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Friday September 19, 2008 08:44 by Joshua Hart - UWE velorution at yahoo dot com
![]() New research shows that friendships on busy streets are cut by more than 75 percent People living on streets with heavy motor vehicle traffic are experiencing a considerable deterioration of their local social lives according to Joshua Hart, a researcher from the University of the West of England. Results suggest that residents on busy streets have less than one quarter the number of local friends compared to those living on similar streets with little traffic.
People living on streets with heavy motor vehicle traffic are experiencing a considerable deterioration of their local social lives according to Joshua Hart, a researcher from the University of the West of England. Results suggest that residents on busy streets have less than one quarter the number of local friends compared to those living on similar streets with little traffic.
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Comments (7 of 7)
Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7Thanks Josh and well done
This is such thought-provoking stuff. The link between friendship, quality of life and traffic is so obvious when you say it, but the clarity of your research and the poignancy of the personal statements make this compelling. We cannot ignore this.
Jon
Good stuff - more evidence that things need to change.
Although...... Bradley Stoke? Quiet streets but I doubt anyone even looks at each other up there, let alone talks! :-)
Good work Josh. Though i'm not convinced there will be that many new cars on the roads given rising oil prices. Like the population growth forcasts (9 Billion), these seem to be based on the whako theory of limitles growth and limitless resources.
I'm going to the West of England Partnership's Transport Forum soon. Should I try to use this there? What else should I do? Is there any point trying to influence WEP?
I'll try to check back here Thursday night for comments. Thanks for any pointers.
Yes, thank-you Josh for challenging mass car-use and showing how we are allowing the car to ruin all our lives.
Yet more evidence to back UCL’s Prof John Adams work on excessive mobility and the social breakdown it causes, which impacts especially badly on the poor.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypermobility_(travel)
Try again - this is Wikipedia's blue-arsed fly link
No no no you just don't get it do you!
More cars, more roads, it's all progress. The way to the New Atlantis, the Brave New World, the wonderful Utopia, the Pie in the Sky, the Jam Tomorrow of human perfectibility. You'll love it, really you will.