Is Fake London Really That Bad? (A Reply to NJB)

I spent many formative years in London Ontario Canada. Jason of Not Just Bikes has said many things, but I made this video to add my own comments about the city. As much as I have tried to lay out that which redeems the city. It is still a place that I do not wish to move back to.
OurRetiredLife:
Bike Tour: Thames Valley Parkway, London, Ontario
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NJB Links:
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Throwing Good Money After Bad Car Infrastructure - Wonderland Road
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Why We Won't Raise Our Kids in Suburbia
• Why We Won't Raise Our...
0:00 Is Fake London Really That Bad?
0:28 What is Fake London?
1:50 London is car infested
2:44 London is primarily single family homes
3:28 A car is required for every trip
4:10 Crossing the street is dangerous
4:44 You're stranded until you can drive
5:33 Biking in London is suicide
6:30 London transit sucks
7:21 Kids don't go outside
8:01 Why London sucks
9:17 Good things about London
10:46 London Ontario has potential
11:27 Conclusion
11:55 Outro

Пікірлер: 729

  • @nicthedoor
    @nicthedoor7 ай бұрын

    If you are not familiar with what a stroad is, feel free to watch this video from Not Just Bikes kzread.info/dash/bejne/gYausLyOlbiucbA.htmlsi=_N24NTobASCDgzIr

  • @user-sy6ky6ed2e

    @user-sy6ky6ed2e

    7 ай бұрын

    That video is biased against cars

  • @Banedragon

    @Banedragon

    7 ай бұрын

    Nice work on the thumbnail I thought it was just not bikes

  • @thespectator1243

    @thespectator1243

    7 ай бұрын

    @niclaporte: Thank you for sharing your perspective. It's always good to see a problem from more then just one point of view. I really hope more people in the world are getting orange pilled, though. Sometimes, just being aware of a problem will make all the difference in the world (even if it still will take some time to actually fix the problem; but you gotta start somewhere). Yes, Jason might go a bit far sometimes, but given his vision, I think he has never gone TO far.... but this is just my personal opinion. Greetings from across the pond! :D

  • @fredashay

    @fredashay

    7 ай бұрын

    I used to like his channel and generally agreed with him about stroads and the benefits of alternate ways to get around, but I discovered that he is clearly a fa5c15t who wants to force everyone to ride bicycles everywhere, in the blistering heat of summer and freezing cold of winter. Now, if you want to ride a bicycle everywhere in extreme horrible weather, that's your business and should be your right. But that's not what I want to endure. I'll keep my car, thank you very much.

  • @longiusaescius2537

    @longiusaescius2537

    7 ай бұрын

    @obimk1104 Dutch?

  • @jaro6985
    @jaro69857 ай бұрын

    Seems like a reasonable take, the potential is there as you show. But to me 70%+ of trips by car stat alone is enough to justify the criticism.

  • @jerredhamann5646

    @jerredhamann5646

    7 ай бұрын

    70% by car is not even bad by north america there are some areas that are like 90%

  • @gytan2221

    @gytan2221

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jerredhamann5646 there are some with 100%

  • @neiotik

    @neiotik

    7 ай бұрын

    ⁠being slightly above a low bar is still abysmal. 30% is still a failing grade.

  • @nntflow7058

    @nntflow7058

    7 ай бұрын

    It's bad once you experienced something better.....

  • @toffeeFairy

    @toffeeFairy

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@jerredhamann5646 yeah and north america isn't what he's comparing it to lol

  • @Jacob_Waller
    @Jacob_Waller7 ай бұрын

    I don't think Jason is calling London worse than anywhere else. He is commenting on the fact that it's not unique. London is a cookie cutter suburb that you can find everywhere in North America

  • @nicthedoor

    @nicthedoor

    7 ай бұрын

    That's exactly what I tried to express in the conclusion. Thanks 👍

  • @TheTroyc1982

    @TheTroyc1982

    7 ай бұрын

    London is not a suburb

  • @thiccum2668

    @thiccum2668

    7 ай бұрын

    @@TheTroyc1982I think he means suburban development

  • @Demopans5990

    @Demopans5990

    7 ай бұрын

    @TheTroyc1982 Looks like a suburb to me. If there are more trees than people, it's not a city

  • @guynicoletti5811

    @guynicoletti5811

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Demopans5990the trees are a deliberate strategy…has no correlation to whether a given place is a city.

  • @guidoferri8683
    @guidoferri86837 ай бұрын

    Summary: is fake London really bad? Yes, but it's slowly improving, kinda

  • @nntflow7058

    @nntflow7058

    7 ай бұрын

    1% improvement is kind of meh......

  • @lilacghoste8366

    @lilacghoste8366

    7 ай бұрын

    Freaking 20 years, sooo slow

  • @Paul_C

    @Paul_C

    7 ай бұрын

    As a tourist: Would I enjoy London Ontario? Eh, no. Most tourist do not have a car to move around: Delete London from the destination list.

  • @Fler64

    @Fler64

    7 ай бұрын

    This. Was waiting for the arguments that fake London isn't as bad as NJB says, but he was mostly agreeing. The improvements won't have much impact and these big NA cities seem unfixable

  • @nyanbadacc5228
    @nyanbadacc52287 ай бұрын

    Hello! Fake London resident here (my house is even in your video)! While Jason is occasionally hyperbolic about his sentiment regarding fake London, I don't really think it is misplaced. I commute on my bike in London and surrounding area around 250km per week and while I still prefer it over driving, it is an awful experience. The bike lanes exist, they just don't connect to each other so you're forced onto extraordinarily dangerous stroads here and there. The bike lanes are often riddled with potholes, overgrowth, and debris that isn't present on the roads so I often see cyclists preferring the roads over the poorly maintained bicycle lanes as well. I think a prime example of both of these points is Wonderland road southbound between Sarnia road and Riverside drive. There is a (mostly) grade separated bike lane there, but it is so poorly maintained that the stroad that is Wonderland is genuinely preferable to cycle on. It also just randomly ends for a small portion at the intersection of Oxford road, so you have to join traffic anyways by crossing 2 lanes which is absurd. There are other points along that stretch that randomly terminate into the sidewalk for a portion (If it is illegal to cycle on the sidewalk, why did they design it this way? It makes no sense.) The problem with fake London is a problem that is also shared by many other North American cities more generally, that being the complete disregard for anything that is not an automobile by both the general populace and past local politicians. Even when policies or infrastructure are put in place that are meant to be for people who do not operate automobiles, it is so disjointed and contorted because it is made from the perspective of someone who exclusively uses an automobile for transportation. London is a great symbol for North American failures in transportation and I'm happy Jason is showcasing those failures. The city is improving ever so slowly, but it simply isn't fast enough. I've personally gotten rid of my car and have committed to nearly exclusively using my bike to get around, but that may genuinely be the death of me. Just this week I was bumped into by a motorist who was texting and driving on Dundas; It wasn't enough to cause damage to me or my bike, but it is still cause for major concern. Apologies for my incoherent rant.

  • @roelkomduur8073

    @roelkomduur8073

    7 ай бұрын

    I met a Canadian couple last mouth, just outside Duisburg Germany. They were retired, biking across Europe ( second time!). I was on my way biking to Basel. Got in a conversation with them, talking about bike infra, mentioned NJB,.. they knew the channel.. Guess were they came from? London Ont.!! They fully agreed with NJB on London.. You always meet nice people when biking. Greetings from Yellow bike.

  • @julietardos5044

    @julietardos5044

    7 ай бұрын

    I've observed that putting up posts to separate bike lanes from roads increases trash and weeds because the street sweepers can no longer get to the bike lane blocked by the posts. Sigh.

  • @saturday1066

    @saturday1066

    7 ай бұрын

    "forced onto extraordinarily dangerous stroads" I have a different risk/reward metric than you (and a lot of folks, tbh) but I'm still curious: what is your "reward" to justify risk of "extraordinarily dangerous stroads"? I'm not trying to be critical. I'm just trying to understand what you get out of increased lethality on a daily basis. real question (not snark): do/would you ride a motorcycle? p.s. does "here and there" mean multiple times? both directions of commute? p.p.s. on the right side of your keyboard, there is an extra large key marked "return/enter." you could avail yourself of that - free of charge - if you wanted to.

  • @nyanbadacc5228

    @nyanbadacc5228

    7 ай бұрын

    @@saturday1066 The reward for justifying the risk is not being homeless; Being able to get to work in a timely manner helps with that. I cannot afford a motorcycle nor can I afford a car; Even if I could, I probably would still try to ride a bicycle as it is better for the planet and it keeps me healthy though. "Here and there" is an idiom meaning "occasionally". I do not plan on wasting my time making my KZread comments look nice for your pleasure :)

  • @nyanbadacc5228

    @nyanbadacc5228

    7 ай бұрын

    @@julietardos5044 We actually have small street sweepers for bicycle lanes here in fake London! They just never seem to leave the downtown area unfortunately. Many of the worst bike lanes for debris here are at the same grade as the stroad and are without plastic bollards. For example, Hyde Park Road.

  • @roelkomduur8073
    @roelkomduur80737 ай бұрын

    NJB is making people aware of their surroundings, how infrastructural choices impact their lives. Quite rightly he is not just talking about bike lanes. To me as a Dutchman, it's impossible to understand that a city that " is the fastest growing city of Canada" doesn't have a clue how to do that correctly. No trains, no busses, no trams.. just build the same ole suburbs.. If i compare that to new build cites in the Netherlands ( yes we have them, 40% of our land we made ourselves) it is pathetic! To say that JNB is exaggerating is shortsighted and stupid. NOW is the time to build better, to invest in liveable city! Now you have the opportunity to do things right the first time. Be bold! Stop these stupid endless discussions over bike lanes that cost a few mil, while spending billions on a couple of km's highway.. Hereby want to thank NJB for making me aware of the incredible infrastructure in my country, what i take for granted...

  • @ZeBoy85

    @ZeBoy85

    7 ай бұрын

    Did you know that my hometown Melbourne Australia has more trams and tram tracks than the entire Netherlands? It’s not that he’s exaggerating it’s just that when he talks about places that aren’t European he tends to go in often half-cocked without all the facts… like I’ve never seen a NJB video showing protected bike infrastructure in London, Ontario like is shown in this video and yes while it doesn’t have much it’s hypocrisy to say that it doesn’t have any at all especially when this video shows that it even has legacy infrastructure that doesn’t match the new protected bike lanes which looks at least 10 years older. This is what’s called a fallacy something that could potentially be used to undermine his argument. And here’s the thing we people of countries that aren’t the Netherlands or Europe mostly agree with NJB most of us are actively fighting against NIMBY’s for better infrastructure. Jason is great his channel is part of the reason I became more aware of my city and it’s infrastructure but what Jason doesn’t do is champion actual change and developments in our cities he says that they’ll never change that there isn’t a desire to change. If you read my earlier post you would see that Edmonton a small mining town in northern Canada has invested $100 million Canadian dollars into pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure, that’s unheard of pretty much anywhere outside of the Netherlands and they aren’t orange pilled?

  • @KnzoVortex

    @KnzoVortex

    7 ай бұрын

    I think you’ve gotten your definitions of “exaggerated” and “acceptable” mixed up here. Nic never claimed London Ontario was a particularly well-planned city by any means, just that it’s a little more than having literally zero redeeming qualities as NJB has been portraying it. As you know, the state of North American urban planning is abysmally bad, so these differences are important for people in North America, especially in giving indications on where momentum towards better urban planning seems to be forming. Ultimately, I feel like your main gripe is that this video didn’t highlight how awful the standards for city design in North America are. And sure, maybe possibly if this video had more of a criticizing tone more people might come out of it wanting to change things, but I’ve found a lot of people in the US/Canada who watch NJB just end up feeling angry and hopeless about their cities. Wide scale change like this is difficult, and unlike the Netherlands and many other places, we have had and still have a gangantuan prescience of the car industry fighting for its benefit in the area. What we need is to spread the message of reasonable urbanism in North America so people voting with this in mind, and we need people engaging with local government to convince them we care about these things. On both fronts, the fight is going to be hard, and I think there is a place for both anger arousing and more chilled out and even optimistic content for urbanism minded North Americans for our own sanity, it’s not like us being angry all the time is gonna manifest into changes in our cities or that a less harsh tone is gonna make people feel like everything is fine.

  • @roelkomduur8073

    @roelkomduur8073

    7 ай бұрын

    Ah, Melbourne. Been there, seen it( got an auntie living in Geelong, such a nice bike friendly place. Come to think about her , she must be one of oldest residents with her well over 100 years..) Of course you have more tram track then we have ( you would be Houston if you haven't ) You and others non Dutch/European are so f*cking complacent!! You think that the 100 mil Can,$ in 4 years that Edmonton is PLANNING to spend is a lot of money and that that isn't getting attention enough? Or that Jason doesn't give attention to a bike path in London U.K? ( he did one on the remarkable transformation in Paris..) Good Urban infrastructure is not some "quirky European " or "fashion " thing.. It is a necessity to keep this planet alive! In a couple of years most of the people on Earth will be living in cities, unless we want to live in human hellholes like Mumbai, Houston or Cairo, we must take MORE action! You as resident of Auzzieland must know that! Soon you have 50 degrees C summers like in Texas and Phoenix...Your/our currant model is unsustainable in the NEAR future..Nuclear subs might save you from the Chinese, but won't save you from climate change.This is what NJB in a gentle way is trying to tell. To come back to London Ontario,. 400.000 citizens and no mention able trains, busses or trams is laughable! "But we working on it..." Tell that to you grandchildren. Morons! BTW We got NIMBY's too. @@ZeBoy85

  • @perfectallycromulent

    @perfectallycromulent

    7 ай бұрын

    well there's the issue. the netherlands is so small and densely populated that you need to turn one of europe's largest river deltas into an entirely unnatural terrain, while canada is the second largest country in the world, and one of the least densely populated.

  • @roelkomduur8073

    @roelkomduur8073

    7 ай бұрын

    This is exactly what i mean with "complacent " We had the hottest summer on record...It took us in the Netherlands 30 od years to plan and build what we have now. Do you really think that you have another 30 years to change? We have a car industry also, i live 40 clicks from the German border( so our economics are very close)..They build cars over there you know.May bee you know some of the brands...Even they are investing in change.. I understand the politics of the US, done a year highschool there, i understand the Jewish Space laser fanatics.. But we're running out of time here. @@KnzoVortex

  • @beardannyboy
    @beardannyboy7 ай бұрын

    I just moved to Fake London from Ottawa, and my impression so far is that a) The number of Stroads cutting through the city is insane. b) Most of the local citizens have a severe case of "Car-brain", where the default assumption is you go everywhere and do everything in your car, and so does everyone else. c) There's a notable homeless problem around downtown, with encampments in all of the nearby greenspaces, and it seems the suburbanites like to pretend it doesn't exist. I think that people in the safe bubble of their car tend to ignore everything they are driving past. d) 90% of the city is designed like a suburb, with neighborhoods of single story detached houses complete with setbacks and lawns being everywhere, and much of downtown being littered with empty parking lots, and all the shopping being pushed to the outskirts in clusters of big box stores. e) The trees are nice, it's not called the forest city for nothing, but I'm certain the existing trees are a massive barrier to development due to over-zealous protections put on them.

  • @pdblouin

    @pdblouin

    7 ай бұрын

    I mean...I've lived in Ottawa for a decade (and Sudbury, ON before that) and you're basically describing both of those cities also. You're describing this whole continent.

  • @beardannyboy

    @beardannyboy

    7 ай бұрын

    @@pdblouin I was in the downtown of Ottawa, so maybe the experience in the 'burbs is different, but in Ottawa there was a much lower density of stroads, King eddy being the worst example, and those stroads had lower speeds and more frequent crossings. The bike network was much better developed, I was able to easily get across the downtown to any other part of the city without feeling like I had to fight my way through car traffic. The neighborhoods are generally denser, without the massive proliferation of front lawns and setbacks you see in London, and with plenty of 3-4 story apartments and townhouses. And there wasn't nearly so much space dedicated to parking. London has an excess of parking lots and dedicated street parking EVERYWHERE.

  • @nicthedoor

    @nicthedoor

    7 ай бұрын

    Very well said.

  • @agilemind6241

    @agilemind6241

    7 ай бұрын

    The trees are not the problem, it is clearly the zoning & mandatory parking laws to me. I also recently moved to Fake London, but to one of the "mixed use" neighbourhoods featured in the video, and there are half a dozen apartment buildings of different sizes and almost all of them include significant greenspace and lawns on their lots. The one that doesn't is because more than half of the lot is dedicated to parking. 1/3 of the houses are multi-unit, and we have a few small townhouse developments. The townhouses have a similar problem as the apartment buildings with significant portions of their lot dedicated to parking, meanwhile the neighbourhood streets are ridiculously wide and easily accomodate on-street parking near the businesses. Meaning there is effectively 2 parking spaces in the neighbourhood for every car in this neighbourhood. If the city outlawed expanding outwards, and eliminated the crazy parking requirements there is tons of space in the city to accomodate growth through densification without cutting down a single tree.

  • @SpencerGatten

    @SpencerGatten

    7 ай бұрын

    I would say Car Brain is very prominent here, when it comes to tree protection you betcha! if you cut down 1 tree you have to plant 3 in its place

  • @johnnevada46
    @johnnevada467 ай бұрын

    I was brought up in South London (Askin Street) in the 1960s - until my parents moved back to the 'real' London in England. From the age of 6 or 7, I cycled, walked, or got the bus everywhere around the city. My parents had no idea where my friends and I went on long summer days and I always came home with adventures to tell. I revisited London recently and was shocked at how ugly, boring, and car-dominated the city had become. The vibrant downtown I remember was replaced with parking lots. I also noticed the sad absence of kids on the streets. How do they make any friends?

  • @rituwebpro

    @rituwebpro

    7 ай бұрын

    Wow your lucky. Wish i could move to London UK.

  • @AvalancheCleo

    @AvalancheCleo

    7 ай бұрын

    I'm sorry to hear this. I was often in London as a child and have fond memories. This saddens me.

  • @baronvonlimbourgh1716

    @baronvonlimbourgh1716

    7 ай бұрын

    They don't.

  • @bussesandtrains1218

    @bussesandtrains1218

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@rituwebprodon't. It has its own problems Move to York or smth instead

  • @jewhunterbiden

    @jewhunterbiden

    6 ай бұрын

    @@rituwebpro londistan

  • @illhaveawtrplz
    @illhaveawtrplz7 ай бұрын

    It sounds like your rebuttal amounts to “Jason is 95% right, but London is making some progress”. I’m glad it’s getting better! But I’m not sure that it’s the most effective counter-argument...

  • @ketchup901

    @ketchup901

    7 ай бұрын

    It's not a counter-argument, it's just expanding and providing more insight.

  • @Lancelot9587

    @Lancelot9587

    7 ай бұрын

    @@ketchup901its exactly as you say. This is less of a rebuttal; it’s more like providing context

  • @craigbowers4016

    @craigbowers4016

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah, honestly sounds like somebody just wanted to make a video that would include a super popular video so they could get a lot of people to watch "their POV". Basically someone with not much new to say just looking for attention.

  • @rlwelch

    @rlwelch

    6 ай бұрын

    Sometimes the point isn't to argue, it's to learn things :)

  • @anthonyarundel727
    @anthonyarundel7277 ай бұрын

    Largely supports NJB. In fact, this more in depth look at London Ontario made me think that it was worse than what Jason described! But even a city that is denser and visibly beautiful can be terrible for cyclists and pedestrians - inner Sydney Australia for example.

  • @luk5464
    @luk54647 ай бұрын

    Seems a good a fair assessment, but Jason has always said that Canada is mostly better than the US when it comes to walkability and that often Canada makes it at least theoretically possible to get places without a car. He never used Fake London as THE prime example of bad urban planning. He just uses it because that's what he knows best.

  • @bararobberbaron859

    @bararobberbaron859

    5 ай бұрын

    I think he used Houston as that? Or at least a Texan city iirc.

  • @abatall

    @abatall

    23 күн бұрын

    @@bararobberbaron859houston was the worst he said

  • @sonicblare
    @sonicblare7 ай бұрын

    Dude, when you said you took 2009 data, and showed kids biking on sidewalks, I lost you. You've probably never had a close call with a 50mph truck. It's life changing

  • @realityblooms

    @realityblooms

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeah I don’t get the message he’s trying to prove. “It’s safer to bike on this stroad than Jason suggest, but not 100% chance you make it to your destination alive”

  • @notcreativebush5702

    @notcreativebush5702

    7 ай бұрын

    So it’s not a suicide, but just a russian roulette, got it that’s much better.

  • @woodpeckerer

    @woodpeckerer

    7 ай бұрын

    I mean yeah, I think he was making a more logical, data-based argument than one based on emotion. People have had all kinds of experiences with cars, no close calls, close calls, and full-on hits. To be clear, it would also be unreasonable for someone to say "Dude, when you said London is still kind of bad based on x data, I lost you. I've never been hit by a car and my life has exclusively been enriched by them!" because this is also an anecdote.

  • @Jet-ij9zc

    @Jet-ij9zc

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@realitybloomsthere's never a 100% chance

  • @BrokenCurtain

    @BrokenCurtain

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@Jet-ij9zc One of my chemistry teachers once said that the laws of Brownian motion mean that if you open a door to a room, there's a slight chance that all the air in the room will escape through the opening. The probability of that happening is just very, very small. So when someone says that crossing a stroad isn't suicide because there's a chance I'll make it to the other side alive, that's what I'm reminded of.

  • @bramharms72
    @bramharms727 ай бұрын

    As a Dutchman who's been following Jason since the beginning I must say that it's always been clear he makes London (the one that isn't London) into a strawman to point out common problems. That said, at the first pictures you showed of London (the one that literally no one in the world can pinpoint on a map) my clear gut reaction was "hell hole". Some indoctrination might have taken place over the years... 🙄 So it's good you made this thoughtful video. I enjoyed it.

  • @BrokenCurtain

    @BrokenCurtain

    7 ай бұрын

    Just to clarify: a "straw man argument" or "straw man attack" is a logical fallacy and dishonest debate tactic where someone assigns a position to the other side that's different from the argument they're actually making because it's easier to refute. For example, I support investment in public transportation and cycling infrastructure because that makes cities more liveable - but I occassionally encounter folks in the comment sections who'll claim that people like me "just can't afford to buy a car and are envious of car owners". That's a straw man attack. I believe what you actually meant to say is that Jason is using London, Ontario as his "go-to example" for bad urban planning and might occasionally exaggerate the situation to get his point across. That's not really a straw man, but as a fellow non-native English speaker, I get that it's easy to mix-up terms like this.

  • @bramharms72

    @bramharms72

    7 ай бұрын

    @@BrokenCurtain Ha ha! 😁 My friend, I thank you for being so concerned about my educational wellbeing (relax, I made that one up) that you took upon yourself the effort of writing a such hefty reply. But just because I appreciate your effort doesn't mean I agree with it. Not that I could if I would, I can't, this is the internet. I'm legally obliged to die on a hill of semantics if the call so comes. So to battle it is! Everything you say is correct but you describe just a single use of a figurative strawman. It's a logical device that can be used as a caricature, teaching aid, scapegoat, someone to talk to, lover (ok, some of those are better classed as symptoms). This is true in Dutch, but we use logical concepts in a similar way the English speaking western countries do. In replying to you I do notice I strain the edges of my English vocabulary for thinking about eh.. mental stuff. So don't make me do it all over again. 😜 Wishing you the very best.

  • @baronvonlimbourgh1716

    @baronvonlimbourgh1716

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeah, london is just a stand in for any random north american city.

  • @OKutchawO
    @OKutchawO7 ай бұрын

    As a london commuter who mainly uses ebike to get anywhere the city has made a good deal of impvoments to the infrastructure. But still has a lot to work on to make it better. The busses could use some love as it takes an hour to get anywhere in the city

  • @SpencerGatten

    @SpencerGatten

    7 ай бұрын

    London busing is almost always "show up whenever you want day"

  • @humanecities
    @humanecities7 ай бұрын

    Great breakdown! I’ve never been to London, ON. Something I’ve noticed as I’ve traveled more is that Canadian cities are much better off than we sometimes think. There’s also a lot of potential across the country! I think Jason’s videos had woken a lot of people up to the problems! I’m happy to see so many urbanist creators on YT, IG, and elsewhere adding to the call for change.

  • 7 ай бұрын

    One thing I always wonder is whether there is really a big surge in new urbanists, or whether we are in a bubble of KZread’s algorithm giving us that impression?

  • @carmenl163

    @carmenl163

    5 ай бұрын

    Why does 'a lot of potential' sounds so optimistic, while in fact, you'd never say that to a cancer patient?

  • 5 ай бұрын

    @@carmenl163 because a city isn’t a cancer patient. There are known solutions to the historic urban planning mistakes, based on what’s been done elsewhere. Cancer on the other hand doesn’t have any great solutions right now.

  • @shaunpcoleman
    @shaunpcoleman7 ай бұрын

    I live in Waterloo Region and have travelled to London on many occasions. When you enter the city from the 401 your first impression is wide roads, parking lots, plazas, etc. As you approach the core it does not improve. I'm sure there are some decent places to live but it is a typically southern Ontario suburban community the same as Mississauga, Brampton, Burlington, Milton, Guelph, etc. To get the nice parts of London from a suburb (where most people live) you must drive. When I have visited people who live there, the suburbs are a labyrinthian maze. I do not see how transit could be efficient. London recently cancelled the rail part of their Rapid Transit plan to go exclusively with buses. A quote from the BRT Handout, "BRT is a bus-based rapid transit system that mirrors many of the features of a rail system with the flexibility and cost savings associated with using over the road vehicles." No, that is a lie told by a politician who is never going to use transit pandering to car dependant constituents. Buses (RT or regular) always get stuck in transit. Waterloo Region has the ION and Hamilton now has the LRT. London is run by politicians stuck in the 20th century. Without rail transit, the traffic will just get worse. London is not a fun city to visit and I imagine it will stay that way.

  • @ghostpipe888
    @ghostpipe8887 ай бұрын

    As someone who grew up in 'old' London and watched the downtown be killed by malls and urban sprawl and a lot of the most impressive character homes at the time being regarded as 'old fashion' and of little worth (in comparison to the cookie cutter treeless blocks on the outskirts that swallowed farmland and green space) which were then torn down to make parking lots. I still remember the old market down town that actually catered to farmers selling large amounts of produce and the ware house buildings full of artists (sorry nostalgia). Anyway, its growth is a city that was based around malls by culture-less hacks and now that mall culture has basically died/ gone off trend... it is a bit of a disconnected mess, full of cars that IMO represents the attitudes of the ppl who were originally drawn to suburban communities. Disconnection and a fear of anything different.

  • @Quince828

    @Quince828

    7 ай бұрын

    I guess you’re referring to the sprawl of Sifton City as he built out the burbs.

  • @SpencerGatten

    @SpencerGatten

    7 ай бұрын

    I have a few clients now who are exicted about buying the old downtown homes keeping the character but upgrading them. its been nice to see.

  • @theultimatereductionist7592

    @theultimatereductionist7592

    7 ай бұрын

    Correction: fear of anything different would imply a desperate attempt to SAVE the past, NOT destroy it and replace it with something new. The latter is a fear of NOT being modern.

  • @circleinforthecube5170

    @circleinforthecube5170

    6 ай бұрын

    character homes? a old bland foursquare from 1920 is not much better than a ranch, this may be shocking but tastes change, modern houses will also probably be more loved in 40 years

  • @RoboJules
    @RoboJules7 ай бұрын

    As a Vancouverite, London feels a lot like Surrey. And what I'd say about Surrey is that while it has some way to go, some areas are already genuinely lovely, and it's dripping with potential. So good luck to London. Hopefully one day there's hourly train service to Toronto, Niagara, or Winsor that connects to a decent LRT system with decent mixed use high density housing, nice walking and cycling, and beefed up bus lines at every station. It's a realistic goal that I can see fulfilled within the next 10-15 years. London would be a great place to live if it had that a little bit of work. I'm sure that housing demand justifies it.

  • @SnapshotOfASoul

    @SnapshotOfASoul

    7 ай бұрын

    I absolutely agree with this take as someone who is from around both. The part of Surrey I lived in for a little while was genuinely walkable and bike-friendly.

  • @Criminelsoyeux

    @Criminelsoyeux

    7 ай бұрын

    at the end of the day we all like Surrey but we never wish to live there.

  • @mattwardman

    @mattwardman

    7 ай бұрын

    Is this Real Surrey or Fake Surrey? !! We could have some fun with this - I see that Vancouver is partly named for the Dutch Couverden ... Great comment - from Real London the one thing I can say is that it takes a long time, and the most important thing to do is to make a start - which they have done.

  • @noseblind2088
    @noseblind20887 ай бұрын

    Living closer to downtown is better. Car depency is the bane of this city, and I would say you reap the most benefit living in downtown or the satellite neighborhoods while also owning a car. That is a niche set of requirements and also highlights the city's problems, but if you fit that description then London will be an enjoyable experience. The transit is far too unreliable at this stage, so there isn't any way to get downtown without relying on the shitty transit, walking if possible, or paying for parking. All 3 are deterrents if you live in the outer ring of the city and that is the biggest issue of the city's layout

  • @agilemind6241

    @agilemind6241

    7 ай бұрын

    Lack of density is the real problem in the city. I don't own a car while living in the city so I've ridden a fair bit of the transit and there are pretty decent routes right now, the problem is low frequency, and the low frequency is due to low ridership, which is in turn due to the ridiculously low density neighbourhoods everywhere in the city (even close to down town). The city needs to put in place a 100% ban on expansion of the city limits and focus entirely on densification, and replacing the insane amount of parking with more useful spaces.

  • @SpencerGatten

    @SpencerGatten

    7 ай бұрын

    yes agreed, if you can live in a downtown satellite neighbourhood you have a lot more options, so many more restaurants and activities growing there.

  • @circleinforthecube5170

    @circleinforthecube5170

    6 ай бұрын

    @@agilemind6241 yes but the problem with that is it theres a point where the entire cities architecture is completely changed, going from almost all single family homes to no single family homes in the city at all even for historic preservation (except the really old 1800s houses) honestly i dont want to see everything i know be torn down for a city that is unfamiliar

  • @pezz2345
    @pezz23457 ай бұрын

    In terms of obesity it struck me as someone who has lived in London their entire adult life when I first went to Toronto near the start of the Pandemic just how much skinnier Torontonians are - - Maybe it was just the areas that I was in, but it did lead me to think the same thing that less walkable cities really do exacerbate obesity wayyyyy more than we really think about lol

  • @julietardos5044

    @julietardos5044

    7 ай бұрын

    I suggested to CityNerd that he take his top 10 and bottom 10 walkable cities and compare obesity rates.

  • @sm3675

    @sm3675

    7 ай бұрын

    Obesity and poverty in Canada are closely linked. Areas such as Etobicoke, Misissauga, Oakville, Markham, Barrie, and London are all car centric, but the latter (Barrie and London) are fatter and less wealthy.

  • @SpencerGatten

    @SpencerGatten

    7 ай бұрын

    thats really interesting, ill have to pay more attention but this isnt something I noticed even living in london all this time maybe I am blind to it!

  • @kathrynstemler6331

    @kathrynstemler6331

    7 ай бұрын

    I ride my bike to my 10 hour/day standing job and I’m still fat 😂😂

  • @brandonm1708
    @brandonm17087 ай бұрын

    I was expecting to find you slamming NJB here, but was pleasantly surprised by your well-reasoned response! Also I loved that “Not Not Just Bikes” intro

  • @quixomega
    @quixomega7 ай бұрын

    I have several friends who live in London, ON. I've been there many times, and genuinely badly served by public transit and very spread out. If that's the target of your KZread channel, then yes it's terrible. Is it worse than other similar North American cities? No not really, and I don't think Jason Slaughter even makes that claim in his videos, he's mostly just using it as an example of all of the stupid choices that most North American cities make in transit design and it's because London is so typical that it makes a good comparison.

  • @Gigaamped
    @Gigaamped7 ай бұрын

    Honestly, I was hesitant at first but I see what you did there ;) this is a great video that will hopefully blow up and highlights major things our cities should strive to do better on. I especially appreciate you including statistical data like how biking is statistically safer on streets without painted bike gutters than with them. cheers!

  • @Andrea-lj4jg
    @Andrea-lj4jg7 ай бұрын

    Looking at fake london on google maps is depressing, half of downtown is nothing but parking lots

  • @supersmashmaster43

    @supersmashmaster43

    Ай бұрын

    Yep and it's even more depressing walking through it

  • @katrinabryce
    @katrinabryce7 ай бұрын

    If I was the mayor of Fake London, here's what I would do with the stroads: Reconfigure them to be one bus lane, one car lane, and one cycle lane in each direction, with a linear park in the middle. Some, maybe every second one, would have a tram lane in place of the bus lane. Fronting them on each side would be a row of buildings with shops on the ground floor, and a mix of offices and apartments on the 2-3 floors above that. That would change the stroads from being the edge of the neighbourhoods to the centre of the neighbourhood.

  • @johnfitzgerald7618
    @johnfitzgerald76187 ай бұрын

    One thing you always have to consider in Ontario is the political influence of property developers. The current premier, for example, has some splaining to do about how he reversed a campaign promise in a way that significantly promoted the interests of large developers. In the 60s London city council decided to surround core London with low density neighbourhoods organized around malls. That worked well for big developers and big construction companies (and local construction companies like EllisDon, which grew into a huge construction company), but it created the London you see today. I grew up in London, moved to Toronto for 50 years, then moved back a few years ago. I made frequent visits to London during those 50 years, though. The once-bustling downtown had been destroyed by 1980. Successive municipal governments since then have been promising to revitalize downtown, but it's even less alive today. I am not saying that the influence of developers is necessarily a sign of municipal corruption. It could, for example, simply be the result of smart developers bamboozling incompetent municipal governments (to call municipal government incompetent is almost always redundant in Ontario). Whatever the reason, the solution, if there ever is one, will be political. If people ignore municipal politics and don't organize for change nothing will happen. A few giant crowds at the legislature calling out Doug Ford might help, but I fear that most people in Ontario may actually like living in stroad suburbs. I live in core London, by the way. It's fine, although downtown and the old East End commercial district are moribund.

  • @RealConstructor

    @RealConstructor

    7 ай бұрын

    I never been to London ON, but I wonder what you can do in downtown London ON. What is the attraction of downtown, if most shops and restaurants are moving to the outskirts and become big box stores and fast food chains with lots of parking lots. Redeveloping downtown should be the main goal of local and regional governments I would say. Make sure everyone wants to go to downtown and make sure they go by foot, bicycle or public transport.

  • @johnfitzgerald7618

    @johnfitzgerald7618

    7 ай бұрын

    @@RealConstructor For sure, but it ain't happening. A large part of downtown is owned by a single developer, who claims that development is being held back because the city won't allow enough parking for companies that want to relocate there -- that is, the companies want parking spaces and the city refuses to allow them, so the company goes to the burbs.. Of course, if there were a decent transit system the need for parking might be less, but there isn't one, nor is there much chance of one appearing any time soon. The system is so bad that massive capital expenditure would be required. They've painted themselves into a corner. [Edited for clarity]

  • @agilemind6241

    @agilemind6241

    7 ай бұрын

    @@RealConstructor Restaurants are not moving to the outskirts, the suburbs are filled with terrible chain resaurants but if you want to go to a nice place you'll be going downtown. But sadly that's about the only thing there is downtown right now. There's not even a supermarket! Just redevelopment isn't the solution, they tried that with Dundas St. and while it is beautifully designed for walking, cycling, and window shopping, it is instead a desolate wasteland of awful convenience stores and homeless people. It needs to be a multi-prong approach of increasing density, improving transit, and redevelopment.

  • @agilemind6241

    @agilemind6241

    7 ай бұрын

    @@johnfitzgerald7618 That's clearly a lie, there is a giant multi-story parking lot downtown that is more than 1/2 empty all the time. There are surface parking lots everywhere that sit empty all the time, and there are dozens of bus routes that pass through downtown that are well used. It's an excuse b/c that "developer" doesn't want to develop anything, they just want to profit off of rent in the crumbling buildings they own.

  • @johnfitzgerald7618

    @johnfitzgerald7618

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@agilemind6241 Yes, he could well be lying. He's a developer, after all. I doubt that most of those empty spaces are in public lots, though. Companies would have the added costs of negotiating with private companies for reserved spaces. He does claim (yes, perhaps falsely) that when Citi Financial wanted to move into the old Central Library the city could only offer them spaces at Ridout and Horton. As for the buses, they're well used on the current schedules with buses 20 or (mainly) 30 minutes apart. To make the buses a real alternative to driving they would have to double or triple the number of buses. Like all good Torontonians I hated the TTC when I lived there, but when I moved back to London it suddenly seemed much more attractive. Which is horrifying.

  • @danellis-jones1591
    @danellis-jones15917 ай бұрын

    I grew up in real London. I now live in Perth, Australia, which has even more single car use than fake London (80%+). And my teenage years were FAR more free than my teens. Because of the great PT. I could go basically anywhere. The point is, car dependent planning is cheap, dangerous and are know to affect both our physical and mental health. And there's absolutely no reason why we couldn't build cities in the same way as we did 200 years ago. The thing that annoys me most is these awful cities are made because builders and developers have pursued governments to allow it so they can make more money. Basically the urban environment in USA/Canada/Australia are due to privatisation

  • @violetlight1548
    @violetlight15487 ай бұрын

    As a fellow former Lousy Londoner (my favourite of NJB's names for the town, due to the alliteration), you do bring up some good points, and I am happy the place *is* (by some miracle) improving. I grew up in London with a single Mom and we didn't have a car for years - I still remember taking the bus to get groceries and a cab back, and walking to school. This was years ago - in the late 80s/early 90s, where there was pretty much no bike infrastructure whatsoever as well. I also took the bus to get to high school and community college. It is *possible* to live in London without a car, but it's a pain in the ass. That said, I would never, ever move back. I'm living in Hamilton now, below the mountain, in a neighbourhood just blocks away from downtown. I can walk to work, to my son's school, to an actual, thriving Downtown with almost everything we need, and easy GO access to Toronto. We only use my husband's little beat up Honda Civic (I don't drive) for grocery getting and relative visiting. The bus service in Hamilton blows me away too -- every 10 minutes on some routes! I never expected to see transit that frequent outside Toronto! Hamilton's not perfect by any means --- housing is expensive, and homelessness is a problem the city *needs* to solve -- but it's where *I* feel at home, something I never felt in London.

  • @rhizocarp
    @rhizocarp7 ай бұрын

    Nice video and very fair, I think. While London has too much suburban sprawl, it really does have good bones in the older part of the city: the downtown train station and hockey arena, the lack of an urban freeway, and the Thames Valley Parkway. It is getting better, but it's just a shame that the pace of change is so slow. And some of the positive change underway (e.g. BRT) is already being watered down with curb lanes in some sections.

  • @SpencerGatten

    @SpencerGatten

    7 ай бұрын

    yes the speed in which london changes feels like a snails pace. it takes forever for the city to make a good decision and even longer to act on it

  • @beback_
    @beback_7 ай бұрын

    I sympathize with Jason's anger. He's not an optimistic 20 year old living in a world brimming with possibility. He's in his mid forties, and feels like he's been gaslit for DECADES and that the best years of his life have been stolen from him.

  • @johnwt7333

    @johnwt7333

    7 ай бұрын

    I thought he was in his mid fifties

  • @beback_

    @beback_

    7 ай бұрын

    If so I NEED to know what his skin care routine is haha@@johnwt7333

  • @rlwelch

    @rlwelch

    6 ай бұрын

    Jason travelled across the world for years and then used his fancy job to relocate to somewhere he likes - I'm not saying he's wrong, but he's not exactly a downtrodden, powerless victim of suburban dysfunction here

  • @johnwt7333

    @johnwt7333

    6 ай бұрын

    @@rlwelch he is. The first 3 decades of his life were taken away from suburban dysfunction

  • @krazyknux8746

    @krazyknux8746

    6 ай бұрын

    Ok this is a bit of an exaggeration. After being orange-pilled, I can look back at my childhood and see where things could have been much different and improved, but it would be preposterous to say that those years of my life were taken away.@@johnwt7333

  • @SnapshotOfASoul
    @SnapshotOfASoul7 ай бұрын

    If you like the cycling around Vancouver, check it out around Tofino and Ucluelet, it's absolutely breathtaking and they have not just grade separated but completely separated lanes in many places, including (at least when I was there) a use separated boarding lane for people who want to use it for riding things other than bikes. As someone from a city that's around Vancouver, that has really good infrastructure for biking and walking, it always astounds me that we're also one of the most car centric areas of the region - lots of auto shops, big stroads, urban freeways, 1950s style huge intersections - but it's really always been so friendly to activity that it's deceptive. You don't see it from the road half the time, but there's pathways in my area too that span the entire city and can make an hour's walk into fifteen minutes if you know how to navigate. I'd walk home from school this way all the time, and people would be horrified when I told them, as if it was unsafe. It wasn't, it was lovely. Now I live on the outskirts on a two lane road constantly clogged with traffic, zero sidewalks... and yet I have multiple bus stops outside of my house so it's rated as "good for non car owners." Buses... that get stuck in traffic and often never show up. Sigh.

  • @jjmaia
    @jjmaia7 ай бұрын

    I stopped in London ON once on the way to Detroit and found it gray, uninteresting and sprawling.

  • @supersmashmaster43

    @supersmashmaster43

    Ай бұрын

    I was born and raised in London and agree with you, but I'll still take this place any day over Detroit

  • @markuserikssen
    @markuserikssen7 ай бұрын

    It's nice to see a more nuanced video by another local. This puts things a bit more into perspective and it shows that it's perhaps not as bad as one might think. Also great to see that the city is making progress. It seems like slow progress and there's still a long way to go.

  • @SpencerGatten

    @SpencerGatten

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes the City is very slow to respond and make any changes, but we got a government housing agreement in place which has put pressure on them for faster infrastructure change

  • @floriangoetz5117
    @floriangoetz51177 ай бұрын

    I just spent a few years living in London, and I do see the potential of London. If you live close to the Thames Valley Parkway (TVP), and your destination is close to the TVP, you have a great opportunity to commute to by bike. The issue is the rest of the network isn’t fully connected. Biking north-south is difficult because biking on Adelaide, Richmond or Wonderland is a nightmare, and the same goes for commuting west-east with Oxford, Fanshawe or Commissioners. The roads either need better bike infrastructure or there needs to be other alternative corridors for bikes.

  • @SpencerGatten
    @SpencerGatten7 ай бұрын

    Since I have been living in London I have noticed big changes for bike traffic, but we are getting more intensification like the plans for all the building around 100 Kellogg. More density will be more walkable areas and hopefully more biking options, the issue is its still a city in canada that gets a ton of snow so biking months will always be limited.

  • @oldmanlearningguitar446
    @oldmanlearningguitar4467 ай бұрын

    As a life long London resident I’d say Jason has it right. The bike lanes are often disconnected. The buses are better than 20 years ago since they no longer travel in bunches but post pandemic they are worst than pre-pandemic due to frequency cuts. Retail has moved farther and farther away from the city center and much of it is unavailable to bus riders or on 30 to 40 minute intervals. Oh, and they killed 1/2 of the proposed rapid transit and the one leg currently nearing completion is so short at 5.5 km it’s almost pointless. It really only connects the main college campus to their downtown building. Non-students not riding its full length might save 3 to 5 minutes but there’s no reason for most Londoners to go downtown anymore.

  • @gilbster
    @gilbster7 ай бұрын

    Great Video! It's cool to see the progress that London is making. I visited once briefly a few years ago and really just stayed in the old downtown area. I have a similar feeling about Kansas City Missouri. We have such a sprawled out city, and much of the City area is car centric, stroads +suburbs. But over my almost 15 years of living here I have seen a lot of progress in increasing cycling infrastructure and transit options. We still have a ways to go, but we are moving in the right direction.

  • @Ben-jq5oo
    @Ben-jq5oo7 ай бұрын

    Cycling on these roads is arguably less dangerous than cycling on country lanes in the UK.

  • @tim.a.k.mertens
    @tim.a.k.mertens7 ай бұрын

    I've lived in London my whole life (aside from university), it will always be my hometown. Having worked for the city for two summers I've flip flopped between being very optimistic for London's future and feeling hopeless and helpless to change it. The city recently added bike lanes with no barriers to a segment of Colborne street where one side of the street had served as street parking for as long as I can remember. A few years ago they also added bus route 1 which turns left onto Colborne from cheapside, where almost every time it makes the turn, cars in the turn lane have had to back up to let the bus in. Now there is no centre turn lane and the bike lanes are right in the path of the bus. It's a recipe for disaster The trees on the Boulevards were only planted in the past 15 years or so, which means if they had thought ahead a little, they could have just put the bike lanes on the boulevards. I really wanna hope for the city but I'm not convinced those who are responsible for those decisions are competent enough to do it right. When the neighborhood raised objections to this particular bike lane plan on Colborne, they were outright ignored. Still I have a bit of hope, thank you for helping me see it again

  • @BlueGrovyle
    @BlueGrovyle7 ай бұрын

    This is an extremely well-edited and tasteful video. Couldn't help but laugh at the inclusion of the "dramatic reenactment" as well. Nice voice, by the way.

  • @nicthedoor

    @nicthedoor

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much!

  • @ramrancherog9195
    @ramrancherog91957 ай бұрын

    I live in London and I commute only by bicycle. I am lucky enough to be close to 2 entry points on the the Thames Valley Parkway. I do think London has immense potential and after reading some of the recent construction and bike lane projects my theory is the city is wanting to build a network of bike lanes to connect people on to the parkway and use that to get people safely to where they want to be. It could be better, since often times the TVP is less direct, but it is taking advantage of something unique about London and I am all for it

  • @SpencerGatten

    @SpencerGatten

    7 ай бұрын

    I love the TVP but what do you do in the winter when it comes to commuting?

  • @chrisdabeard8790
    @chrisdabeard87906 ай бұрын

    I visited friends in Fake London about 15 years ago. We were staying in one of the older nieghbourhoods, about a 15 minutes walk from the downtown shopping areas. We didn't have a car, but we still managed to get about. Being from England, we didn't find it strange to walk to wherever we needed to get, but we did get some funny looks when people asked how we got about without a car. On some days, our friends would drive us out to some of the restuarants or shopping areas which we didn't visit on our own without a car, mainly because we didn't want to be carrying potentially heavy bags all the way back. Public transit was not the best, but since we didn't have a schedule to keep (holiday) it wasn't really an issue. I could definatley see it being a problem for commuters each day. It's good to see that London is trying to improve and build less car-centric infrastructure. It'll be interesting to visit my friends again next year, to see what has changed.

  • @Joker-eg6oz
    @Joker-eg6oz3 ай бұрын

    I didn't feel that free thing until I got my own car @ 17. Even being a cyclist & walking alot still pretty confined to my superblock. Even with full empathy for biking it's horrifying to drive by a cyclist in a bike gutter.

  • @stephenvandulken6948
    @stephenvandulken69482 ай бұрын

    Back in 1955, when I was a few years old and my family was in Montreal, my father got a job offer to move to Fake London. Instead we moved to New York City (and I now live in a walkable town on the south coast of England). Jeez, we may have dodged a bullet...

  • @andymod
    @andymod7 ай бұрын

    Based on scenery you shown in this video, it has a lot of greenery and doesn't look that awful. P. S. What I am really surprized is video and audio (!) quality of the video itself for a channel with such a tiny subscriptions and views numbers. Do more, it's great!

  • @karlkoehler341

    @karlkoehler341

    7 ай бұрын

    Greenery is nice and all but.. reminds me of many other North American places. Remnants of a downtown, where buildings were knocked down to make space for parking, downtown streets expanded to six lanes, and plenty of suburban sprawl. Heck, even South Lake Tahoe is like that, a place surrounded by the beauty of nature like no other and then they destroy the feeling by putting in this suburbia. There is so much space to do better ! Separate pedestrian-facing store-fronts from parking-lot car-street facing store-backs. Connect the pieces of sidewalk and bikelane. Does Costco really need a road for cars on 3.5 sides or could one side not be for bikes/pedestrians only? As is, not even the people who live in the apartment complex across the street will bike or walk there.

  • @nntflow7058

    @nntflow7058

    7 ай бұрын

    There are lots of compact cities covered with greenery. But homeless people in downtown areas is not such a nice thing. Like in Fake London....

  • @JeremyLevi

    @JeremyLevi

    7 ай бұрын

    Canadian cities tend to have plenty of very nice green spaces because the one thing we have lots of is land and because Canadians more or less expect to be able to access nature at the drop of a hat. Travelling between one of those nice green spaces and the next in anything but a car is where you start bumping into the sharp edges of modern Canadian urban planning though.

  • @andymod

    @andymod

    7 ай бұрын

    @JeremyLevi Canadian urban planning can blow up your mind in a bad way (I didn't see US one, tho). But there are plenty of really coll places too, especially in big cities like Toronto or Montreal. But after Europe, it still feels outdated.

  • @michieldame701

    @michieldame701

    7 ай бұрын

    Totally Agreed on both counts, It looks great and Do more!... Even in the replies the discussion is happening...

  • @PaintyMainy
    @PaintyMainy7 ай бұрын

    I first was afraid this was going to be one of those "debunking" videos. But it was actually quite insightful. Nice job.

  • @jarodh-m6099
    @jarodh-m60997 ай бұрын

    As fellow resident of English-speaking North America with a passing familiarity with the Toronto area, I think the point of comparison is worth considering. London, ON seems like a pretty average metro in English-speaking North America. If you compare it to a place like Houston (or most the Gulf Coast), it is doing pretty well. When you are comparing it to the progress that has been made in comparable European metro areas, you shrug. As someone who regular watches Jason's videos, I have never under the impression that the whole city was the same level of car-centric. However, as someone who has living in various places in the U.S. and felt limited by not owning a car, I felt exactly what he was trying to get at.

  • @vanschaaykb
    @vanschaaykb3 ай бұрын

    I bike to work most days when its either not pouring rain or coated in snow. The intersection you showed at Ridout and Commissioners, while one of the nicer looking bits of bike infrastructure is actually one of the most dangerous intersections on my route. You have highspeed traffic on Commissioners occasionally failing to stop for red light, but probably the most dangerous is turning traffic on Ridout/Upper Queens; southbound turning left from Upper Queens and northbound from Ridout turning right onto Commissioners. The way the bike lane shifts from being a painted lane to a median separated path seems to confuse drivers and they don't end up seeing you. I've had a number of close calls at that intersection. There are separate signals for bikes at the intersection but they timed the same as the car traffic making them completely useless, if there were different signal priorities / intervals it would be a totally different story. The other intersection on my route is equally as dangerous for a different reason is the threeway intersection of Egerton, Trafalgar and Hamilton. The northbound bike lane on Egerton goes from a painted bike lane, to a sharrow at the intersection back to a painted bike lane IN the intersection. Its really dicey here with cars making a right turn on Trafalgar because you start out behind them switching to beside them in the intersection and then you get to play the game of "did they see me and who's gonna go for it". Thankfully most of my route is along the Thames Valley Parkway away from traffic which is great.

  • @liam3284
    @liam32844 ай бұрын

    You can have walkable single family layouts. Typical is suburbs arranged around a train station and commecrial area. I mean, supermarket, greengrocer, post office, bakery, railway station all within 2k or so, and not on a thoroughfare. You can also have car dependant dense developments. High rise and mid rise, all surrounded by roads and parking lots, straight off a major road, fenced off from walking and cycling paths.

  • @nagi1337
    @nagi13376 ай бұрын

    American suburbs look so strange with those exposed front lawns. Where I'm from, people would have some kind of bush fence for privacy. I wonder why they don't do that in america.

  • @Quince828
    @Quince8287 ай бұрын

    I moved from ottawa to London to go to school and it always reminded me of the Ottawa I grew up in, except that no one knew how to drive and get around in a snowstorm. It was small town feeling back then. The number 6 bus was so miserable that at the first break in the school year I went back to Ottawa to fetch my car, and drove to campus from then on. Biking was dangerous and the only walk ability was pretty much limited to the downtown core. It appears from your video that things might have improved somewhat but there’s still a very long way to go; even by Ottawa standards.

  • @SofiaChambers
    @SofiaChambers7 ай бұрын

    i HAVE been to London. I grew up in Michigan, and have been to London more times than I can remember. My first time in London was in the 1970s. The last time i was there was a few years ago. 10 years ago, my mother in law, while riding a bicycle in London, was the victim of a hit and run driver. Despite witnesses and reporting his license plate #, the police did NOTHING. Unfortunately Ontario, from Windsor and Sarnina to Niagra and maybe Kingston, has become one massive megaopolis. Yeah, there is still some farmland between each of the countless other "Londons" scattered about. But all of the hundreds of km of sprawl feels just like the hundreds of miles of badly planned sprawl in the USA. And it's a mess! Lest you think I'm just hating on Ontario because i'm from Michigan... and we hate the Leafs and think you can't pronounce the "aʊ" sound properly, I think Michigan overall is maybe WORSE than Ontario when it comes to sprawl and terrible suburbs. Also, I left Michigan in part because of how absolutely terrible it all was.

  • @Deckzwabber
    @Deckzwabber7 ай бұрын

    Somewhat off-topic question? Are those cul-de-sacs not interconnected with small paths for bicycles and pedestrians?

  • @GordonFlash1983
    @GordonFlash19837 ай бұрын

    I'm from London UK and it's a car unfriendly city. Apart from the congestion and low emission charges, it's almost impossible not to get some sort of fine. Accidently being in a bus lane for literally less than one second, £60 fine. Did an immediate U turn after accidently driving up a street not for cars, £60 fine etc etc.

  • @CathyMartinTBW
    @CathyMartinTBW7 ай бұрын

    Good video. Good points. You both make excellent content, by the way. For what its worth I think both Vancouver and fake London could benefit from one of the easiest ways to improve the local lifestyle. A simple public relations effort to make travelling on public transit more acceptable. If viewed as a social failure, that's what it will become. Like you, I live in Vancouver and love to travel by scooter, however I am from real London, where you can sit on a bus and find yourself sitting next to an MP, a CEO or an OBE (look it up). There's zero social stigma. By putting great WiFi on all public transit, and pushing a well thought out PR campaign we could turn the public perception of transit around cheaply and to great effect. Regardless, we live in one of the best places on the planet.

  • @johnnevada46

    @johnnevada46

    7 ай бұрын

    I too am from the real London. A couple of years ago I visited Toronto to see a relative in hospital. When I visited the hospital, most of the family was gathered around the bed of my uncle. After a while, somebody asked how I had traveled to the hospital and I answered that I had caught a bus from the hotel. Jaws dropped and the surprise would not have been greater if I had said that I had arrived on a camel or by hot-air balloon.

  • @Arachn4
    @Arachn47 ай бұрын

    As a former London resident I really enjoyed your video. Thanks!

  • @PRITZ060191
    @PRITZ0601917 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for this. I'm heading to London soon from India for my MBA at Ivey. Hope to have a great time!

  • @commorevpenguin9602
    @commorevpenguin96027 ай бұрын

    This was a very well made video especially for the channel size.

  • @dutchman7623
    @dutchman76237 ай бұрын

    Even your images show me that NJB was right on many things. I do not see anyone in wheelchairs or mobility scooters freely and safely moving around. Hardly any pedestrian anywhere. Narrow sidewalks next to 4, 6, lanes for cars, where people with a stroller cannot pass each other or cross the street easily. It all confirms NJB views. Yes, you can survive in such a place, but is it a joy to live there?

  • @BeHappyByBike
    @BeHappyByBike7 ай бұрын

    I feel the same way about Winnipeg. I think in the end, these less developed cities will catch up to European standards much quicker than big cities because they haven't already been oversaturated with car dependent infrastructure and the introduction of cycling and walkable infrastructure can more easily be introduced. I do have a car but I get to choose to bike for 85% of trips including to work. Wish me luck for the winter but I'll really try to stick to it.

  • @wayneslater1543
    @wayneslater15437 ай бұрын

    But I grew up in an area with lots of cars....how would you get around in a deep snow winter without a 4x4?

  • @nicthedoor

    @nicthedoor

    7 ай бұрын

    Clear the snow.

  • @nioerk1865
    @nioerk18657 ай бұрын

    Honestly the fact you had the courage to make this video as a person with 2k Subs compared to NJB with over a million speaks a lot. Well done with the video as well, great quality.

  • @johnwright7105
    @johnwright71057 ай бұрын

    I grew up in London and went back about 4 years ago for the first time in almost 15 years and it was significantly nicer in terms of the amount of bike lanes/ pathways. And much nicer in those terms than any city I've lived in in America since.

  • @rlwelch

    @rlwelch

    6 ай бұрын

    Great to hear! It's way more important to learn where things are heading, and look for ways to improve them, than to dogpile and make doomer generalizations on how bad things currently are

  • @carolinenagel7085
    @carolinenagel70857 ай бұрын

    A little over a year ago the street (about 300 meters or 330 yards long) where I live was turned into a bicycle street. This means that the max speed is 30 km/hr (20 miles/hr) and cars cannot overtake bicycles or other cars. Ever since it is much more quiet. Cars make a lot of noise. Noise makes people sick.

  • @thomaskalbfus2005
    @thomaskalbfus20057 ай бұрын

    Since its Canada, I'm assuming it snows a lot, so would you rather walk in this snow or drive?

  • @nicthedoor

    @nicthedoor

    7 ай бұрын

    Personally I'd rather bike.

  • @thomaskalbfus2005

    @thomaskalbfus2005

    7 ай бұрын

    @@nicthedoor In the snow? Do you like biking in snow, and in how deep snow do you bike? How do you like biking in ice? In some places it is hard just to stand on ice, and you want to bike on it?

  • @nicthedoor

    @nicthedoor

    7 ай бұрын

    @@thomaskalbfus2005 Studded tires do wonders in the ice. If you're interested, check out this video. kzread.info/dash/bejne/h5ysj5Rvd8mpcrg.html

  • @ATjfds
    @ATjfds6 ай бұрын

    The "Not Not Just Bikes" intro with the horn was so funny

  • @WhyGodby
    @WhyGodby7 ай бұрын

    could you make the trip to peterborough? ive always found it an incredibly confused city

  • @nicthedoor

    @nicthedoor

    7 ай бұрын

    I lived in Trenton but yet to visit Peterborough but I am curious to check it out . I am told that it's not that great of a place however.

  • @appa609
    @appa6097 ай бұрын

    Surprisingly, according to a 2014 Deloitte report, Toronto has an almost identical modal split of 70% car, 23% transit, 5% pedestrian, 1% bicycle.

  • @chillylagarto7728
    @chillylagarto7728Ай бұрын

    I really do think that Public transit should improve, at our current population of 500k we can definitely start thinking about a Metro system. Stops between the major North/South malls, the Hospitals, the College/University and Downtown. Would make it so much easier to make those cross city trips for events.

  • @ManunKanava
    @ManunKanava7 ай бұрын

    A good quality video! Nice to see otherone's opinion. Hope that NJB sees this.

  • @aliancemd
    @aliancemd6 ай бұрын

    I pressed automatically, thinking it’s NJB, based on thumbnail style, thinking “weird, missed this one”. I was open to see Jason being challenged, did not expect to basically confirm the same things with more data, well presented nonetheless(great job on that one). 11:49 I tried imagining myself at the end there, walking there and it literally gave me anxiety

  • @marknieuweboer8099
    @marknieuweboer80997 ай бұрын

    Actually your video confirms Jason's main point: improve step by step. Everyone likes Amsterdam as an example. Now I studied there for 7 years in the 1980s. So I can testify that the city came from far as it was much more uncomfortable and dangerous for cyclists. Amsterdam started a long term policy in the early 1970s. The key is pretty simple. Start with the old inner city and slowly, gradually expand to the suburbs. To me it seems that this is what London, Ont. is doing.

  • @renskedunnewold1995
    @renskedunnewold19957 ай бұрын

    Well I for one think it's nice that you want to defend your (adopted) hometown. Jason has criticized my hometown too, though not quite as harshly or often (I'm from Rotterdam). But I don't think he truly believes London to be the worst out there, he just uses it as a stand-in for all car-centered places in North America. And when I look at the footage you used, that is indeed what I see, even if _some_ effort is put in to make improvements. I still think London has a long way to go to start being a pleasant urban space, but I'll be cheering you on from across the Atlantic!

  • @LoicMat
    @LoicMat7 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the video, and congrats on the thumbnail, you had me fooled! But sorry, @9:27 someone having to go around a construction sign on the bke path, inches away from an 18-wheeler, is not my idea of "great separated bicyle paths"

  • @ricardoojm
    @ricardoojm5 ай бұрын

    hi. nice video. where is the pathway at 9:42?

  • @nicthedoor

    @nicthedoor

    5 ай бұрын

    That is along the Thames in Springbank park. West of Ronderland road I believe.

  • @tillhecameback
    @tillhecameback7 ай бұрын

    good insight, honestly, you should ask NJB to do a collab, not that one of you is right or wrong, but to hear you guys talk about the goods and bad about a cities transportation system would be invigorating.

  • @gadgetgirl02
    @gadgetgirl027 ай бұрын

    I lived in London for 12 years, and as far as I'm concerned the earth can swallow it up any time now (the people can leave before the earth swallowing part). And the poor urban planning is only one of those reasons.

  • @adee4151
    @adee41517 ай бұрын

    to sum it up, you basically agreed to every of Jason's points with the exception that a) it's not the worst, just average for North America (so sad), b) there are some people like you, who are/were brave enough to not be deterred by the hostile walk/bike environment, and c) you see a positive trend.

  • @sanderdeboer6034
    @sanderdeboer60347 ай бұрын

    When looking at the map I just realized that we past through (fake) London many years ago when we traveled from Toronto (where we started our Canada/USA trip) to Grand Rapids Michigan. Most of my family with Duch roots live in Toronto, Ottawa and Grand Rapids. I can’t remember going through London, probably because we traveled on the freeway. Or perhaps on the stroad which all look the same. My nieces wedding in Grand Rapids actually was celebrated on a stroad in Grand Rapids. I was 17 at the time, and it was really annoying to not go anywhere by myself. In the Netherlands where at the time you could not get a license until you were 18 years old, I was used to get around by bike and public transport from a very early age. And this was the first holiday in which I wasn’t able to truly go anywhere by myself when we stayed with family in suburbia in Grand Rapids, Ottawa and Toronto. When I was 16 we traveled to the UK and visited many cities including REAL London and my favorite Edinburgh during the festival. Where my parents and little sister did one thing, while I visited other sites on my own. Obviously if I was a young American I could travel by car from 16 years old. But it still feels very limiting when you come from Europe where I could travel on my own from around 6-7 years old. (Obviously first in the local neighborhood by bike and when I was a bit older by public transport) I do like the USA and Canada a lot, with beautiful nature (like Niagara Falls) and great cities like Chicago, Washington and my favorite NYC. (Didn’t like Toronto, but CN tower was nice). But I would NEVER want to live there, except maybe in NYC. Even though the houses my family lived in were large and spacious. However I do hope the USA will eventually change to a safer, cleaner and more civil level.

  • @hollylockhart9423
    @hollylockhart94237 ай бұрын

    10 years ago I moved to a smaller city for university and I found out the buses sucked. They were so bad. They were infrequent, most running on 30 or 60 minute schedules. Many routes stopped running at 6pm and all routes stopped at 11pm. Getting across town would require at least one transfer. There was no live tracking of when your bus would come, you had to go to a website to lookup the schedule of your bus noting of it was a weekend or evening hours since this would change the route number you were on.... And then I overheard another student get on the bus and say "I love these buses they are so much better than the ones back home".... Luckily for me, her friend asked her where she was from.... London Ontario. This city's buses have gotten better since then and I hope London's have as well.

  • @fortythreenorth2518
    @fortythreenorth25185 ай бұрын

    The traffic is bad here especially since we don't have any expressways crossing the city like our neighbours in Windsor and Kitchener. Our transit is improving slowly and problems with rail crossings are being resolved with pricey underpasses.

  • @MJUltra42
    @MJUltra426 ай бұрын

    I am a fake Londoner as well and when I first moved here I used to ride my bike all the time. After being hit by a car on 4 different occasions within a year and having my bike stolen twice I decided I won't do it anymore. Furthermore, I lived downtown and worked by Fanshawe college and because of the shitty public transit infrastructure I would walk to work an hour and 15 minutes a day to and from work. I now have a car and my daughters school is a 15 minute walk from my house but it's terrible, unsafe and loud so we just drive most of the time. So recently I tried to take up biking again and Jesus Christ that's a full and absolute no for me. Also I used to live in the apartment building you showed with the super parking lot and we used to drive across the street to see a movie cause it was safer and more convenient

  • @levienkon
    @levienkon7 ай бұрын

    I lived there for 2 years without a car, all my memories are like painful walking in the deep snow for 1.4km to the bus stop everyday.

  • @strawberry641
    @strawberry6417 ай бұрын

    very good video! surprised to see that it has under 1000 views! (at the time of me writing) Keep up the great work :]

  • @SpencerGatten

    @SpencerGatten

    7 ай бұрын

    looks like your surprise was warranted the video blew up!

  • @ironbolt2678
    @ironbolt26786 ай бұрын

    73% of all trips were done by car? Thats bad. I live in Brno, Czech republic, which is similar in size to Fake London. Even though I have a car and the country is still pretty car infested, I can manage 95% of my trips without a car, even travelling abroad (well countries are smaller here). Those trips I chose to use a car were mostly for fun I get from driving (I love driving) and some for convinience. If I didnt get a car from my grandparents, I wouldnt even thought of having one (because no money as a student), so I cant even imagine how I would manage to survive in Fake London

  • @user-xi6nk4xs4s
    @user-xi6nk4xs4s7 ай бұрын

    Appreciate your effort to give some more insight into London ONT. From Jason's use of the city, I didn't expect it to be as bad as his references suggest, as it's clear why he uses it as a counterpoint. I must say your footage doesn't make me optimistic. It's worse than a thought, or at least it appears to be. I haven't been "orange pilled", but as I'm Dutch and live in a small town in the Netherlands it's hard for me to compare with other cities in Canada, or North America as a whole. I remember our traffic infrastructure from the 1970s around my town and the neighboring municipalities, and even then it was way more friendly for other modes of transport than the car, than I'm seeing in your footage. I hope the improvement will continue, especially for the younger generations.

  • @martinmusli3044
    @martinmusli30447 ай бұрын

    Thanks mate. Insightful! keep it up!

  • @thefactspherefromportal2740
    @thefactspherefromportal27407 ай бұрын

    This was nice to watch. I went in thinking this was going to be a rant against NJB, but it's nice to see you both agree and disagree with his points and highlight how it could be better.

  • @iiSeeJay
    @iiSeeJay7 ай бұрын

    At 9:10 where were those 2 clips recorded?

  • @cedarbobedar7223
    @cedarbobedar72237 ай бұрын

    I watch NJB and I was in London (On) earlier this year on foot for several hours. I think the difference here is just perspective. If you're comparing London to a cycling haven in Europe, London looks like hell. If you're comparing it to a neighboring city however, it actually looks like a step up. The fundamental sprawled development pattern is still clear though and I think that's what NJB is relying on - nicer bike lanes and more buses are great, but it's still a disappointing compromise when what is really needed is more significant zoning changes and a heavy emphasis on infill development to change the scale from car-sized to people-sized. But yeah London's not that bad. As cites go around here, it's pretty nice. I mean if London is hell, you're gonna have to get creative to describe Hamilton lol

  • @capnkirk5528

    @capnkirk5528

    7 ай бұрын

    This was much better put than what I wrote. There is a housing crisis throughout North America, but a big part of that is the way McMansions have been sold to all of us as the epitome of success.

  • @bennicbennicbennic
    @bennicbennicbennic7 ай бұрын

    Hey from St. Thomas. Fake London isn’t great, but they are making moves that I am impressed by. Another good thing I’ll add, our cities are talking about interurban transit. With St. Thomas landing Amazon and VW, I hope it goes through soon. (Oh and London is also testing pedestrian priority signals, so that’s good).

  • @SpencerGatten

    @SpencerGatten

    7 ай бұрын

    would be huuuuuuuuge if they set something up like that between london and St thomas. I have friends who live in st thomas but no easy way of travelling between both. St thomas getting all the huge businesses it would be great if we could connect the two

  • @pbreedu
    @pbreedu7 ай бұрын

    Most of the cost associated with cars are fixed. You pay financing, depreciation, insurance and some maintenance regardless of how little or much you drive. To drive more just costs you a bit more in gas, maintenance and depreciation. Therefore, the incentive to drive less is not that high despite the fact that ownership costs are high.

  • @bbrolls
    @bbrolls7 ай бұрын

    I definetly agree what NJB has to say with the car dependecy in London but from hearing your take on it is better than other car dependent cities in north america. I would like the point out downtown London has so much potential to be such a great place since it very walkable and very urban place to walk through while having a few parks in the center near rivers but its flooded with crack heads and cars and parking lots. I defenitly agree London has potential to be a great city but I hope they take little steps improving bike lanes or create an lrt which is very needed for students and commuters in London

  • @andrelam9898
    @andrelam98987 ай бұрын

    I visited London ON a bunch in the late 1980's through the early 2000's for of all things a yearly Volvo car get together. I have many great memories of the visits, but sadly London suffered pretty much all the same issues that afflict so many North American cities. It was dense and walkable pre-car. Then lots of downtown buildings were torn down and turned into surface lots making for a somewhat empty down town. I live in Buffalo... boy did it take a long time to recover from the implosion of domestic steel production. Same exact issues as London. Thankfully there are people pushing hard to reshape the city and make it better for everyone. Lots of empty spots have been filled in over the last decade and a large a mount of former warehouse space has been converted to housing. There is a new energy down town that has not existed in a least 60 years. I hope London has been seeing the same. The suburbs generally are pretty awful for biking and walking, but there are a few bright spots. We can live in a place that is not pedestrian and cycling friendly and work to make it better 🙂

  • @lilybertine5673
    @lilybertine56737 ай бұрын

    Aw, that was a nice reply video. I liked the honesty. It sure doesn't look as bad as I pictured it, but still as a European, I prefer walkable and denser cities. That park looked pretty neat tho. There's definitely steps in the right direction.

  • @thedrusus
    @thedrusus7 ай бұрын

    The city is working on bringing up transportation numbers by "renewing infrastructure", which means taking away dedicated right turn lanes, lane reductions from 1 to 2 lanes, and all together slowing traffic down to a complete stall. Mid day it can easily take well over an hour to go from the university to the highway simply because there is so much endless congestion with no infrastructure to support this. I don't understand why the city's approach to urban sprawl is to try to disincentive driving by making less efficient and overall a brutal experience. No other city in Ontario has less efficient traffic, none.

  • @Coltoid
    @Coltoid7 ай бұрын

    One positive thing London does; apartment towers! They are everywhere even in many new suburban developments.

  • @nicthedoor

    @nicthedoor

    7 ай бұрын

    This. especially around the commercial hubs. which gives me hope about change that could happen.

  • @daiheadjai
    @daiheadjai7 ай бұрын

    Gotta say, one of the first things that made me click a NJB video was because I recognized London ON (having spent a year at UWO) and the GO Trains in the thumbnails. Good video - honestly, I feel like Markham ON would be a better example of poor planning, especially as you've got fantastic Mainstreet Unionville and Mainstreet Markham to juxtapose against the rest of the city.

  • @ageoflove1980
    @ageoflove19807 ай бұрын

    Why its so bad is because Fake London is not a suburb but a stand-alone city of 500,000. This would make it the 4th largest city of The Netherlands. And although its a stand-alone city its hardly in the middle of nowhere, since its only about 2 hours drive from either Toronto and Detroit plus a fair number of smaller towns in the immediate vicinity. Now all these facts combined make it an ideal candidate for mass transit and cycling: Its a decent sized city, relatively close to major urban centres in an overall faitly densely populated area. Climate is about the mildest youll find in Canada and its completely flat. If there would be cycling and public transportation, it should be here. There should be a large railway station with very frequent trains serving a Detroit-Chatham-London-Brantford-Hamilton-Mississauga-Toronto line, something like that. Since Toronto is only 117 miles away a bullit train connection would even make it viable to commute. And sitting back, enjoying a coffee and read the newspaper or just watch the landscape fly by is a lot better than being stuck in traffic. You could be in central Toronto within the hour this way. This station should be a large building with lots of shops and services and a large indoor bike parking. From this hub a network of high quality bike infrastructure should radiate out in to all directions. Further more, a large bus and tram station should be attached to the train station with lines radiating out the same way. All the important stops should of course also connect with the bike infrastructure and have parking facilities etc etc... The point is, you need to do all these things. Just adding a couple of bikelanes does nothing, because you have to offer the public a total traffic solution, the cycling is only a small part of this greater system. Once you got all this you can create high density housing and pedestrian streets and plazas around the most important hubs in the London network. This is now viable because you no longer have to handle all the car infrastructure to service the area. This will all reinforce the effect of the system, quickly turning these hub areas in the most desirable parts of the city. Because there is so much foot traffic from people switching from bike to tram, tram to train or to the high density housing, lots of shops and restaurants will want to locate to here. And before you know it youll have a European style neighborhood.

  • @Michael-kt6gi

    @Michael-kt6gi

    Ай бұрын

    Superb comment. Agree with everything you say 100%

  • @andrewmackie5110
    @andrewmackie51107 ай бұрын

    Well, now I want to swing by and check out some of these awesome trails.