Thursday, February 21, 2013

London Congestion Pricing Creates Positive Results On All Accounts



Bike commuters in London
Streetsblog, used the occasion of the 10th anniversary of London’s congestion pricing system to review its effectiveness. As you probably know, congestion pricing is a tool by which cities limit automobile and other traffic to certain areas by charging a fee for access. In London, that fee is £10, or about $15.


Has it worked? Streetsblog says yes — or, it did for a bit.
In its first few years, the London charging scheme was heralded as a solid traffic-buster, with 15-20 percent boosts in auto and bus speeds and 30 percent reductions in congestion delays. Most of those gains appear to have disappeared in recent years, however. Transport for London (TfL), which combines the functions of our NYCDOT and MTA and which created and operates the charging system, attributes the fallback in speeds to other changes in the streetscape and traffic management …
The congestion charge also raised millions in revenue, some $435 million in 2008 alone.
But the benefit over the past decade can be seen most clearly in the three maps Streetsblog provides.

Car traffic declines.

Bicycle usage rises.

 
Public transit use increases. 


Less traffic, less congestion, more public transit use, more money for government investment. All the sorts of things that drive right-wing Americans insane. So I wouldn’t hold my breath for implementation in a U.S. city any time soon. 

2 comments:

  1. You could ԁefinitely ѕeе your eхpertiѕe in
    the article уou ωrite. The arena hopeѕ fоr even
    more pаssіonatе wrіteгs such as you who are nοt afгaid to mentіon hoω
    they belieѵe. Always go after уour heart.

    My wеb blog - Best Wordpress Plugin

    ReplyDelete
  2. I like what you guys tenԁ to be up too. This tуρе of clеver work and гepoгting!
    Κeep up the wonderful works guys I've added you guys to my personal blogroll.

    Feel free to surf to my blog post :: mens wedding rings phoenix az

    ReplyDelete

Transportation for America Coalition