other ways to stay cool. In Dallas, those 20 minutes were the entirety of my journey, and the heat was dry (as in Madrid). There were sidewalks that felt safe, despite the fact that they were scarcely more than an accessory to keep the bike-ped people happy when the new roads went in. Incredibly unpleasant with the lack of trees or anything to look at, sure. But they felt safe.

Surely there are parts of the Houston area that could go walk-able. Those places could pick up density, and people could choose to move there. But you'll always have the scars on the landscape from these past 70 years where people were unleashed to lay waste to whatever nature surrounded the city, pushed ever forward by cheap oil and subsidized parking and driving. With the options available in America, I don't think you'd ever get enough people interested in Houston to make significant headway on undoing all the bad development.

If you're interested in further explanation, let me know and I'll try to put up a blog post, where I can use pictures to further explain myself.