Showing posts with label viaturas de transporte particular. Show all posts
Showing posts with label viaturas de transporte particular. Show all posts

Friday, September 30, 2011

ZURIQUE: Tram operators can turn traffic lights in their favor as they approach, forcing cars to halt

Across Europe, Irking Drivers Is Urban Policy

Pedestrians and trams are given priority treatment in Zurich. Tram operators can turn traffic lights in their favor as they approach, forcing cars to halt.

ZURICH — While American cities are synchronizing green lights to improve traffic flow and offering apps to help drivers find parking, many European cities are doing the opposite: creating environments openly hostile to cars. The methods vary, but the mission is clear — to make car use expensive and just plain miserable enough to tilt drivers toward more environmentally friendly modes of transportation.

Cities including Vienna to Munich and Copenhagen have closed vast swaths of streets to car traffic. Barcelona and Paris have had car lanes eroded by popular bike-sharing programs. Drivers in London and Stockholm pay hefty congestion charges just for entering the heart of the city. And over the past two years, dozens of German cities have joined a national network of “environmental zones” where only cars with low carbon dioxide emissions may enter. Likeminded cities welcome new shopping malls and apartment buildings but severely restrict the allowable number of parking spaces. On-street parking is vanishing. In recent years, even former car capitals like Munich have evolved into “walkers’ paradises,” said Lee Schipper, a senior research engineer at Stanford University who specializes in sustainable transportation. “In the United States, there has been much more of a tendency to adapt cities to accommodate driving,” said Peder Jensen, head of the Energy and Transport Group at the European Environment Agency. “Here there has been more movement to make cities more livable for people, to get cities relatively free of cars.”


To that end, the municipal Traffic Planning Department here in Zurich has been working overtime in recent years to torment drivers. Closely spaced red lights have been added on roads into town, causing delays and angst for commuters. Pedestrian underpasses that once allowed traffic to flow freely across major intersections have been removed. Operators in the city’s ever expanding tram system can turn traffic lights in their favor as they approach, forcing cars to halt.


Around Löwenplatz, one of Zurich’s busiest squares, cars are now banned on many blocks. Where permitted, their speed is limited to a snail’s pace so that crosswalks and crossing signs can be removed entirely, giving people on foot the right to cross anywhere they like at any time. As he stood watching a few cars inch through a mass of bicycles and pedestrians, the city’s chief traffic planner, Andy Fellmann, smiled. “Driving is a stop-and-go experience,” he said. “That’s what we like! Our goal is to reconquer public space for pedestrians, not to make it easy for drivers.”


While some American cities — notably San Francisco, which has “pedestrianized” parts of Market Street — have made similar efforts, they are still the exception in the United States, where it has been difficult to get people to imagine a life where cars are not entrenched, Dr. Schipper said.


Europe’s cities generally have stronger incentives to act. Built for the most part before the advent of cars, their narrow roads are poor at handling heavy traffic. Public transportation is generally better in Europe than in the United States, and gas often costs over $8 a gallon, contributing to driving costs that are two to three times greater per mile than in the United States, Dr. Schipper said.


What is more, European Union countries probably cannot meet a commitment under the Kyoto Protocol to reduce their carbon dioxide emissions unless they curb driving. The United States never ratified that pact.


Globally, emissions from transportation continue a relentless rise, with half of them coming from personal cars. Yet an important impulse behind Europe’s traffic reforms will be familiar to mayors in Los Angeles and Vienna alike: to make cities more inviting, with cleaner air and less traffic.


Michael Kodransky, global research manager at the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy in New York, which works with cities to reduce transport emissions, said that Europe was previously “on the same trajectory as the United States, with more people wanting to own more cars.” But in the past decade, there had been “a conscious shift in thinking, and firm policy,” he said. And it is having an effect.


After two decades of car ownership, Hans Von Matt, 52, who works in the insurance industry, sold his vehicle and now gets around Zurich by tram or bicycle, using a car-sharing service for trips out of the city. Carless households have increased from 40 to 45 percent in the last decade, and car owners use their vehicles less, city statistics show.

“There were big fights over whether to close this road or not — but now it is closed, and people got used to it,” he said, alighting from his bicycle on Limmatquai, a riverside pedestrian zone lined with cafes that used to be two lanes of gridlock. Each major road closing has to be approved in a referendum.

Today 91 percent of the delegates to the Swiss Parliament take the tram to work.


Still, there is grumbling. “There are all these zones where you can only drive 20 or 30 kilometers per hour [about 12 to 18 miles an hour], which is rather stressful,” Thomas Rickli, a consultant, said as he parked his Jaguar in a lot at the edge of town. “It’s useless.”


Urban planners generally agree that a rise in car commuting is not desirable for cities anywhere. Mr. Fellmann calculated that a person using a car took up 115 cubic meters (roughly 4,000 cubic feet) of urban space in Zurich while a pedestrian took three. “So it’s not really fair to everyone else if you take the car,” he said.


European cities also realized they could not meet increasingly strict World Health Organization guidelines for fine-particulate air pollution if cars continued to reign. Many American cities are likewise in “nonattainment” of their Clean Air Act requirements, but that fact “is just accepted here,” said Mr. Kodransky of the New York-based transportation institute.


It often takes extreme measures to get people out of their cars, and providing good public transportation is a crucial first step. One novel strategy in Europe is intentionally making it harder and more costly to park. “Parking is everywhere in the United States, but it’s disappearing from the urban space in Europe,” said Mr. Kodransky, whose recent report “Europe’s Parking U-Turn” surveys the shift.


Sihl City, a new Zurich mall, is three times the size of Brooklyn’s Atlantic Mall but has only half the number of parking spaces, and as a result, 70 percent of visitors get there by public transport, Mr. Kodransky said.


In Copenhagen, Mr. Jensen, at the European Environment Agency, said that his office building had more than 150 spaces for bicycles and only one for a car, to accommodate a disabled person. While many building codes in Europe cap the number of parking spaces in new buildings to discourage car ownership, American codes conversely tend to stipulate a minimum number. New apartment complexes built along the light rail line in Denver devote their bottom eight floors to parking, making it “too easy” to get in the car rather than take advantage of rail transit, Mr. Kodransky said.


While Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has generated controversy in New York by “pedestrianizing” a few areas like Times Square, many European cities have already closed vast areas to car traffic. Store owners in Zurich had worried that the closings would mean a drop in business, but that fear has proved unfounded, Mr. Fellmann said, because pedestrian traffic increased 30 to 40 percent where cars were banned.


With politicians and most citizens still largely behind them, Zurich’s planners continue their traffic-taming quest, shortening the green-light periods and lengthening the red with the goal that pedestrians wait no more than 20 seconds to cross. “We would never synchronize green lights for cars with our philosophy,” said Pio Marzolini, a city official. “When I’m in other cities, I feel like I’m always waiting to cross a street. I can’t get used to the idea that I am worth less than a car.”

in THE NEW YORK TIMES 26 June 2011

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/27/science/earth/27traffic.html?pagewanted=1&_r=2&ref=europe

FOTO: Eléctricos "presos" na Rua dos Fanqueiros devido ao excesso de estacionamento à superfície que ainda existe na Baixa, Lisboa. É todo um paradigma de mobilidade, de estilos d evida, que tem de ser profundamente altertado em Portugal.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

O exemplo de Munique: Gartnerplatz‏

Descubra as diferenças entre esta praça em Munique e uma equivalente em Lisboa, como por exemplo a Praça da Estrela ou o Campo das Cebolas. Aqui neste espaço verdadeiramente público, há pessoas, há vida. Em Lisboa a maioria das praças e largos estão sem vida, invadidas de viaturas de transporte particular. Enfim, não é por acaso que Munique é considerada uma das cidades do mundo com maior qualidade de vida. E Lisboa? Vivemos ainda obsecados com o estacionamento das nossas viaturas de transporte particular.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Across Europe, Irking Drivers Is Urban Policy

Across Europe, Irking Drivers Is Urban Policy

Pedestrians and trams are given priority treatment in Zurich. Tram operators can turn traffic lights in their favor as they approach, forcing cars to halt.

ZURICH — While American cities are synchronizing green lights to improve traffic flow and offering apps to help drivers find parking, many European cities are doing the opposite: creating environments openly hostile to cars. The methods vary, but the mission is clear — to make car use expensive and just plain miserable enough to tilt drivers toward more environmentally friendly modes of transportation.

Cities including Vienna to Munich and Copenhagen have closed vast swaths of streets to car traffic. Barcelona and Paris have had car lanes eroded by popular bike-sharing programs. Drivers in London and Stockholm pay hefty congestion charges just for entering the heart of the city. And over the past two years, dozens of German cities have joined a national network of “environmental zones” where only cars with low carbon dioxide emissions may enter. Likeminded cities welcome new shopping malls and apartment buildings but severely restrict the allowable number of parking spaces. On-street parking is vanishing. In recent years, even former car capitals like Munich have evolved into “walkers’ paradises,” said Lee Schipper, a senior research engineer at Stanford University who specializes in sustainable transportation. “In the United States, there has been much more of a tendency to adapt cities to accommodate driving,” said Peder Jensen, head of the Energy and Transport Group at the European Environment Agency. “Here there has been more movement to make cities more livable for people, to get cities relatively free of cars.”
To that end, the municipal Traffic Planning Department here in Zurich has been working overtime in recent years to torment drivers. Closely spaced red lights have been added on roads into town, causing delays and angst for commuters. Pedestrian underpasses that once allowed traffic to flow freely across major intersections have been removed. Operators in the city’s ever expanding tram system can turn traffic lights in their favor as they approach, forcing cars to halt.
Around Löwenplatz, one of Zurich’s busiest squares, cars are now banned on many blocks. Where permitted, their speed is limited to a snail’s pace so that crosswalks and crossing signs can be removed entirely, giving people on foot the right to cross anywhere they like at any time. As he stood watching a few cars inch through a mass of bicycles and pedestrians, the city’s chief traffic planner, Andy Fellmann, smiled. “Driving is a stop-and-go experience,” he said. “That’s what we like! Our goal is to reconquer public space for pedestrians, not to make it easy for drivers.”
While some American cities — notably San Francisco, which has “pedestrianized” parts of Market Street — have made similar efforts, they are still the exception in the United States, where it has been difficult to get people to imagine a life where cars are not entrenched, Dr. Schipper said.
Europe’s cities generally have stronger incentives to act. Built for the most part before the advent of cars, their narrow roads are poor at handling heavy traffic. Public transportation is generally better in Europe than in the United States, and gas often costs over $8 a gallon, contributing to driving costs that are two to three times greater per mile than in the United States, Dr. Schipper said.
What is more, European Union countries probably cannot meet a commitment under the Kyoto Protocol to reduce their carbon dioxide emissions unless they curb driving. The United States never ratified that pact.
Globally, emissions from transportation continue a relentless rise, with half of them coming from personal cars. Yet an important impulse behind Europe’s traffic reforms will be familiar to mayors in Los Angeles and Vienna alike: to make cities more inviting, with cleaner air and less traffic.
Michael Kodransky, global research manager at the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy in New York, which works with cities to reduce transport emissions, said that Europe was previously “on the same trajectory as the United States, with more people wanting to own more cars.” But in the past decade, there had been “a conscious shift in thinking, and firm policy,” he said. And it is having an effect.
After two decades of car ownership, Hans Von Matt, 52, who works in the insurance industry, sold his vehicle and now gets around Zurich by tram or bicycle, using a car-sharing service for trips out of the city. Carless households have increased from 40 to 45 percent in the last decade, and car owners use their vehicles less, city statistics show.

“There were big fights over whether to close this road or not — but now it is closed, and people got used to it,” he said, alighting from his bicycle on Limmatquai, a riverside pedestrian zone lined with cafes that used to be two lanes of gridlock. Each major road closing has to be approved in a referendum.

Today 91 percent of the delegates to the Swiss Parliament take the tram to work.
Still, there is grumbling. “There are all these zones where you can only drive 20 or 30 kilometers per hour [about 12 to 18 miles an hour], which is rather stressful,” Thomas Rickli, a consultant, said as he parked his Jaguar in a lot at the edge of town. “It’s useless.”
Urban planners generally agree that a rise in car commuting is not desirable for cities anywhere. Mr. Fellmann calculated that a person using a car took up 115 cubic meters (roughly 4,000 cubic feet) of urban space in Zurich while a pedestrian took three. “So it’s not really fair to everyone else if you take the car,” he said.
European cities also realized they could not meet increasingly strict World Health Organization guidelines for fine-particulate air pollution if cars continued to reign. Many American cities are likewise in “nonattainment” of their Clean Air Act requirements, but that fact “is just accepted here,” said Mr. Kodransky of the New York-based transportation institute.
It often takes extreme measures to get people out of their cars, and providing good public transportation is a crucial first step. One novel strategy in Europe is intentionally making it harder and more costly to park. “Parking is everywhere in the United States, but it’s disappearing from the urban space in Europe,” said Mr. Kodransky, whose recent report “Europe’s Parking U-Turn” surveys the shift.
Sihl City, a new Zurich mall, is three times the size of Brooklyn’s Atlantic Mall but has only half the number of parking spaces, and as a result, 70 percent of visitors get there by public transport, Mr. Kodransky said.
In Copenhagen, Mr. Jensen, at the European Environment Agency, said that his office building had more than 150 spaces for bicycles and only one for a car, to accommodate a disabled person. While many building codes in Europe cap the number of parking spaces in new buildings to discourage car ownership, American codes conversely tend to stipulate a minimum number. New apartment complexes built along the light rail line in Denver devote their bottom eight floors to parking, making it “too easy” to get in the car rather than take advantage of rail transit, Mr. Kodransky said.
While Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has generated controversy in New York by “pedestrianizing” a few areas like Times Square, many European cities have already closed vast areas to car traffic. Store owners in Zurich had worried that the closings would mean a drop in business, but that fear has proved unfounded, Mr. Fellmann said, because pedestrian traffic increased 30 to 40 percent where cars were banned.
With politicians and most citizens still largely behind them, Zurich’s planners continue their traffic-taming quest, shortening the green-light periods and lengthening the red with the goal that pedestrians wait no more than 20 seconds to cross.
“We would never synchronize green lights for cars with our philosophy,” said Pio Marzolini, a city official. “When I’m in other cities, I feel like I’m always waiting to cross a street. I can’t get used to the idea that I am worth less than a car.”
in THE NEW YORK TIMES 26 June 2011

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/27/science/earth/27traffic.html?pagewanted=1&_r=2&ref=europe

FOTO: Eléctrico no centro de Munique

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Largo do Corpo Santo ou Largo do Carro Santo?


Largo do Corpo Santo? Parece mais um exemplo lisboeta de "Largo do Carro Santo"!

Toda esta bela praça de génese pombalina está há demasiadas décadas transformada numa placa de circulação rodoviária. Tudo o mais é um parque de estacionamento feito em cima do joelho.

Não há uma única árvore ou equipamentos (bancos de jardim?) para os cidadãos usufruirem do que é suposto ser um «espaço público histórico» segundo o PDM em vigor. Os passeios foram reduzidos à sua expresão mínima. E chegaram ao cúmulo de criar lugares de estacionamento mesmo em frente da entrada principal da igreja!

Que outra capital da europa trata assim os seus espaços públicos de referência?

E isto acontece a poucos metros da Praça do Município, sede do governo da cidade de Lisboa.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Transporte Público em Lisboa: «apenas aceitável»

The Best Public Transportation in Europe is in Munich, Poll Says

Munich has Europe’s best public transportation, according to a study published Tuesday. The survey, which covered 23 European cities, found that 9 offered only ‘‘acceptable’’ bus, streetcar and metro services.

The study was done by EuroTest, a group of automobile clubs in 15 nations led by the German auto club ADAC. It rated local public transportation on travel time, information, ease of transfer, costs, operating hours and access to bike and car parking.

Of the cities surveyed, only Munich rated ‘‘very good.’’ The survey found that public transit was ‘‘good’’ in 11 cities: Helsinki, Vienna, Prague, Hamburg, Copenhagen, Frankfurt, Barcelona, Leipzig, Cologne, Rome and Bern. It rated public transportation as only ‘‘acceptable’’ in Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam, Warsaw, Oslo, Lisbon, Madrid, London and Budapest. (March 3, 2010)


Foto: Eléctrico 24 (cujo regresso está prometido pela CML) no Largo do Carmo em 1979 pelo fotógrafo Olle S Nevenius.

Nota: Lisboa não vai conseguir alterar os comportamentos de mobilidade insustentáveis (1 cidadão = 1 carro) com Transportes Públicos que são classificados como «apenas aceitáveis».

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Túnel do Marquês, em Lisboa, é o lugar mais poluído de Portugal

De cada vez que um automobilista entra ou sai de Lisboa à hora de ponta através do Túnel do Marquês está a atravessar o lugar mais poluído do país.
A conclusão consta de um estudo do Instituto Superior de Engenharia de Lisboa (ISEL) a que o i teve acesso. Os níveis de poluição no interior desta passagem são dez vezes superior ao limite legal. Enquanto que, nas principais zonas urbanas da capital, a média de partículas na atmosfera ronda os 50 microgramas por metro cúbico, dentro do túnel esse valor dispara para 500 microgramas.

"As emissões de CO2 na atmosférica preocupam a generalidade das pessoas, mas as partículas são os constituintes mais perigosos para a saúde pública", adverte Manuel Matos, engenheiro ambiental do ISEL e coordenador do estudo. Por serem pequenas, as partículas infiltram-se rapidamente nos pulmões e são absorvidas na corrente sanguínea, originando um leque alargado de doenças respiratórias e pulmonares.

Mas as partículas encontradas no Túnel do Marquês são ainda mais perigosas porque 80% da sua composição é carbono. Isto significa que boa parte do ar que se respira dentro do túnel é composto por restos de combustível queimado, metais libertados pela parte mecânica dos automóveis e ainda resíduos que se soltam dos catalisadores: um cocktail de fragmentos propícios para outro leque alargado de doenças cancerígenas.

A poluição é um fenómeno associado a quase todas as passagens subterrâneas rodoviárias, mas no caso do Túnel do Marquês o problema agrava-se uma vez que se conjugam duas características perigosas: "É demasiado comprido e tem um elevado declive", explica o especialista.

O Túnel do Marquês tem uma extensão total de 1725 metros e uma inclinação de 9% (o limite imposto pela União Europeia é de 5%). Cada uma destas particularidades tem uma consequência distinta nos níveis de poluição. A elevada subida que o túnel apresenta implica um maior esforço do carro, um maior gasto de combustível e, por fim, maiores quantidades de partículas libertadas para a atmosfera. O comprimento do túnel, por seu turno, significa que, nas horas de maior congestionamento de trânsito, o ar não circula: "Os automóveis em movimento encarregam-se de garantir a ventilação do túnel, mas quando estão parados no trânsito isso não acontece." E o que temos entre as 08h00 e as 10h00 e das 17h00 às 19h00 é um túnel cheio de carros a queimar combustível. O que é que se poderá fazer, então, para reduzir o nível de poluição no Túnel do Marquês? A resposta de Manuel Matos é desanimadora: "Há muito pouco a fazer, além de reduzir o número de carros que entra e sai do túnel.

"O Túnel do Marquês "até está bem equipado", defende o engenheiro ambiental. Tem ventiladores que disparam automaticamente quando a atmosfera fica turva e é lavado uma vez por mês. Mesmo assim, o estudo do ISEL faz várias recomendações: aumentar ainda mais o número de respiradores e proibir a circulação dos automóveis a diesel que, segundo o especialista, são os responsáveis por mais de metade da poluição dentro do túnel. Porém, todas estas medidas não passam de remendos, adverte Mário Matos: "A única solução passa por restringir o uso do carro". É, aliás, isso que acontece durante os fins-de-semana. Aos sábados e domingos, os valores das partículas dentro do túnel descem para quase metade, fixando-se em média nos 200 microgramas por metro cúbico: "É essa comparação que nos permite fazer a correlação entre a poluição e o volume de tráfego automóvel", remata o engenheiro ambiental.

As amostras para o relatório do ISEL foram recolhidas em Outubro de 2008, mas os resultados nunca foram apresentados em Portugal. O estudo, que teve o apoio da Câmara de Lisboa, apenas foi apresentado em 2009 na Áustria. Porém, o vereador Fernando Nunes da Silva, responsável pelo pelouro do Ambiente, disse ao i desconhecer estas conclusões e considera "estranhos" os resultados: "O túnel foi sujeito a um estudo de impacto ambiental e o tráfego previsto era muito superior ao que lá circula. Foram introduzidos limites de velocidade de 50 km/h que estão a ser respeitados. Acho muito estranho que um estudo de impacto ambiental elaborado por nomes sonantes da engenharia do ambiente conclua que não existe problema e vem agora um estudo dizer o contrário", rematou.

(jornal «i»).

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

"Vigilantes" da CARRIS: mais de 9000 autuações em 2009

Desde 2004 que a Carris dispõe de um serviço de “Vigilantes” com o objectivo de contribuir para a melhoria das condições de circulação e operação do transporte público da Carris, complementando a actividade normal das entidades policiais. Diariamente os “Vigilantes” percorrem a rede da Carris, procurando com a sua presença desmotivar as infracções na circulação e no estacionamento que penalizem a circulação dos autocarros e eléctricos.

Infelizmente, apesar da actuação dos “Vigilantes” e das entidades policiais, ainda se verificam muitas situações de falta de respeito pelo transporte público. Segundo informação da CARRIS, só no ano de 2009, os agentes da Polícia Municipal, em serviço nos “Vigilantes”, procederam a mais de 9000 autuações, com parte significativa ao longo do trajecto da carreira 28 de eléctricos.

Foto: o dia a dia da vida do Eléctrico 28 na R. de S. Vicente

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Estacionamento Selvagem: «Perhaps prayer will help»

«We whine to a halt, clang the bell. This morning some little lettuce has parked his car too close to the tramlines just below the Sé (cathedral). The driver does all he can to nudge his tram through the gap but can't pass. He gets out and climbs the Sé's steps. Perhaps prayer will help.»

in Backwards Out Of The Big World - A Voyage into Portugal
Paul Hyland
Flamingo, London 1997

Nota: passados quase 15 anos, este relato do inglês Paul Hyland continua actualíssimo...