This Tiny Island has Insane Traffic

Visit wren.co/start/notjustbikes to start offsetting your carbon emissions with Wren and get your first month for free!
If the US is too big to have good urbanism, then a small country must be great, right? Well, no. Believe it or not, the size of the country has nothing to do with how car-centric it will be.
NJB Live (my live-streaming channel): @njblive
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References & Further Reading
List of North American countries by GDP (nominal) per capita
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...
This video contains content licensed from Getty Images

Пікірлер: 2 200

  • @NotJustBikes
    @NotJustBikes Жыл бұрын

    Visit wren.co/start/notjustbikes to start offsetting your carbon emissions with Wren and get your first month for free! The best part of these comments are the people who try to guess the island and they're wrong ... but it really goes to show you that _so many islands are like this!_

  • @franciscoacevedo3036

    @franciscoacevedo3036

    Жыл бұрын

    Americans and Canadians: we can't make cities better because we're so big Russia: laughs in Saint Petersburg

  • @alvinleonardo1263

    @alvinleonardo1263

    Жыл бұрын

    I haven’t watched the video yet, but judging by the thumbnail. I won’t be Surprised if this is about Puerto Rico… Fuck me traffic is ass…

  • @franciscoacevedo3036

    @franciscoacevedo3036

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@alvinleonardo1263 se trata de nueva providencia en las Bahamas. Hubo un muchacho que pensó lo mismo sobre su país (Jamaica) yo pensaba que era en Canadá la islita

  • @jockiardsviscosclansoatlan8412

    @jockiardsviscosclansoatlan8412

    Жыл бұрын

    I made a life hack video to avoid traffic & encourage walking: kzread.info3rP16fPa1GI

  • @noel975

    @noel975

    Жыл бұрын

    Wait, if your first month is free, doesn’t that just mean you start a month later?

  • @CampingforCool41
    @CampingforCool41 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely insane to me that places that could be literal paradise on earth turn their cities into car hell.

  • @KleineJoop

    @KleineJoop

    Жыл бұрын

    The people dont know any better sadly

  • @PendulumCancel

    @PendulumCancel

    Жыл бұрын

    Folks in the Caribbean and Latin America can be pretty big Ameriboos in some ways and city design and transportation choices are some areas where we obsessively copy the US even when it doesn't make sense to do so.

  • @CampingforCool41

    @CampingforCool41

    Жыл бұрын

    @@KleineJoop sure, but the designers that came up with this mess should’ve known better

  • @melaniebluck6549

    @melaniebluck6549

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CampingforCool41 I suspect designers generally do know better, and that the problem lies with the local politicians that approve projects and the contractors that want to build them.

  • @LiamMcBride

    @LiamMcBride

    Жыл бұрын

    Car companies love to destroy cities

  • @EdgarEsc1972
    @EdgarEsc1972 Жыл бұрын

    The conversion of Nassau's main streets into one-way couplets really stood out to me, prioritizing the traffic moving through downtown versus making downtown the destination.

  • @lonestarr1490

    @lonestarr1490

    Жыл бұрын

    It could have been an appropriate measure if they'd simultaneously reduced the number of lanes on each of the streets and slowed the traffic itself to basically walking speed (which is not unheard of in other city centers). That would've diverted the through traffic to the ring road, making downtown a (walkable) destination. I'd argue it's not to late for that.

  • @edwardmiessner6502

    @edwardmiessner6502

    Жыл бұрын

    And all it's creating is blight.

  • @snigwithasword1284

    @snigwithasword1284

    Жыл бұрын

    Traffic engineers, left to their own devices, will recreate New Jersey, and your shopfront will be no more than a concrete barrier along the highway.

  • @pennyforyourthots

    @pennyforyourthots

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@snigwithasword1284 as a former resident of the Philadelphia area, I am legally required to say "Fuck new Jersey, go birds".

  • @Zalis116

    @Zalis116

    Жыл бұрын

    One-way pairs are more efficient for cars _and_ safer for pedestrians though, as traffic light timing makes groups of cars travel in "platoons" with long intervals of sparse traffic, there's less need for additional turn lanes at intersections, and non-drivers only need to check one direction when crossing. I'd take them over stroads any day.

  • @fernandofreitas6643
    @fernandofreitas6643 Жыл бұрын

    I'm in Boipeba now, a car free island in Brazil. It has 40% of Nassau/Amsterdam size and people get around by walking, bike, quadricycle and tractors-buses (literally a tractor carrying around 20 seated people). Everything being walkable has another advantage, people are concentrated in spots and leave 80% of the island for the preserved nature. Therefore there are a lot of animals and birds around! I asked one local about cars and he said there are only two...ambulances!

  • @myra0224

    @myra0224

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad there's still the bus-tractor because not everyone is physically able to walk or bike around to everywhere. Sadly here in Belgium, bus stops get scrapped, plans to get rid of train stations are also being made... How will the people using that get around then? By car, like I have to at home as well (because there's literally no public transport). In the city, they make the buses do a detour but I'm thinking of older people who go to the yearly market and can't walk too far... But why would cities and the country care? Because they obviously don't...

  • @theofficialj-squad9741
    @theofficialj-squad9741 Жыл бұрын

    As a local my frustrations finally feel heard. I have many European friends (most in the Netherlands in particular) and got very interested in city planning as a hobby, And could see (atleast on paper) how easy some simple things would be to implement. I was really taken aback by this video (in a good way) and it made so many parts of the island look really nice. (The Nassau Pronunciation bit was also a very nice addition) I look at simliar island nations some of even bigger sizes and see what they come up with and it just disappoints me that things here seem so lazy. (To play devil's advocate) There's a variety of things I could mention but none I feel are quite appropriate for a comment such as this. To everyone at Not Just Bikes, this video blew me away and as an overview on my country's traffic problems it was spot on.

  • @betula2137

    @betula2137

    Жыл бұрын

    That's such a great thing to get a spotlight on your country for something you're interested in

  • @stephenwaldron2748

    @stephenwaldron2748

    Жыл бұрын

    @@betula2137 I, a Barbadian, just stewing in envy lol 😂. But seriously, I could feel a lot of the issues mentioned here are relevant to much of the Caribbean as well and I was just happy that it was pointed out because it's something you don't hear nearly enough advocacy for in the region.

  • @Zorn446
    @Zorn446 Жыл бұрын

    11:55 This is actually something I noticed a while ago. Many people don't realize how cars work like an "atmosphere capsule". The feeling outside a car is always so different than inside a car. It is like the inside of a car is capsuled off from the real world. (Edit: I mean they literally are metal/glas capsules.)

  • @kalstonii

    @kalstonii

    Жыл бұрын

    I still ride with the windows down and the system up 😂

  • @seankilburn7200

    @seankilburn7200

    Жыл бұрын

    @@emiliopenayo4738 Great song

  • @MKRN98

    @MKRN98

    Жыл бұрын

    @@emiliopenayo4738 this song reminds me of Test Drive 6 racing game. I know a bit off topic but I had to say it lol

  • @anindrapratama

    @anindrapratama

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah you have to be autistic to actually notice the streets while in a car based on my experience

  • @DIYMaistor

    @DIYMaistor

    Жыл бұрын

    Us bikers call them "cages"

  • @RoboJules
    @RoboJules Жыл бұрын

    This reminds me of Costa Rica. It's a tiny little country only twice the size of Vancouver Island, but has nothing but winding country roads and highways. There's a national train service, but it really sucks. The result is that San Jose is an unwalkable parking lot when it has the potential to be one of the nicest metropolis in Central America.

  • @gardenstatePR

    @gardenstatePR

    Жыл бұрын

    Puerto Rico outside of San Juan sucks pretty bad too.

  • @franciscoacevedo3036

    @franciscoacevedo3036

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@gardenstatePR Costa Rica el tocayo de Borinquen :) ellos hasta tiene una rana verde con ojos rojos

  • @darioguerra3065

    @darioguerra3065

    Жыл бұрын

    Theres lots of public transportation via buses in the country, still puts canada and the us to shame.

  • @FeedMeSalt

    @FeedMeSalt

    Жыл бұрын

    My experience wasn't bothered by that. But, 50k usd literally bought a small town there so we kinda lived like royalty. That being said though, the public transportation system in Costa was ten times better then Canada. I could get across the entire nation in basically a day for 12$

  • @RoboJules

    @RoboJules

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darioguerra3065 The buses are pretty damn good to use traveling in between towns, but the traffic of the central valley makes them a bit of a nightmare around there, especially in San Jose. Also I find that the infrastructure is a bit lacking, with rarely any wayfinding, signage, information, or benches. When I'm in Costa Rica, most of the time I find myself flagging them down instead of using a bus stop. And instead of using a website or some informational poster, I'll often times finding myself asking a kind Tico for directions.

  • @changein3d
    @changein3d Жыл бұрын

    Crazy to imagine that an Island of this size could be literally personal-car free

  • @KleineJoop

    @KleineJoop

    Жыл бұрын

    *Should, and crazy that it isn't.

  • @craigpelton6134

    @craigpelton6134

    Жыл бұрын

    But if it was car-free, how could automakers sell cars there?/s

  • @jimihenrik11

    @jimihenrik11

    Жыл бұрын

    In Germany, there is a car-free island. It is much smaller, though. It is called Wangeroge and the only cars are firetrucks and policecars.

  • @s1Lence_au

    @s1Lence_au

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jimihenrik11Rottnest Island in Western Australia is also car-free (like most car-free islands there are some exceptions like police cars etc.)

  • @Bakazinha

    @Bakazinha

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jimihenrik11 Same in Denmark. But only the people who works there in the stores, lives on the island. It could be done in a much larger scale. Bahamas would be perfect for it

  • @Neliel97
    @Neliel97 Жыл бұрын

    Also, the topography seems perfect for public transport and biking, good weather and perfectly flat terrain

  • @QuesoCookies

    @QuesoCookies

    Жыл бұрын

    That's what gets me. Someone from Amsterdam says there are "some hills." That must mean they have a 1% grade, tops. I'm in Washington, US. Our hills are virtually vertical and people still bike around. You couldn't ask for a more ideal biking environment.

  • @finnaerix9837
    @finnaerix9837 Жыл бұрын

    I live in switzerland and until now I haven't realized how beautiful it is that when walking in the city, it doesn't look like the city is crumbling.

  • @mikedamat

    @mikedamat

    Жыл бұрын

    *Cries in American* T-T

  • @jamsya493

    @jamsya493

    Жыл бұрын

    Swiss here, Geneva could do some more work in my opinion but its nice that bike lanes are pretty much everywhere

  • @umjackd

    @umjackd

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jamsya493 Geneva isn't as nice as the other cities, but it's still leaps ahead of what you get used to even in North America.

  • @TheGrundigg

    @TheGrundigg

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jamsya493 But geneva is literally as car infested as it gets. It's got one of the worst traffic situations out of any places I lived in.

  • @krischezockt1916

    @krischezockt1916

    Жыл бұрын

    German here and this video inspired me to use my bike tomorrow to get to work instead of my car and feel happy about the opportunity 😁 really puts things into perspective

  • @JavaProgrammingify
    @JavaProgrammingify Жыл бұрын

    Maltese here. If you have the time, maybe you can do a similar video about Malta. It's also a tiny island with immense (and I mean immense) traffic congestion, shitty public transport, road widening to no avail, the usual shit show.

  • @Joesolo13

    @Joesolo13

    Жыл бұрын

    It's wild how badly car-centric mentality has infected even the places LEAST suited to their use. This really applies to dense cities in general, where NJB and other have covered the insanity of free car storage and infrastructure in general, but on islands where fuel is so expensive, and space is at such a premium, you still see this madness. You could bike across Malta in under 2 hours pretty easily, it's pretty crazy it's not prioritized more.

  • @NotJustBikes

    @NotJustBikes

    Жыл бұрын

    I'll get to Malta some day, but first I need to visit a few places that _aren't_ full of cars. :)

  • @JavaProgrammingify

    @JavaProgrammingify

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Joesolo13 You're right. The situation is beyond depressing on the island. I'm not exaggerating. People here have to leave their house at least by 6AM to be sure to arrive to work on time at 8AM by car. The average commute distance is around 6km. By bus it's even worse, if it arrives.

  • @JavaProgrammingify

    @JavaProgrammingify

    Жыл бұрын

    @@NotJustBikes Thanks for the comment. Hope you enjoy your visit. The island is beautiful but cars unfortunately ruin a big part of the experience. The government has absolutely no plans on how to tackle the issue and it just keeps getting worse with every year that passes.

  • @bogdangiusca7431

    @bogdangiusca7431

    Жыл бұрын

    When I read the title I immediately thought about Malta.

  • @astupidlylongnamethatstoolong
    @astupidlylongnamethatstoolong Жыл бұрын

    As someone who started recently driving in Malaysia (I still walk and take public transit if its faster or better for my sanity), it is absolutely true you don't notice shit going around you in your car. I have walked to work and back to home before. The road I take is 30 minutes long by feet. By car is 5 minutes. Same route, yet I noticed new and old businesses going in and out only by walking. It is definitely harder to notice if you're driving as well, you're more concerned about the cars around you than the business next to you going out.

  • @FF-ch9nr

    @FF-ch9nr

    Жыл бұрын

    hows traffic/public transport in Malaysia compared to other places you’ve been?

  • @zavdon242
    @zavdon242 Жыл бұрын

    Bahamian Local here. Thank you sir for pointing this stuff out. Our City planning was basically non existent Nassau modernized as the U.S did the idea of modernization was "pave roads" and we ended up with this mess. We have had proposals to organize the Jitneys and better urban designing but these issues aren't a priority for our leaders. Creating more tourism jobs via foreign investment is their favorite pass time.

  • @WouterNederstigt
    @WouterNederstigt Жыл бұрын

    People really underestimate how much prosperity a switch away from car dependency can bring. Especially a place like the bahama's which (i assume) has to import all its gasoline and cars. Imagine a shift away from cars there, it would mean drastically reduced imports of gasoline, cars and car parts, all the while reaping large health benefits due to the decrease in pollution and an increase in exercise rates

  • @beep5406

    @beep5406

    Жыл бұрын

    Will lower how much space is needed to be given over to cars, reduce the cost of road Matinance, lower noise pollution and less stress in commuting.

  • @PhotonBeast

    @PhotonBeast

    Жыл бұрын

    Totally; even outside those large scale benefits, on the personal level, people aren't spending 15K dollars every couple of years for a (used) car or more for a new... and HAVING to spend that kind of money... and having that car sit in a parking space for 80% of the time.

  • @liam3284

    @liam3284

    Жыл бұрын

    Most of the cars will be imported too, and that bill adds up quickly.

  • @nigelnecroz7028

    @nigelnecroz7028

    Жыл бұрын

    Import on cars especially are high as well

  • @nigelnecroz7028

    @nigelnecroz7028

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hardyorange Getting a fresh car here is basically a dream. Most of them have to be second hand or refurbish to get them imported even reasonably with tax

  • @marionpaulodagang9980
    @marionpaulodagang9980 Жыл бұрын

    Having goosebumps seeing profound similarities between the problems of Bahamas Jitneys and Philippine Jeepneys 😔

  • @NotJustBikes

    @NotJustBikes

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely! I've been to the Philippines, and I was also reminded of the Jeepneys. Though for what it's worth, the Jeepneys look _way_ more interesting! :) Thanks for the Super Thanks!

  • @reyalonsagay

    @reyalonsagay

    Жыл бұрын

    @@NotJustBikesHi. I hope you can make a video about my country’s current transportation system in the near future.

  • @TheExpressionless1

    @TheExpressionless1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@NotJustBikes Yeah a video on the Philippines would be amazing

  • @pomtubes1205

    @pomtubes1205

    Жыл бұрын

    @@NotJustBikes yeah, ph jeepneys have their own problems, but wht i can say is A. It's not JUST the jeepney but the entire system is stupid. (Look at any road in Manila) B. When did the urban planners (aka government) actually took the time to think about the experience of the average people FIRST AND FOREMOST? C. Jeepneys are exclusive in the ph, and is cleary a symbol. It shoudn't be removed by force (like what they're doing now) but obviously to help modernise the vehicle without losing its "identity".

  • @emdivine

    @emdivine

    Жыл бұрын

    had a little fun to get my perspective: went to Wolfram Alpha and typed in "250 philippino money in nok" to get numbers I understand and it left notes correcting my spelling to "filipino", interpreted that to Philippine Pesos and then calculated it's ~50 Norwegian Kroner >just me being impressed with technology

  • @Melon623
    @Melon623 Жыл бұрын

    Driving is a bit of a status symbol in many of these small countries/islands. You can at least give off the impression that you've "made it" if you have a car. Even in places like the UK, USA everyone's kind of subject to the "do you own a car" stigma, like the famous one about needing to have a car otherwise a potential suitor could be potentially put off if travelled by bus or bike.

  • @davidty2006

    @davidty2006

    Жыл бұрын

    Britain has been turning more like the US. All be it with the ability to walk.

  • @abone2pick

    @abone2pick

    Жыл бұрын

    A bit??😂

  • @lisat9707

    @lisat9707

    Жыл бұрын

    We need to flip it to i have a Awsome bike that costs more then most peoples cars. Make the bike a status symbol that you pay for the logo of😂

  • @mgjk

    @mgjk

    Жыл бұрын

    in Canada, a car for many people is a status symbol and their first personal freedom. 16 years old, you can't bring your girlfriend home, but if you have a car... it's not just about transportation, it's a private room on wheels.

  • @lilbtyt7928

    @lilbtyt7928

    Жыл бұрын

    Hmm yeah I can see that with friends so I can see it there. A car is. A lot of people second biggest purchases.

  • @anonymm3152
    @anonymm3152 Жыл бұрын

    This strongly reminds me of Cyprus. We rented some bikes to try to see a bit more of the island than the hotel, and it felt like a miracle that we returned alive. The biking infrastructure was practically non-existent.

  • @kugul1683
    @kugul1683 Жыл бұрын

    This reminds me a lot of where my grandfather lives in Australia: Beautiful weather, coastal mild climate but infrastructure dedicated to cars

  • @trekswithnick

    @trekswithnick

    Жыл бұрын

    As an Australian citizen, I can confirm this

  • @childrenovmen

    @childrenovmen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@trekswithnick As an Australian resident (from Europe) I can also confirm this and its incredibly sad. I live in the closest city to Sydney, officially a "bike city" according to UCI, that has one commuting bike route (great, if you live, or your destination, is literally on that one path) and a large recreational bike path along the coast. We have a highway that literally separates the city in 2 and has very few crossing points, and multiple stroads. To me its insane how much Australian traffic engineers take inspiration from Americas. We also have the problem of big trucks and fast and furious wannabes to deal with. Car Culture is big in Australia, especially with boomers.

  • @CityLifeinAmerica

    @CityLifeinAmerica

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yeetusdeletus9 GM really screwed everyone but Europe :(.

  • @KleineJoop

    @KleineJoop

    Жыл бұрын

    @@turkeytrac1 I must suffer permanently from heat stroke then. It has all to do with cardiovascular capacity/fitness, i like to cycle and rowing indoors in winter, my work is also active (production) but my heart(rate) doesnt care lol/no sweat. I understand this isnt the norm/might be hard to grasp, especially for an American. Anyway, enjoy you retirement. Try cycling, foremost because its fun ;)

  • @trekswithnick

    @trekswithnick

    Жыл бұрын

    @@childrenovmen I lived in three cities in Australia and ironically the least car dependent of the three cities that I used to live in is Brisbane

  • @ure2grit931
    @ure2grit931 Жыл бұрын

    Bahamian here! So glad you featured us! What frustrates me is when I mention bikes to people they balk at the idea saying it's "too hot" to use bikes on this small island!

  • @kitmittens2486

    @kitmittens2486

    Жыл бұрын

    i think its a great idea in concept but i feel like I'll sweat my deodorant off before i reach my destination 😂 i guess theoretically i could just carry some with me

  • @lisat9707

    @lisat9707

    Жыл бұрын

    Too hot too cold... They forget WIND from biking. Sooo nice! Oh and Ebikes take care of the Too hot but😅

  • @kitmittens2486

    @kitmittens2486

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lisat9707 i didnt think of that. its something to look into then, thanks :]

  • @milliedragon4418

    @milliedragon4418

    Жыл бұрын

    Which is funny biking is cooler than walking. Cooler if you don't have a car with air conditioning. Having a car is only cool when you air conditioning. Cars are literally ovens, you can cook an egg if it's hot enough on the surface, die of heat without a window crack or air conditioning. I grew up in the deep South USA, it's humid to and very hot in the summer. And it's hell w/o air conditioning. I always try get up early in the morning (summer time only), and late at night are the best time do anything bc that's coolest time of day

  • @antb533

    @antb533

    Жыл бұрын

    e bikes are pretty good sweat reducers.

  • @noodlenomnom6746
    @noodlenomnom6746 Жыл бұрын

    It would be really interesting if you investigated Guam. It's become a car dependent wasteland despite the fact that it only takes an hour to drive around the whole island. It's very similar to the Bahamas where the resorts are all well developed areas but the local areas are a bit run down. Im really interested in doing a redesign of Guam as my thesis for School. I think it has a very interesting history and would be a fun study.

  • @jordangibson4270
    @jordangibson4270 Жыл бұрын

    i've lived in new providence my entire life, and i started watching your videos BECAUSE i was wondering how cities fare with biking infrastructure. this is just a wild glitch in the matrix moment for me. i really love how you articulate everything you want to say, and I think you've voiced a LOT of people's opinions. i agree that it would be so so so easy to just fix things. you genuinely inspired me to study urban planning. kudos to you man, you're awesome!!!!

  • @dustinm2717
    @dustinm2717 Жыл бұрын

    the one down side to these videos, is just how much more aware of the depressing reality of living in suburbia (in my case, rural prairie canada) and how much worse it makes having knowledge that where you're at is only doubling down on car dependency

  • @dopaminecloud

    @dopaminecloud

    Жыл бұрын

    All things of any worth in life will make you suffer once you care. But passion is the willingness to suffer for what you care about.

  • @pranaym3859

    @pranaym3859

    Жыл бұрын

    After moving to North America, I realized why mass shootings are common in the US It's depressing here I live in a city with half million population but it feels like a ghost town, no human in sight except for the buildings and cars

  • @henryreturns1397

    @henryreturns1397

    Жыл бұрын

    Canada we rely so much on cars. Due to our "long distance roads" cars are needed due to how bad the public system is. And even on bike , on winter is not even an option due to the harsh snow and cold weather.

  • @alexlight1157

    @alexlight1157

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in prairie Canada too and my little city is building lots of multi-use pathways and we're finally getting real protected bike lanes this year If you have the time privilege you should really get involved in municipal politics

  • @ichijofestival2576

    @ichijofestival2576

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alexlight1157 That's really a big piece of it. Actually say these things who can actually do something about it. Local governments don't take input from KZread comment sections.

  • @joostschrier9507
    @joostschrier9507 Жыл бұрын

    I live in Curaçao, a Dutch Caribbean island in the Southern Caribbean - next to Aruba, and I recognize many of the Bahamian challenges you mention. We have a smaller version of Jitneys here as well, which we call Buses, but we also have the larger buses with scheduled routes, which we call Konvois, and regrettably the Downs-Thomson Paradox and the hub-and-spoke model for the bus routes are alive and well in Curaçao. Some of the questions you have, you would probably have here as well. Like your question about why the weather doesn't prompt people to take the bike to work. In Curaçao (similar situation and even less rain than in The Bahamas) there are a couple of reasons for this: a) bikes don't have AC and you'll be drenched with sweat before you arrive at work with a bike, b) women here are terrified of their hair getting messed up (generalization, I know, but not less true) and sweat plus hard winds will make short work of your carefully manicured and straightened coupe, c) "if you're riding a bike then you must be poor because you obviously can't afford a car" and there's nothing worse than people thinking you're poor, d) and of course, just as you show for the Bahamas, it's death-defyingly dangerous to ride a bike in a car-centric country. The thing about not wanting to be perceived as poor, influences the willingness to take public transport as well. I remember when I came to Curacao I didn't have a drivers' license. Since I didn't need one in Utrecht and it's prohibitively expensive in The Netherlands I never got one. So I had to get one here (which is super cheap and easy in comparison) but my then-employer didn't allow me to take public transport to get to work because it would reflect badly on the company. "If one of the company's managers is taking public transport, then he must not earn enough to afford a car, so the company must be doing badly" was the reasoning the employer wanted to avoid. So one of my colleagues had to take a 30-minute detour every morning and afternoon to traffic me to- and from work until I got my license... If you ever decide to come vacation in Curacao (it's a popular destination for Dutch tourists, multiple flights per day from Schiphol ;-) ) and you'd like to do a video here as well, please hmu. I can get you in touch with everyone connected to local public transport. Your videos are pretty well known here.

  • @Liloi9667

    @Liloi9667

    Жыл бұрын

    nos tin e mesun problema na aruba y mi no por mas LMFAO

  • @kattkatt744

    @kattkatt744

    Жыл бұрын

    The social stigma is a real thing, but personally I have got to say that the sweat thing is the same same as the rain or winter excuse. Southern Japan is super humid and warm, basically subtropical and still bicycles are fairly popular. You do not need to bicycle super fast and as with all other exercise as you get better at it you sweat less because your body doesn't feel excerted by the activity.

  • @joostschrier9507

    @joostschrier9507

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Liloi9667 Al menos Aruba ta plat manera Hulanda... ;-)

  • @joostschrier9507

    @joostschrier9507

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kattkatt744 true, it is an excuse and if they'd build the infrastructure to properly support riding a bike places then people will find a way to deal with it. I remember from back in The Netherlands I would also just take the bus instead of my bike if it rained. Likewise I would love to use a bike here to get (small) groceries or to go to the beach, and use the car or a bus to get to work so I wouldn't have to sweat up a suit.

  • @ianhomerpura8937

    @ianhomerpura8937

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kattkatt744 especially Naha, and to some degree, Kagoshima.

  • @Kayla-uu4zc
    @Kayla-uu4zc Жыл бұрын

    I think the stigma around public transportation is so weird. I wish I lived a town that offered it. When I have to go into work, I either ride my bike( currently out of commission because of crappy roads) or electric scooters. I recently had a colleague of mine who found out that I don't have a car and offered me unlimited rides. I appreciate her. Thank you, Alex! Anyway, I have used every form offered and I have never met someone who hasn't assumed I had a car then took pity on me when they realized didn't!

  • @jodyssey9921

    @jodyssey9921

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't take rides very often, if I wanted to ride around in cars I'd get one I always say. I took 2 rides this winter because they took the bus off the road and there was too much traffic for me to safely ride my scooter home in the snow. Even if someone offered to pick me up everyday I would say no. Not judging you, just stating my own position. When I was a kid as a family we drove across Canada several times cooped up in a car or truck. Those trips were the biggest influence on my decision to not drive as an adult, I just hate being in the goddamn things. 😂

  • @tomhoots

    @tomhoots

    Жыл бұрын

    No worries, just sit or stand there next to all of the other people waiting for the bus as they smoke as much as they possibly can before it arrives, then sit amongst them, paying attention to the guy behind you who's talking to his friend about "how he killed a guy." And so on. "You meet the nicest people on the bus!" Well, no. You get home at the end of the day smelling like you spent all day in a bar, and thankful that you lived to make it home one more day.

  • @Stellar001100

    @Stellar001100

    Жыл бұрын

    Depends on where you are really. Having experienced Japanese public transportation, it's set a high bar for me. Coming back to the US, where I live the homeless loiter around the trolley and bus stops, sometimes even in the trolley themselves. There has been several instances where the homeless have become violent.

  • @ng.tr.s.p.1254

    @ng.tr.s.p.1254

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tomhoots Well of course when you live in the Mad Max universe, you'll think car hell is just like heaven. 🤡

  • @claudiajuarez5429
    @claudiajuarez5429 Жыл бұрын

    00:34 Packed the cat.

  • @fernanluis176
    @fernanluis176 Жыл бұрын

    This reminds me of how car centric urbanism has ruined Puerto Rico. Each city has been suburbanized and most downtown areas are decaying. Public transit is non existant unless you’re in the metro area. Its really sad considering the island was really different in the 50’s on an urbanism scale. I think a lot of beauty has been lost

  • @firstEmperorAugustus

    @firstEmperorAugustus

    Жыл бұрын

    It's all the old boomers moving there

  • @fernanluis176

    @fernanluis176

    Жыл бұрын

    @@firstEmperorAugustus it’s a lot of factors. I’ve lived here my hole life. Our colonial status and corrupt government are no help either

  • @gabrielguihurt3623

    @gabrielguihurt3623

    Жыл бұрын

    So many urban centers in the metro area have been abandoned due to lack of proper infrastructure support too. I can understand using motorized vehicles when you're traversing the mountains due to the steep and curvy hills, but the metropolitan area has no excuse for being so car centric. Puerto Rico having a rail system in the early 1900's and then being infected with the american car fever is another item on the long list of tragedies the American South has gone through due to the heavy US influence.

  • @dannyornelas9914

    @dannyornelas9914

    Жыл бұрын

    The same thing happened to Hawaii. It’s also weird seeing indigenous NIMBY’s who see multifamily developments as “against their culture”. Thus why Hawaii has some of the strictest zoning laws in the country.

  • @jadinerhine

    @jadinerhine

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fernanluis176 Bingo.

  • @setyourhandlex
    @setyourhandlex Жыл бұрын

    The things you notice about your city when walking are stark and immediate. A car really just turns a city into a series of disconnected destinations.

  • @Ingestedbanjo

    @Ingestedbanjo

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep, car dependency is definitely a huge reason why I find it really hard to find Guernsey (a channel island in the UK) nostalgic, despite visiting relatives there every year in my childhood. Another big reason is the offshore banking industry that has demolished a lot of the quaint buildings along the shorefront and turned them into huge glass and concrete cubes. But yeah, from what I've heard, there are more cars on Guernsey than there are permanent residents.

  • @DFX4509B
    @DFX4509B Жыл бұрын

    Bahamas in ads: paradise. Bahamas in reality: this vid.

  • @codymessick7745
    @codymessick7745 Жыл бұрын

    This is so topical for me! I've been in south florida for 3 weeks now helping take care of my father in law while he's in home hospice treatment, and while I have spent quite a bit of time in Miami, this is the first time I've lived down here. It's fascinating to me how leaving the house at all means that I have to drive on 6 lane divided roads to strip malls with giant parking lots. With how small this area is in landmass and how packed in people are, the density and planning are truly awful. The weather is legitimately perfect, but it's completely ruined by how much of a headache getting anywhere can be. Oh and get this - When I first got down here with my wife, my father in law was still in the hospital and we stayed in a condo complex that also had some units available as long term hotel rooms. My wife decided to walk out to the main road to buy some supplies at a drug store. She walked the entire perimeter of the property and there was not a single access point or gate for a person on foot to enter or leave the premises. You literally have to have a car in order to trip the sensor and the automatic gate to open. She had to wait for a car to come through and slip out of the gate after them. What??

  • @lemonofish869
    @lemonofish869 Жыл бұрын

    I'm surprised you didn't visit the Dutch territories in the Caribbean, although being autonomous regions their urban planning is similar to the rest of America and nothing like the European part of the Netherlands.

  • @kattkatt744

    @kattkatt744

    Жыл бұрын

    He did go to a town called Nassau though, so next best I guess?

  • @JasperJanssen

    @JasperJanssen

    Жыл бұрын

    The place is called Nassau, it doesn’t get more Dutch than that.

  • @maxdenbreejen9844

    @maxdenbreejen9844

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Liloi9667 He's Canadian.

  • @JAG214

    @JAG214

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@maxdenbreejen9844 Correct

  • @Liloi9667

    @Liloi9667

    Жыл бұрын

    @@maxdenbreejen9844 HES CANADIAN?? BRO GOODBYE IM SO DUMB LMFAOOOOO he in the ok then !!!

  • @emptyspace2240
    @emptyspace2240 Жыл бұрын

    This makes me realize how lucky I am to live in a town that actually allows me to use a bike to get to places. Edit: Thanks for the likes, everyone!

  • @ivanristic5512

    @ivanristic5512

    Жыл бұрын

    I can only imagine how great it would be to ride bicycles here in dallas😅, and what is this heaven you live in called?

  • @vijfsnippervijf

    @vijfsnippervijf

    Жыл бұрын

    🚲🚲🚲😌

  • @fjp3305

    @fjp3305

    Жыл бұрын

    The bike is the best mean of transportation for short distances.

  • @Azurethewolf168

    @Azurethewolf168

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fjp3305 you could also walk tho

  • @Azurethewolf168

    @Azurethewolf168

    Жыл бұрын

    This comment makes me realize how unlucky I am to live in a city that allows me to only use a car to get to places.

  • @ennemuk
    @ennemuk Жыл бұрын

    I lived on Aruba for a while and this video captured the situation there exactly. The American tourists seem to have brought their infrastructure with them 🙃 it was impossible to bike anywhere, barely any public transport and walking was incredibly unsafe. Our friends were always shocked and insisted on driving us home when they found out we walked somewhere...

  • @estebanfraticelli2978
    @estebanfraticelli2978 Жыл бұрын

    This same thing happens in Puerto Rico. In the 40s, our zoning laws were made identical to the US's laws, so we have the same stroads and strip malls and unwalkable cities. There's also massive massive urban sprawl, there's always a housing development around the corner. Only good thing is we have lots of mountains so the open spaces have a nice backdrop.

  • @LouisSubearth

    @LouisSubearth

    Жыл бұрын

    Also, the downtowns are very walkable because of the Spanish urban planning that built them, so a good public transportation system can revitalize them, since parking has been the biggest hurdle for people to come shop downtown instead of malls and shopping centers in the suburbs.

  • @estebanfraticelli2978

    @estebanfraticelli2978

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LouisSubearth Yes, and so far, at least Bayamón has an active redensification project in their downtown, problem is they don't have many businesses or homes there so I almost never see foot traffic.

  • @mogfy

    @mogfy

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly how NJB explains it. Every town has a stroad but every town as a town center. We need to change the zoning and the car culture mentally but it necessary because we’re an island not a continent and we’re running out of space with all the urban sprawling. If nothing gets done, there will be no nature to enjoy just malls, stroads and suburban communities.

  • @grennoin3108
    @grennoin3108 Жыл бұрын

    This reminds me of the town I was born in, as a kid I noticed that the shops alongside the main road went out of business and changed at least every year or so, but those in the inner city, pedestrian area, those stayed in business way longer. When a literal kid riding a bus every other week can notice how car traffic doesn't help businesses like pedestrian traffic does, how can adults be puzzled over this for so many decades?

  • @Notmyname1593

    @Notmyname1593

    Жыл бұрын

    I suspect the decision making officials are driving cars so they won`t notice such things.

  • @garryferrington811

    @garryferrington811

    Жыл бұрын

    It's all about the money. Owning and driving a car keeps people spending a huge portion of their money.

  • @blanco7726

    @blanco7726

    Жыл бұрын

    Ok but main roads are full of busses and who takes the bus has to walk home from the bus stop. If the shops are closing down, unfortunately that area is just terrible for business, or the businesses cant figure out a way. You wont see Mcdonalds closing down f.ex they will get their clients be it thru cars or busses.

  • @thesenamesaretaken

    @thesenamesaretaken

    Жыл бұрын

    @@blanco7726 yeah the area is terrible for business. Because there's no foot traffic

  • @blanco7726

    @blanco7726

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thesenamesaretaken forgot another reason, theres no houses. Main road with just businesses has no foot traffic except clients. Main road with houses and businesses has more foot traffic. I can give you hundreds of examples that I’ve seen across Belgium, France, Luxembourg, Spain, England where a road functions as main commercial street, traffic artery and still residential all along the street.

  • @miketeeveedub5779
    @miketeeveedub5779 Жыл бұрын

    I stopped commute biking 10 years ago in my western Canadian city because it simply became too dangerous to do so. Traffic congestion has doubled since then. I look at my bikes hanging in the garage with a profound sadness every time I pass them to get to my car. Wise men say: "we can never go back." So true...

  • @bearcubdaycare

    @bearcubdaycare

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@TheTroyc1982 I bicycle commuted through the stop and go traffic of the drop off/pick up zone of South Terminal of Gatwick Airport, at the time a major international airport. About as congested as you can get, but never quite felt safe.

  • @sirjmo

    @sirjmo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheTroyc1982 unless congested traffic average speed is slower than an elderly on a bike, probably not. It needs to be normal to be safe and it wont be normal till cars are no longer the fastest.

  • @liamness

    @liamness

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@TheTroyc1982Depends if it's stop-start traffic or just solid congestion.

  • @dntthe88

    @dntthe88

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@TheTroyc1982 People lose focus a lot in congested traffic due to frustration and boredom

  • @Cobalt985

    @Cobalt985

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheTroyc1982 No, those NYC fixie riders are simply insane. Anything can happen, a sudden lane change or a door opening (this does happen!) would fuck you.

  • @wowshiii4519
    @wowshiii4519 Жыл бұрын

    Watching this channel convinced me to start riding my bike to school. I live about a mile from my school and I thought it would be useful to help keep me in shape not to mention I enjoy cycling. My town is car centric but I ride mainly along residential streets so I manage. When I started riding my bike my friends kept asking me why I would ride my bike instead of taking my car because yes I do own a car. Almost everyone I knew asked me this question. Maybe I'm the weird one for wanting to cycle in a relatively car centric area but it's less than a mile of mainly residential streets. I think it's more down to the car first culture here in the US.

  • @lisat9707

    @lisat9707

    Жыл бұрын

    I get that question allot. I just say. Biking is FUN! plus no parking fees😅.

  • @danielp709

    @danielp709

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for actually giving your situation some thought. So many here in the US just assume a car is the only way to get around. It's not.

  • @enjoyslearningandtravel7957

    @enjoyslearningandtravel7957

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lisat9707 yeah, biking is fun, but also an easy way to keep healthy and fit

  • @jodyssey9921

    @jodyssey9921

    Жыл бұрын

    I bet your friends complain about the price of gas but never make the connection.😂

  • @EmmaVZ

    @EmmaVZ

    Жыл бұрын

    Less than a mile? It's crazy to me, a Dutchy, that anyone would take the car to cover such a tiny distance. Good for you that you cycle it now! It'll improve your mental health as well, and costs less!

  • @gweegoop7781
    @gweegoop7781 Жыл бұрын

    Respect for shoehorning a Bahamian vacation into your urbanist content.

  • @ure2grit931

    @ure2grit931

    Жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't even call it shoehorning because our road design is a fail

  • @daniberrieful
    @daniberrieful Жыл бұрын

    I saw Island and immediately thought "Jamaica". Traffic is soooooo bad. We have the things Urbanist wants, mixused development, lax zoning laws, we have buses and frequent bus-like taxi cars. But still we have so many cars and traffic is AWFUL. One thing that alot of people miss in the Urbanism talks is personal safety. Being able to walk everywhere also means you feel safe walking. It's one of the reasons people have cars. Criminals hinder walkable neighborhoods. You have people that can walk 10 mins to the grocery store and they'll still drive once it gets dark they are scared to walk home. Also you mentioned a dedicated lane Tried that in Jamaica, cars and regularly drive in the bus lane when it was free and they were stuck in traffic. You need your people on board when you set up plans. Cars are also a social status. Riding a bike or taking the bus is seen as something for the poor. The first thing most people do when getting a job is buy a car (10% auto loan). Even while still living with family etc people 1st buy a car.

  • @franciscoacevedo3036

    @franciscoacevedo3036

    Жыл бұрын

    Americans and Canadians: we can't make cities better because we're so big Russia: laughs in Saint Petersburg

  • @Greentrees60

    @Greentrees60

    Жыл бұрын

    People driving in the bus lane sounds like a great opportunity for government revenue...

  • @Yorick257

    @Yorick257

    Жыл бұрын

    It seems that taking a free dedicated bus lane is something people will do everywhere. In Tallinn (Estonia, Europe), dedicated bus lanes are filled with cars during rush hour. The only "nice" thing I noticed is that bus drivers are now more aggressive. Taking shortcuts and cutting in. But, sadly, they have to do it just to be even remotely on time. I guess the best solution is to introduce truly dedicated lanes, with separators. Then cars will either have to follow the bus path precisely (which most drivers who take the lane don't actually want) or not take it at all.

  • @Yorick257

    @Yorick257

    Жыл бұрын

    @@franciscoacevedo3036 more like "laughs in Moscow" with a population bigger than NY or London

  • @ianhomerpura8937

    @ianhomerpura8937

    Жыл бұрын

    Given that Jamaica has one of the oldest railway networks in the world, opened in 1845, it would be such a waste not to modernise and utilise it.

  • @MrCyclist
    @MrCyclist Жыл бұрын

    I am a cyclist both commuting and recreational in Toronto., Canada A Jamaican lady I know once asked my to visit her island. I reported that Jamaica has no safe cycling infrastructure and was way too hot and the drivers have no patience for bikes. She agreed and understood. She knows I visit Italy often and that I will only go to Europe to bike. PS . Cycling in developing countries is seen as for poor people so most avoid it. This was said to me from some one from Sri Lanka now living in Toronto.

  • @lisat9707

    @lisat9707

    Жыл бұрын

    Ya I understand that. It is starting to be like that here (except for fitness buffs) too except with Ebikes I'm beginning to see a bit of a shift. Not much of one yet but it's starting

  • @tijn001

    @tijn001

    Жыл бұрын

    Italy is a beautiful country to cycle in, but from my experience, unless on dedicated trails its not a pleasant place to bike. Drivers are impatient and do not care about your position as a vulnerable road user. Very little dedicated cycling infrastructure on top of that

  • @debbiehenri345

    @debbiehenri345

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in Scotland and the car is definitely king here. I do a lot of walking and if I meet another person out walking or cycling, 95 times out of a 100 they're English or European.

  • @KleineJoop

    @KleineJoop

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tijn001 Yeah, i've heard Spain is much better. Different culture/people.

  • @snigwithasword1284

    @snigwithasword1284

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, the Bahamas might be the perfect temperature for walking but if I'm cycling hard my favorite weather is ~40-50° Frankenstein (~7°C). I imagine you have to bike slow to stay comfortable in that weather, it's a tricky balance though with how much the wind cools you. Stopping suddenly to wait for traffic, if you've just been sprinting to keep up with traffic is especially miserable.

  • @Dpond2k2
    @Dpond2k2 Жыл бұрын

    I loved everything about this video! I'm Caribbean myself and this definitely highlights how difficult it can be to live car-free in the Caribbean (and many other "tourist" destinations in the Americas).

  • @stephenwaldron2748
    @stephenwaldron2748 Жыл бұрын

    I'm from the southern Caribbean (Barbados), and I can relate to this video heavily. The traffic gets so bad on peak hours especially during school time, it can take up to 2 hours to travel 4 - 5k (a 9min drive acc. Google maps) into Bridgetown. Similar to the Bahamas, we have a public transit system run by multiple operators, however ours has three tiers of public service vehicles: - "buses" operated by the government-owned company, - "minibuses", which are basically the same as the _jitnees(?)_ but a bit larger, and these are mostly private, - "ZRs" (route taxis) or "vans", also mostly privately owned. The fare is $3.50 (U$1.75), but you can get change on most PSVs. These all get stuck in the traffic, though the privately-owned vehicles will often go off-route to avoid it, but that is technically illegal. Speaking of illegal, the super competitive nature, especially on over-serviced routes causes a lot of speeding, racing, and just general reckless driving, which of course isn't safe whatsoever and very illegal. People here also stop PSVs wherever, though again, illegal. Of course the MoT's solution is stricter uniform/dress codes and a constant police presence... I honestly try to just walk if I can and I've also decided to get my own vehicle as soon as possible. It's good that there has been a lot more pedestrian infrastructure added in the past decade or so, but cycling infrastructure is still non-existent, as much as I would've preferred to get a bike.

  • @JakeRoot
    @JakeRoot Жыл бұрын

    Come to Okinawa if you want to see what a Japanese island is like: freeways all over the place (many under construction) and just a single monorail and some bus lines. Absolutely biblical traffic.

  • @ianhomerpura8937

    @ianhomerpura8937

    Жыл бұрын

    No wonder why politicians have been proposing a new railway line that will go across the entire island. But at least I can take the monorail from the airport straight to Shuri Castle.

  • @KokimoKandle

    @KokimoKandle

    Жыл бұрын

    When I went to okinawa in 2017 I was surprised at how American the road system felt. Driving there vs Nagano area was a very different experience (though Nagano did have some stroady areas too).

  • @JakeRoot

    @JakeRoot

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ianhomerpura8937 if you plan to mostly go around Naha, the monorail is great. And it usually connects to buses and plenty of taxis. It’s just, outside Naha, it really breaks down. Though there are still buses around, thankfully. Virtually no exclusive lanes though.

  • @JakeRoot

    @JakeRoot

    Жыл бұрын

    @@KokimoKandle It doesn’t seem dramatically different than roads I’ve seen in Tokyo, Osaka, or Nagoya, but the roads are busier and you don’t see that public transport backbone like on the mainland. Since Japan took back over in the 1970s though, I haven’t seen a dramatic change in policy. Roads are still the most important part of the system and the vast majority of road projects are touted as being safety and congestion improvements. They are building an elevated freeway over the 2000-opened Ginowan Bypass, it’s incredible how much money they are pouring into roads. Eight lane stroads are not uncommon. Route 58 even widens to ten lanes in parts of Urasoe these days.

  • @username3282

    @username3282

    Жыл бұрын

    @@KokimoKandle Okinawa was quite literally part of the US after WWII until 1972, so it's no wonder that the road system closely resembles that of the US, and seems like the car-culture has stuck for the most part.

  • @GojiMet86
    @GojiMet86 Жыл бұрын

    Guatemala (not Guadalajara) is facing the same problems as Nassau. Almost everyone sees the car as the advanced, civilized, and American way. The people riding buses would rather not be in them. The public transportation is not very reliable, and outside of the Transmetro, it is very hard to find maps, schedules, and even news about changes. The main roads in the city basically double as highways, and sidewalks are severly neglected, so walking outside is very annoying and noisy.

  • @citrusblast4372

    @citrusblast4372

    Жыл бұрын

    does this apply mostly to the capital or the whole country

  • @spaghettiisyummy.3623

    @spaghettiisyummy.3623

    Жыл бұрын

    Ah, Everyone is Obsessed with Cars cause they remind them of American Media?

  • @GojiMet86

    @GojiMet86

    Жыл бұрын

    @@citrusblast4372 The big cities and towns. The small towns and villages don't have as much simply due to being small. But it's only a matter of time.

  • @GojiMet86

    @GojiMet86

    Жыл бұрын

    @@spaghettiisyummy.3623 Media is not really responsible, people don't need to see specific channels or programs. People see how bad things are in Guatemala and look to the big USA. Not that it's a bad thing, there are many things the US is better at, and cars are associated with moving up.

  • @spaghettiisyummy.3623

    @spaghettiisyummy.3623

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GojiMet86 That makes a lot more sense! Thank you!

  • @gemelwalters2942
    @gemelwalters2942 Жыл бұрын

    The same happens in Jamaica nearby. Millions are spent building highways and public transit is an afterthought. I hate driving but I'm forced to for work and in either case I get stuck in traffic. When you suggest a rail system here many say it's too expensive... meanwhile the cost of gas, road repairs, widening and new highways just keeps going up and no one thinks about the cost. It's ridiculous

  • @Kawaosu
    @Kawaosu Жыл бұрын

    You should visit Mackinac Island in Michigan, it's pretty much a safe haven for bikes and such in the US. The downside of it is there's too much congestion between cyclists and wondering tourists blocking the way. But overall it's an interesting place to visit, but keep in mind be on the look out for emergency vehicles passing by.

  • @lisat9707

    @lisat9707

    Жыл бұрын

    Ok now THIS I want to see!!!!!

  • @AC-qx7eg

    @AC-qx7eg

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s beautiful. The Arch, Grand Hotel are insane

  • @Reyna3103
    @Reyna3103 Жыл бұрын

    That public transport montage at the beginning was just such a flex.

  • @TheXtrafresh
    @TheXtrafresh Жыл бұрын

    wow, this is a trip to memory lane for me. I used to live in Sint Maarten, the french/dutch (!) Caribbean island. It's virtually identical to this, same car-centric design, same busses and systems, same weather, same cars. The main differences are that there's more hills, and even less space to go around. Like in Nassau, virtually nobody rides a bike if not for sports, to the point that I was locally famous for actually doing so. Even with the steep hills and zero bike infra, I would regularly beat traffic because of all the jams, and anytime there was an accident in a key place, my phone would go crazy with people asking me what's going on as they saw me pass the traffic.

  • @sabretooth1997

    @sabretooth1997

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the only people there who get anywhere quickly are the maniacs who dart in and around traffic on those little crotch rocket mopeds that are all over the place. I've spent probably a month there in total and I was surprised I never saw one of them get creamed by a car.

  • @TheXtrafresh

    @TheXtrafresh

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sabretooth1997 ah yes, the scooters. The teenagers doing their Mario Kart cosplay with them give scooters such a bad rep, its tragic. If you ask me, the solution to traffic on SXM is electric scooters and bicycles. I get that 99% of people will need the boost on the hills, but almost nobody needs a full vehicle more often than one out of 10 trips. Still, there they are, lined up in their SUVs, wearing out clutches and brakepads in a downhill trafficjam.

  • @grumbogee1772
    @grumbogee1772 Жыл бұрын

    My car was recently stolen down here in new orleans and it's honestly kind of been amazing walking around the city more.

  • @iheartlazers2
    @iheartlazers2 Жыл бұрын

    I noticed the same thing visiting Hawaii the first time; small island, really amazing weather but very car oriented for getting around between towns and tourist destinations.

  • @berendmuller1794
    @berendmuller1794 Жыл бұрын

    this channel has just made me much more aware of all kinds of places i dont want to go to for vacation anymore, since i want to be able to explore on foot or by bike way more than having to rent a car.

  • @unixnerd23

    @unixnerd23

    Жыл бұрын

    Some governments get it. In Scotland there's a lot of advertising for cycle tourism and an increasing budget for active travel. But it's SO hard to get folk out of cars. Norway is a great place to visit if you love bikes, the infrastructure is amazing and way more folk cycle than in Scotland even in winter.

  • @RobinClower

    @RobinClower

    Жыл бұрын

    I disembarked from my plane visiting Hawaii last year and 95% of my flight stopped at the baggage carousel and then went to wait for the car rental shuttle. The island literally has 1 road which connects every single town, and most of the towns are a few intersections big. The entire time we were on the island I was ranting that you could have just had one train line that would serve 90% of all needs on the island, and instead they have thousands of tourists driving around for no good reason.

  • @berendmuller1794

    @berendmuller1794

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RobinClower this kind of stuff is exactly what i mean. these are some of the more extreme ends of the situation of course, but it seriously sucks. even when i visited some friends of mine in the US i felt like i was staring death in the face anytime i tried to bike somewhere with them. wouldn't want to even think about getting on a bike in a place like you mentioned or nassau.

  • @kalabuk1678
    @kalabuk1678 Жыл бұрын

    Now here’s a collaboration I did not see coming!

  • @Chin-Hwa

    @Chin-Hwa

    Жыл бұрын

    We’re seeing more leftist/city planning crossovers.

  • @nicholaslennon
    @nicholaslennon Жыл бұрын

    I recently experienced public transit while in Boston. After coming back home, I'm left wishing for useful public transit systems in my own city. It was so nice just jumping on the train to go where I wanted.

  • @johntron2443
    @johntron2443 Жыл бұрын

    Really like seeing you cover an area that isn’t directly in North America or Europe. Man I would really love to see you do an episode comparing and contrasting an Asian country like Thailand to America, the traffic there and the way people in cars treat those without cars is something I want to see you cover. It’s very shockingly different than the us, dare I say, way worse somehow.

  • @IslandlifeIoW
    @IslandlifeIoW Жыл бұрын

    Here on the tiny Isle of Wight off the southern English coast, we are replete with wonderful cycle lanes and infrastructure. You’re welcome to explore here anytime Jason!

  • @davidty2006

    @davidty2006

    Жыл бұрын

    Theres also a small railway network that used to have old tube trains from the 1930's. Now using retrofitted tube trains.

  • @royaltea1917

    @royaltea1917

    Жыл бұрын

    True, but that would mean visiting the Isle of Wight, and nobody deserves that fate

  • @gwencaster6485

    @gwencaster6485

    Жыл бұрын

    @@royaltea1917 funny comment, but why do you dislike it?

  • @JzrCrz
    @JzrCrz Жыл бұрын

    This is EXACTLY what I see here in Aruba. I'm pretty sure this is most of (if not, all) the Caribbean, not just Nassau. Aruba unfortunately has more in common with the US when it comes to infrastructure and car-dependency than the Netherlands whose kingdom we are a part of. Which is pretty sad when you think about it. Public transport is barely existent and useful, roads are in really bad shape and cars, cars, and more CARS!! And as you've mentioned, the only good pedestrianized places are where the tourists are. You won't find good bike & walkable spaces elsewhere. I can't even get out of my house safely without a car. I currently live next to a really bad road so we have to drive a bit carefully but even in these terrible road conditions, you can find people speeding like crazy through it! And yes, I also see the more American and "stroad-like" big box stores popping up in new developments and I hate it. I have other reasons but this is definitely one of the main reasons why I'm not planning on staying for much longer. I'm moving to the Netherlands in a few months. I just can't keep living like this anymore.

  • @JarrodBaniqued
    @JarrodBaniqued Жыл бұрын

    The Philippines has the same problem too, since it’s a collection of islands of various sizes. Outside its densest area, Metro Manila (which inappropriately has way too few light rail lines for its population density), there is virtually no train service (although this is getting rectified very slowly in a small part of Luzon). Instead, virtually all the roads are either winding country roads or stroads (and rather frustratingly a few toll expressways instead of double-track railroads), and everyone relies on cars, motorcycles, intercity buses and versions of jitneys and taxis called jeepneys and tricycles, run by a hodgepodge of operators. All the cities with six-figure populations are lacking in metro service. City centers tend to be atrociously car-centric and congested, as the sidewalks are too narrow and there are no protected bike or bus lanes. The side streets in smaller towns are okay on walkability and bikeability, but they’re still quite dirty and infested with motorcycles. Overall, if there were any region of the world that could be deemed “induced demand hell”, the Philippines would be it.

  • @madfx8058
    @madfx8058 Жыл бұрын

    As an American who used to regularly visit my family in the working-class neighborhood of Kalihi on the island of Oahu in Hawai'i I really can relate to this video! Very well made, and that local perspective is priceless!!!

  • @TheRuralUrbanist
    @TheRuralUrbanist Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad to see that I'm not the only disorganized packer out there! You really never know when you may need a spare traffic light for cyclists... 😅 Great video!

  • @Robert_McGarry_Poems

    @Robert_McGarry_Poems

    Жыл бұрын

    Or your cat...

  • @lakrids-pibe

    @lakrids-pibe

    Жыл бұрын

    Copenhagen is great

  • @mrmartinezvida6987
    @mrmartinezvida6987 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for focusing on somewhere outside of Europe and North America. Unfortunately North American car culture has an impact on other countries. When I went to Santo Domingo in the DR, they did have those small buses but it was much faster to take the metro, but the metro is not that long.

  • @NotJustBikes

    @NotJustBikes

    Жыл бұрын

    The Bahamas is in North America, eh?

  • @Coccinelf

    @Coccinelf

    Жыл бұрын

    @@NotJustBikes I didn't know that! I suspect things has changed since I was in school.

  • @Lando-kx6so

    @Lando-kx6so

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@NotJustBikes it is but usually us in the Caribbean separate Caribbean from North(ern) America (Canada, USA, Mexico)

  • @dorothymorris6536

    @dorothymorris6536

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Lando-kx6so yeah in brazil at least we usually divide the American continent into 3: north, central and south. no one's looking at those islands and really thinking north america

  • @drivers99

    @drivers99

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dorothymorris6536 it’s interesting that the Portuguese article for North America uses a different map than the English one. pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/América_do_Norte vs en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_America

  • @ironicloud
    @ironicloud Жыл бұрын

    In Europe there is a similar place like Bahamas and it's Malta republic (a group of 3 islands south of Sicily Island). In the main island (Malta island) there is the same problem with the traffic. Bus lines were operated until 2011 by private companies with a great unefficient time and routes. Fortunately something changed and now it'a bit better (the problem of traffic still remain). In the past there was a narrow-gauge railway but it was disabled (and demolished) in the '60 (I don't remember exactly, but it was done years ago)

  • @achandler8015
    @achandler8015 Жыл бұрын

    9:50 okay but that Citroen is my dream car. I LOVE those things And I like how you bring up noticing the city in a different way when walking. No one really mentions it. It does make me appreciate the old town architecture so much more. Never notice it when driving

  • @rashkavar
    @rashkavar Жыл бұрын

    I will note: busses do relieve traffic congestion *sometimes.* In Vancouver, BC, the bus system is quite widely used (largely as an extension of its handful of skytrain routes), which I credit to its mostly 3-5 minute bus intervals for major routes and the superb traffic modeling data they use to actually stay mostly on schedule. When I was studying at UBC there several years ago, most busses during busy hours were near to completely full (occasionally so much so that they skipped stops when nobody was getting off because there was physically no more room for more people) If you took all those people, and added about 0.8 cars to the road per person (since some people would be traveling in groups), that would be a HUGE impact on the roads - quite possibly enough to make travel through the city effectively impossible. This is a result of 3 things (all of which are tied together): 1: Vancouver's population density. It's not Hong Kong or Singapore levels of bonkers, but by Canadian standards, Vancouver is extremely dense. It also has to handle a huge influx of commuters from neighbouring cities, which have somewhat lesser but still decent bus service, mostly designed around getting commuters into Vancouver. So there's a LOT of people trying to use the roads. Like I said, if they were all in cars, travel would be nigh impossible. 2: How demanding it is to drive in Vancouver. Like any North American city, rush hour traffic is extremely stressful. Lots of people take the relatively chill and surprisingly reliable method of cramming themselves into mobile sardine tins (busses) because at least then you don't have to add an hour plus of hypervigilance to the start and end of your workday. 3: The amount of funding their transit service gets. Seriously, figuring out 3 minute bus intervals on major routes and being right more often than not means you have extremely good traffic models, and getting and maintaining that kind of data takes a significant investment. Back in my day and where I was, the dedicated mass transit lines were mostly just Skytrain (the RAV line was under construction for most of my time at UBC), which was all too far out to impact my area directly, but that did mean a bunch of people from the neighbouring cities coming out my way were taking most of the trip by rail and thus needing a bus to finish the journey. "Free" (built into fees) tickets for university students, expanding mass transit lines over time...Translink is a *big* organization.

  • @HarrowKrodarius

    @HarrowKrodarius

    Жыл бұрын

    this is basically how to do public transit the right way.

  • @rashkavar

    @rashkavar

    Жыл бұрын

    @@HarrowKrodarius Well, having a system of viable bike paths is certainly a thing they could do to improve it further, but yeah, Vancouver's system is good. A bit expensive, and somewhat subsidized by its satellite cities that don't get as much attention from the transit company, but by North American standards it's a pretty spectacular system. (Low key I'd love to see a video from someone like Not Just Bikes who knows more about international systems and is good at identifying design flaws - would be interesting to see what they're not doing well aside from the obvious bike issue.)

  • @TroubleshootGamingMeds
    @TroubleshootGamingMeds Жыл бұрын

    Really enjoying this one! I highly suggest taking a look at Puerto Rico. It's been ruined by car dependency.

  • @marcoalejandrocruz

    @marcoalejandrocruz

    Жыл бұрын

    Concur with that! Nothing worse than a once walkable Island being destroyed with the help American Federal Highway subsidies. It’s crazy that, to this day, they keep dynamiting and flattening mountains to build single family housing, all while the walkable urban cores crumble into disrepair.

  • @franciscoacevedo3036

    @franciscoacevedo3036

    Жыл бұрын

    Tienen los cascos urbanos destrozados :/

  • @TroubleshootGamingMeds

    @TroubleshootGamingMeds

    Жыл бұрын

    @@franciscoacevedo3036 me fui de Puerto Rico Como niño y Cuando regrese me di Cuenta que no podia hacer absolutamente nada sin carro.

  • @pranaym3859

    @pranaym3859

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol, it's not unexpected from US

  • @franciscoacevedo3036

    @franciscoacevedo3036

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TroubleshootGamingMeds si has visto el vídeo sobre el ponzi scheme de Njb vas a encontrar que talvez esa es la razón porque casi todos los municipios tienen problemas financieros

  • @joespkr8715
    @joespkr8715 Жыл бұрын

    They paved paradise and put up a parking lot.

  • @viccasaur
    @viccasaur Жыл бұрын

    We have abandoned our small businesses and downtown due to the car infrastructure, it’s so depressing :(

  • @Al_Bx
    @Al_Bx Жыл бұрын

    The most upsetting thing is that it would be ridiculously easy to implement small changes that would drastically change the outcome. Like turning a few street to bus only, or bus lane where the width of the street allow it. Bike rentals "for tourists" and dedicated lanes... Small changes, first steps. The island is small, it is rich. It only lacks the rarest of all comodities: the will to change.

  • @Fresh720

    @Fresh720

    Жыл бұрын

    Yea someone else mentioned it that they tried it in Jamaica and people just drove in them. You definitely need a carrot and stick approach with infrastructure changes

  • @jl63023

    @jl63023

    Жыл бұрын

    The former would have to be done as many streets in the Caribbean are two lanes (either one way or either way). There isn't much space to have an additional bus or bike lane

  • @geoff5623

    @geoff5623

    Жыл бұрын

    Would be interesting if tourists significantly adopting bikes in the better maintained areas would shift the perception of bikes as "poor" transportation (and hopefully not just change it to being seen only as recreational transport instead)

  • @LightbulbTedbear2

    @LightbulbTedbear2

    Жыл бұрын

    I can definitely imagine bikes being rented to tourists as a "fun recreational way to see the island". They could push bike infrastructure through the government by framing it as giving a better experience to tourists. Then once a critical mass of bike infrastructure/bike availability is reached, the cultural shift would happen by itself in only a few years.

  • @jgroenveld1268
    @jgroenveld1268 Жыл бұрын

    8:00 that is exactly the same vibe I got from catching buses around Disneyland. It was more for the workers in the tourism industry. Disneyland did have their own bus routes that took tourists to and from their hotels/motels but it was separate from the public transit system.

  • @Geotpf

    @Geotpf

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, at least the OCTA is a government agency that runs fixed schedules of standard full sized buses.

  • @bradyrice6631
    @bradyrice6631 Жыл бұрын

    I saw that classic car on my recent trip to Amsterdam! 1955 Citroën DS 21

  • @Stipopedia
    @Stipopedia Жыл бұрын

    Have you ever thought about making a video on Okinawa? While most Japan has a really good train network, Okinawa has exactly one monorail and no other trains. Yes they have bus lines but generally the whole island is very car focused.

  • @Ethaara
    @Ethaara Жыл бұрын

    I moved to the Netherlands from eastern europe, here I take the train to work every day, I would not even consider driving, it would cost too much and take too much time as well, however, I always see traffic from the train going to Amsterdam. Back home, my friends who are living in the capital (my hometown) are buying "expensive" cars with half of my salary to get around, even tho the city has a kinda ok-ish public transport. I think the main reason is status. If you live in a not so well-off place, "only the poor" takes the public transport, not your boss, or your collegues/seniors. It is a stigma and looked down if you are not owning a car, even though..... the average salary is around 700-800 hundred euros / month, so good luck. Many places in western europe quite different. They can afford to drive but many times they choose not to. Here, when it is a choice, it is not a status anymore. When it is not a choice but achivement that you can have a car, it becomes a status - so I can somewhat see why is this happening.

  • @thefuriousfatty2297
    @thefuriousfatty2297 Жыл бұрын

    Urbanists when they see a man cycling on a stroad: you bow down to no one.

  • @joostschrier9507

    @joostschrier9507

    Жыл бұрын

    Everyone else: dead man cycling over there... :-P

  • @thefuriousfatty2297

    @thefuriousfatty2297

    Жыл бұрын

    @TacticalMoonstone it's a dark joke. It's funny because it's true. When people see cyclists on stroad, they go "that dumb cyclist, he'll be run over any minute now" or something of that sort. The joke is a commentary on the behavior of suburban soccer moms.

  • @joostschrier9507

    @joostschrier9507

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tacticalmoonstone9468 what @thefuriousfatty2297 said. It was a joke.

  • @Paul_Sleeping

    @Paul_Sleeping

    Жыл бұрын

    @TacticalMoonstone It's in every car driver's mind when they see one. Very few people in the US respect cyclists when they share a road. Dark thoughts are the norm, not the exception.

  • @samlaki4051
    @samlaki4051 Жыл бұрын

    bro Foreign is huge! knew the man lift weight, but seeing him move is something else

  • @fauzirahman3285
    @fauzirahman3285 Жыл бұрын

    This place looks ripe for an e-bike revolution. I would imagine people wouldn't want to rock up to work sweaty in a tropical climate, so the pedal assist would help a lot.

  • @torresalex
    @torresalex Жыл бұрын

    9:45 Please don't diss the DS. At least it's not an SUV

  • @eric_clover
    @eric_clover Жыл бұрын

    Went here for my first time leaving the US in January. Came on a cruise which was very fun, we were told the reason nobody uses the scooters is because they are often scams, designed to break down after a certain distance and you will have to pay exorbitant fees to return to the port area or to pay for "fixes" for them. That's another problem with these heavily privatised and independent transit, no accountability. At the very least, the cars there are much smaller than the US since they allow smaller European cars.

  • @anniestarlight

    @anniestarlight

    Жыл бұрын

    Someday when I have more control over where I'd live, I'd like to position myself so that I'm within longboarding distance of grocery stores and work if possible. I think it's great as a form of transportation, as I can bring it into work and stash it under the basket in grocery stores without it getting in the way. If necessary, I can even wear a clear backpack to stash my groceries in when running an errand, so that I don't get funny looks from walmart employees who might think I'm there to steal Plus, you get the added benefit of looking and feeling cool when riding one lol

  • @Geotpf

    @Geotpf

    Жыл бұрын

    Small cars are perfectly legal in the United States. They just mostly sell poorly, especially the smallest ones. Part of this is our tax laws. In some countries, cars are taxed by engine size and/or the physical size of the vehicle. In the US, registration taxes are mostly just determined by the value of the vehicle (specific details do vary from state to state).

  • @lisat9707

    @lisat9707

    Жыл бұрын

    LIES. Bird Scooters are a well known widespread company. I should know they were allllll around my city the last few years all summer. You need an app. There's App store ratings. Judge for yourself and read the reviews. This might just be a way the cruise companies prevent tourists from venturing too far too easily and into not as manicured areas.

  • @lisat9707

    @lisat9707

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Geotpf what boggles my mind is I can write off a tonne of car expenses but bike anything is just nope.

  • @tinnagigja3723

    @tinnagigja3723

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Geotpf It's also become a bit of an arms race, it seems. With more SUVs on the road, driving a small car is probably terrifying, and I can understand the temptation to just go 'heck, I'll just get a Rezvani Vengeance to take the kids to school'.

  • @Sequoia204
    @Sequoia204 Жыл бұрын

    9:45 Aw, you can make an exception for a Citoren DS! Legend of an automobile!

  • @whisperSSG8
    @whisperSSG8 Жыл бұрын

    Wow, Nassau looks very different to Malé in the Maldives. They both share the same tropical-paradise inequality problem, but Malé's density makes it feel much more lively when I visited there.

  • @stefanholmstrom1968
    @stefanholmstrom1968 Жыл бұрын

    You mention social stigma and bicycles 15:18. I remember some Ingrians who worked in the same company in Helsinki/Finland as me in the early 90s (an era when quite many Ingrians had moved to Finland). One of these Ingrians was an upper-middle-aged man, a very nice guy. Many of us Finns took the bicycle to work, but he could not even image doing doing the same thing. - I can rationally understand how great bicycles are, but I can't picture myself using one, it would still be shameful, he said. He had grown up in Soviet union, were the bicycle was considered the vehicle for the really poor ones (the "losers" who didn't manage in the communist system). The elite had cars, other workers took the bus/trolley/tram. But bicycles.... no. It was even better to walk to work, he said. The concept of social stigma & bicycles was so deeply rooted in him.

  • @unixnerd23

    @unixnerd23

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the UK is a bit like that.

  • @theodorechiou2886
    @theodorechiou2886 Жыл бұрын

    quite surprised that they dont use scooters like Taiwan, or other south east Asian countries. also as a Taiwanese person who grew up in southern Taiwan, not everyone agrees with what is good weather :) i personally like England in the winter... which a lot of people seem to hate, but bike and path infrastructure is always a plus!

  • @LouisSubearth

    @LouisSubearth

    Жыл бұрын

    It's probably the same stigma as cycling, as in it's seen as a lesser form of transportation.

  • @newfoundlandmapping4493
    @newfoundlandmapping4493 Жыл бұрын

    I love how you focused on this small city on an island. Being from St.John’s Newfoundland I can relate to this. Despite the metro area having a population of only around 250,000 the traffic, especially in the inner city and outer ring highways is horrible. I live in topsail, which is the second largest suburb town of St.John’s and public transport is literally non-existent, the nearest bus stop is an hour bike ride in the suburb over and it only comes once a day, no return trips either. Seeing Bay Street in this video reminds me exactly of old downtown in st.John’s, old abandoned and falling apart from main downtown core which is a pedestrian mall for 4 months of the year. Watching your videos actually makes me sad. I see how lively and great the cities in the netherlands are and my hometown is not even a comparison.

  • @jodyssey9921

    @jodyssey9921

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in St John's. Our transit is absolute garbage, you got that right. There's a bus stop in front of my house but it only comes once an hour, stops at 6 pm and doesn't run on weekends.😂 I ride a bike or scooter or walk everywhere. Dangerous though, been hit by a car twice in 7 years. Rode 18 years in Toronto and never got hit. Would have been hit a lot more than twice if I didn't have decades of experience riding in traffic, too many people here just don't see bicycles and there is only one decent bike lane in the entire city that I know of, along Columbus Dr. To be fair St John's is very windy and hilly and the weather is shit so you have to be a little bit mad to bicycle everywhere, I don't expect everyone to stop driving. I just want them to stop trying to kill me and the city to do a better job with snow clearing for non drivers.

  • @JoshuaFagan
    @JoshuaFagan Жыл бұрын

    The same situation is true throughout the Caribbean. Though the populations are often a little too low to have a comprehensive transit system, there's absolutely no reason not to encourage bicycle travel, and yet there are very few bikes on those islands.

  • @alexandraw6264
    @alexandraw6264 Жыл бұрын

    A NJB video about a city outside of Europe & N. America, collabing with a local KZreadr! Love to see it 😁 I know I’m not alone in wishing to see NJB content from countries around the world, especially in the global south. Hopefully that becomes a feasible thing to do regularly! The collaboration with Foreign Man is a great touch, I love the idea of NJB teaming up with local content creators for videos about different countries.

  • @roccosemler228
    @roccosemler228 Жыл бұрын

    I visited Nantucket last year, which has about the same size as new providence, and i was shocked by the amount of car there. The town itself has a rich history and would be lovely if it weren't completely overrun by cars, the traffic feels like Manhattan despite being a small village. The island is flat and perfectly bikeable, it makes no sense to allow all those cars into town during the summer, when the weather is great. And there is actually a decent bus system that covers most of the island.

  • @roberthuron9160

    @roberthuron9160

    Жыл бұрын

    BTW,Nantucket had streetcars,and a semi-interurban,so there was a transit history! See Boston Street Railway Society,as they have histories of local transit! Correction on above-my error- should be Association! Dumb,please forgive me,thank you 🙏!

  • @roberthuron9160

    @roberthuron9160

    Жыл бұрын

    Add one other factor,the Federal Government has been subsidizing roads,and highways,since the 1920's! The last upgrade of the Highway Trust Fund was 11 TRILLION DOLLARS,and transit/railroads/public transport literally sees,a minute fraction of that! There is no equality under the law,with this system! The price paid in deaths injury,and disruption is now incalculable! Bad policy produces bad ends! CUI BONO- WHO BENEFITS,FOLLOW THE MONEY 💰! Thank you! 😇!

  • @edwardmiessner6502

    @edwardmiessner6502

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Stossburg Mackinaw Island in Michigan bans cars completely and it's doing fine!

  • @DAOzz83

    @DAOzz83

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, but they still use horses on Mackinac for their “transit,” which is… less than ideal.

  • @enjoyslearningandtravel7957

    @enjoyslearningandtravel7957

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DAOzz83 actually, that’s wrong, most people walk or bicycle there

  • @lyninthelowlands
    @lyninthelowlands Жыл бұрын

    I noticed this same trend in Key West, an even smaller island. Outside of the pedestrianized waterfront area it's overwhelmingly car dependent. You can rent bikes but with no dedicated bike lanes it just feels dangerous.

  • @jordanlee4855
    @jordanlee4855 Жыл бұрын

    A crossover episode I wasn’t expecting. Proud to watch both these channels.

  • @HotDogTimeMachine385
    @HotDogTimeMachine385 Жыл бұрын

    Foreign Man in a Familiar land 😄 The Bahamas with bikes instead of cars sounds so much nicer!

  • @squifftopher
    @squifftopher Жыл бұрын

    Haha sounds like our brothers have the same problem as us here in Bermuda 🇧🇲🇧🇲❤️🇧🇸🇧🇸

  • @_alexambroz
    @_alexambroz Жыл бұрын

    This is great. Come on over to Dublin, Ireland and see the dedicated bus lanes that we have. City also has a very strong bus system overall, along with a tram (called LUAS) and train (called DART). Strong bike culture too, regardless of the frequent rain.

  • @AngryApple
    @AngryApple Жыл бұрын

    Even for tourism being able to take the bicycle to get around the whole island would be so much fun and you could actually explore this foreign island

  • @AssBlasster

    @AssBlasster

    Жыл бұрын

    It makes it where the only safe place to theoretically bike is the actual beach. Not even a walking/biking path along a shoreline in Nassau, just private mansions.

  • @guilhermetavares4705
    @guilhermetavares4705 Жыл бұрын

    Public transportation here in Rio de Janeiro has some serious problems, but Nassau seems to be much worse. There is something similar to the jitneys which are the vans, but they serve more the suburbs and certain communities. Our bus system, although not as modern as São Paulo's, has fare integration and you don't have to pay another fare when you make a transfer. And we use less and less cash, since the system accepts transportation cards and even credit cards.

  • @muaddib7705
    @muaddib7705 Жыл бұрын

    Even if the bus gets stuck in traffic, I’m still going to take it because I can get work done, read, or look out the window. It’s still superior imo.

  • @beepbop6542

    @beepbop6542

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't know when people decided that it was "poor" to have someone else drive you around instead of sitting and dealing with traffic for 30 minutes.

  • @MustraOrdo

    @MustraOrdo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@beepbop6542 I know, don't millionaires/celebrities/important people get driven around by limousines or flown about by jets?

  • @davidty2006

    @davidty2006

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MustraOrdo once there was a time where they would hop on a pullman express train.

  • @rgkeys72
    @rgkeys72 Жыл бұрын

    I hope folks take time to watch the Foreign Man video, it is excellent.

  • @snoopyloopy
    @snoopyloopy Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for putting me on to Foreign.

  • @daynester
    @daynester Жыл бұрын

    Great video! I hope more people become aware of this ongoing issue, and as a result, we can hopefully work to improve city infrastructure worldwide.

  • @LinkStorm13
    @LinkStorm13 Жыл бұрын

    I was on the Bahamas a few years ago (my cousin married a bahamian guy), when I was getting into city planning, but before I was radicalized by you videos. As it was the first time for me in north america, I immediately recognised a lot of things that had bothered me while playing cities:skylies and were unfamiliar to me from europe. My parents and I kind of insisted on walking when it was possible, despite having a shared rental car together with another cousin. Some areas are quite pleasant to walk, but others are actually dangerous. when we walked through Kemp Road on sundown to take a shortcut, multiple cars stopped to tell us, it's not safe there, so we went the long way around. :D There were a lot of occasions, when locals would offer us a ride, when they saw us walking along the street, maybe hoping to get a tip (which they surely got :))

  • @enjoyslearningandtravel7957
    @enjoyslearningandtravel7957 Жыл бұрын

    I made the video more interesting that you teamed up with a local who actually tried something different and his life such as doing without a car. It’s too bad that island couldn’t have bike lanes since it would not only make it more fun for a tourist getting around, but it would also make it more practical for locals to get around and keep more healthy and fit at the same time plus especially because the island is much smaller than I imagined and I did not know it had so much traffic. !!

  • @kylehart6893
    @kylehart6893 Жыл бұрын

    7:31 It’s a real missed opportunity that California is so car-centric, given how nice the weather is for walking & cycling

  • @BlueBeefalo
    @BlueBeefalo Жыл бұрын

    Saw this video on nebula. It was very intriguing personally. My mother’s bahamian, from Nassau, and I’ve been there dozens of times, even took the jitney many times. The part where you mentioned the deterioration of businesses near the road. That’s something my mother noticed and mentioned to us a few years back.

  • @annebraun581
    @annebraun581 Жыл бұрын

    The cat! Laughed so hard!!!😂😂😂

  • @ippoanti1615
    @ippoanti1615 Жыл бұрын

    If organized properly, that city could really be an heavenly place. It reminds me of how most italian cities would be ten times better than any other place if they were managed as Amsterdam is.