juxtapilot
Snowflake
Looks like we need to have a Portland area M&G to discuss the hipster agenda...
There is no problem with the freeway ramps, apart from people not realizing that they should be using them to accelerate. That said, you are right, and they aren't all Volvo drivers. Lots of Prius and Subaru drivers also!
The Max would be great if the stops were more than 50 yards apart. As it is you can walk to most places faster.
The dream of the nineties is alive in Portland...
Yeah I saw a few riding around like that. They kept sticking their foot between the tire and the front fork. I was hoping for one of them to get their foot wedged in their and endo overI was talking to a hipster and learned that apparently bicycles with no brakes are a thing. I was like...WTF? I mean I can sort of understand the fixie fixation, especially if you don't have hills...but I think no brakes?
I was talking to a hipster and learned that apparently bicycles with no brakes are a thing. I was like...WTF? I mean I can sort of understand the fixie fixation, especially if you don't have hills...but I think no brakes?
I think we should create a reality show. We will call it "WacoFan in Portland" and I will just walk around encountering these weird people and berate them, spit on them, or just kick them in the nuts. I bet it would get huge ratings and I could follow up with a stint on Celebrity Rehab.
Portland traffic planning engineers were way behind many other cities in urban growth boundary and road designs. They are much better at design now, but they, and Vancouver, have spent years rebuilding their infrastructure to match standards developed by other cities. For example, cramped tiny diameter circular freeway on-ramps used to provide almost no merge time, unless you were driving a sports car that could do zero to 60mph in 4 seconds (if not, drivers had to sit for days and wait for an opening in freeway traffic). Those and other covered-wagon era design flaws hindered drivers and driver development.
Some of their city bridges are very narrow because they were designed for Model T's.
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If someone wants to see a well engineered road system, they can move to Los Angeles. But Portland and the surrounding countryside has its charms.
Not actually true. Portland has some of the most progressive and forward-looking traffic and city planning in the country. It's often used as an example of successful urban design and redevelopment within the discipline.

I said "Portland [Oregon] traffic planning engineers were way behind many other cities in urban growth boundary and road designs."
But now they are up to speed and re-engineering everything they can. Portland freeways may never be the marvel that LA freeways are, but I think that's a good thing. And the more laid back driving attitude, compared to LA, is also refreshing. My supersonic driving days are over. I like covered & one lane bridges.
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Ah, well, I apologize for misinterpreting the context. Having grown up on the stuff (both my folks were Portland planners--one for the city, the other at PSU), I can get a little thorny about it. .....
Portland, where young people go to retire...The dream of the nineties is alive in Portland...