Car and Driver - USA (2020-04)

(Antfer) #1
TURF WAR

As of January 29, 2020, the 450,000 people who drive in to San
Francisco each day must avoid a 1.9-mile stretch of one of the
city’s busiest roads. Privately owned automobiles are now banned
from Market Street to make way for pedestrians, bicyclists, taxis,
buses, historic streetcars, and freight trucks.
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portation Agency, thinks a car-free Market Street will support his
goal of safely moving the maximum number of people in the mini-
mum amount of space. Buses will travel faster without cars getting
in their way, which should attract new riders. New bike lanes are
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“Half of our most deadly intersections are there,” he says.


Wa l k T h i s Way


Busy thoroughfares in San Francisco and New York City
are testing car-free zones.


If you think blocking
car traffic from a single
street amounts to a
declaration of war by
urban planners, you’re
not going to like what
they’ve been doing in
the rest of the world.

Copenhagen,
Denmark
Strøget, Copenhagen’s
0.7-mile-long pedestrian
shopping zone, was
first closed to cars
as an experiment in


  1. Copenhagen’s
    network of car-free
    streets has grown
    steadily ever since.


Fez, Morocco
Fes el-Bali, a walled
section of Morocco’s
second-largest city, is a
UNESCO World Heritage
site and may be the
largest urban car-free
zone on the planet.

Oslo, Norway
Oslo’s city council
faced pushback from
business owners when
it announced plans to
ban cars from the city’s
center; so instead, the
council decided to elim-
inate almost all street-
level parking spaces.
Mission accomplished.

ZONED
OUT

MARKET STREET

This artery runs
from San Francisco’s
bay through the
heart of downtown.


San Francisco’s policy follows New York
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they mark a change in the way urban planners
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Is a car-free wave poised to sweep across
urban American roads? Probably not. Few
streets in the U.S. can match the hustle and
bustle of San Francisco’s Market Street or
Manhattan’s 14th. A street—especially a wide
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ones, like those common in Europe, can be com-
fortable with less activity. But U.S. cities spent
a fortune widening lanes for autos in the 20th
century. Remove cars now and many of those
streets will feel deserted. Fresno, California, and
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to jump-start their struggling pedestrian malls.
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to car-free streets, many advocate for less dra-
matic solutions, including allocating lanes for
bus rapid transit, such as in Madison, Wisconsin,
and banning cars from entertainment hot spots
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to every lane of pavement is gradually ending.
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probably be considered only for the most bustling
corridors. —David Zipper

22 PHOTOGRAPH BY ELYSA WEITALA ~ APRIL 2020 ~ CAR AND DRIVER

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