Living near public transport can lead to longer, healthier lives

wearetheearth:

thelittlemermaid:

bobulate:

A new study for the The American Public Transportation Association finds that people who live in communities with high-quality public transportation generally live longer, healthier lives:

People who live or work in communities with high quality public transportation tend to drive significantly less and rely more on alternative modes (walking, cycling and public transit) than they would in more automobile-oriented areas. This reduces traffic crashes and pollution emissions, increases physical fitness and mental health, and provides access to medical care and healthy food. These impacts are significant in magnitude compared with other planning objectives, but are often overlooked or undervalued in conventional transport planning.

The good news:

[M]any simple, affordable, and often enjoyable lifestyle habits can lead to healthier and happier lives: breath fresh air, avoid dangerous driving, maintain healthy weight, be physically active, eat fresh fruits and vegetables, maintain friendships, and avoid excessive stress.

The bad news:

Many people find it difficult to maintain healthy habits. As a result, the U.S. has relatively poor health outcomes compared with peer countries, and according to some projections average U.S. lifespans may actually decline in the future due to growing but avoidable health risks.

But:

This analysis can help transport and health professionals better coordinate their efforts to create communities where people can live long and prosper…. When all impacts are considered, improving public transit can be one of the most cost effective ways to achieve public health objectives.

Interesting to consider, then, how transportation planning techniques like Hans Monderman’s — based on the observation that individuals’ behavior in traffic is more positively affected by other people and the built environment of the public space than it is by conventional traffic control devices and regulations — might take part in a predominantly public-transport culture.

[via]

No doubt.

Notes

  1. brear-rodriguez reblogged this from wearetheearth
  2. specialagentspooky reblogged this from bobulate and added:
    dude. new urbanism. also of note: who has access to good public transit systems? (and fuck commuter rail. BART, die.)
  3. burghless reblogged this from bananabeat
  4. the-abcs-of-life reblogged this from bobulate
  5. mariamjaan reblogged this from bobulate and added:
    Sweet! The job and the new apartment are super public transportation friendly.
  6. jackikay reblogged this from hippieflavor and added:
    via hippieflavor bobulate planetizen.com I don’t plan on owning a car (and a TV, too) for the rest of my life.
  7. courtney reblogged this from bobulate and added:
    Let’s not keep this a secret, and bring quality public transit to the areas that need it! I love my public and...
  8. lenagainstme reblogged this from bobulate
  9. elleembee reblogged this from bobulate
  10. fauxshizzle reblogged this from bobulate
  11. justinleonnoel reblogged this from bobulate and added:
    I guess I need to move to chicago and sell my car.
  12. deenaroo reblogged this from bobulate
  13. wakeupboo reblogged this from bobulate
  14. titoalimusiq reblogged this from bobulate
  15. rachel-berry-archive reblogged this from bobulate and added:
    Yeah, yeah. I love me some public transportation! It’s cheaper, plus better for the environment, and now studies say...
  16. mollymurphs reblogged this from bobulate
  17. giomanach reblogged this from bobulate and added:
    I use public transport everyday. Yay for me :D
  18. king-and-country reblogged this from bobulate
  19. bananabeat reblogged this from bobulate
  20. pa4culture reblogged this from bobulate

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