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Transport for Suburbia: Beyond the Automobile Age
 
 
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Transport for Suburbia: Beyond the Automobile Age [Hardcover]

Paul Mees
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Routledge; First edition (16 Dec 2009)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1844077403
  • ISBN-13: 978-1844077403
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.7 x 2.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 688,980 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Paul Mees
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Review

'The essential primer for all transport planners.' - Christian Wolmar, Transport Times

 '...tells a compelling story of what is wrong with public transit systems around the world and how transit can work well in low-density, auto-oriented places.' - Kenneth Joh, The Journal of the American Planning Association

'A book which ought to become as celebrated and influential as Jane Jacobs' work on cities or the famous San Francisco study by Appleyard ... The essential primer for all transport planners.' - Christian Wolmar, Transport Times

'[A] fascinating, well-written, well-researched book, easily understood by the layman.' - Railwatch

'This is a powerful book that combines detailed practical observation with a rigorous intellectual assessment and shows exactly what is wrong with public transport systems around the world and what is needed to put them right...It is a masterly overview and one that sets all policy makers, planners, politicians, urbanists and transport professionals a clearly defined task. The task is to deliver high quality public transport in a zero tolerance environment for excuses. After this book there can be no excuses.' - Professor John Whitelegg, Stockholm Environment Institute, University of York, UK

'There's no need for low-density despair.' - Mobility Magazine

'Mees has written a book that is a bus transit buff's dream' D. Brand, Choice, July 2010.

'Now thanks to a book which ought to become as celebrated and influential as Jane Jacobs' work on cities or the famout San Francisco study by Appleyard, I have the anser. And to paraphrase, Tony Blair, its policy, policy, policy and not density.' - Christian Wolmar, e-newsletter.

 'Should be the essential primer for all transport planners' - Christian Wolmar, e-newsletter.

 'Deserves to be widely read - particularly by Government ministers and officials with responsibility for transport planning' - Manchester Climate Fortnightly, 2010.

'In this thought-provoking book, Paul Mees provides a very personal and frank critique of many aspects of public transport planning, finance, and operations in Australia, New Zealand, the US, and the UK.' - John Pucher, Built Environment

'...recommended reading.' -  Philip Laird, Australian Options

 '..an intriguing offer from Paul Mees... this is an important argument and a bold claim... [it] should be widely read - and the lessons implemented.' - Journal of Transport Geography

'Mees delivers a crucial message about how we approach the problem of transportation emissions.  Transport for Suburbia is essential reading for everyone who fights for effective action on the climate crisis.'- Eric  Doherty, www.rabble.ca

 

Product Description

The need for effective public transport is greater than ever in the twenty-first century. With countries like China and India moving towards mass-automobility, we face the prospects of an environmental and urban health disaster unless alternatives are found. It is time to move beyond the automobile age. But while public transport has worked well in the dense cores of some big cities, the problem is that most residents of developed countries now live in dispersed suburbs and smaller cities and towns. These places usually have little or no public transport, and most transport commentators have given up on the task of changing this: it all seems too hard.

Transport for Surburbia argues that the secret of 'European-style' public transport lies in a generalizable model of network planning that has worked in places as diverse as rural Switzerland, the Brazilian city of Curitiba and the Canadian cities of Toronto and Vancouver. It shows how this model can be adapted to suburban, exurban and even rural areas to provide a genuine alternative to the car, and outlines the governance, funding and service planning policies that underpin the success of the world's best public transport systems.


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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
This book has a simple, important message. Public transit can work, even in low density suburbs. But it requires a level of coordination that is anathema to many economists, and the Governments who they advise. It will also required changes to established operators, public and private who are comfortable with the status quo. Until Mees's message is understood, cities large and small, will be condemned to ever increasing dependence on the automobile. Fragmented public transit doesn't work in modern cities. It never can and it never will.

Mees shows how cities as different as Toronto, Curitiba and Zurich have developed successful public transit systems, that achieve high ridership even in low density suburbs where every home has two cars parked outside. He makes his case both anecdotally and analytically. He objectively considers the benefits and costs of private versus public operation, concessioning and franchising, and gives a convincing argument for coordinated transport planning that will convince all but the most hardened free-marketers. He backs up his analysis with simple, robust data, and hundreds of real-life examples. He explains how the myth of density became accepted wisdom.
The book isn't perfect; he's got the regulatory structure of UK rail franchising mixed up, and is a bit too dismissive of the benefits it has (sometimes) achieved. But this is peripheral to his main thesis. He's also perhaps a bit to optimistic about the potential efficiency of public operators. But ultimately, he shows that the benefits of integrated networks are so large, that the overwhelm any inefficiencies of public operation.
Jane Jacobs, in her influential 1961 work "The Death and Life of Great American Cities" showed us valuable things about how cities work that we never quite recognised, and that modern "city planners" were destroying. Almost 50 years later, Jacobs' message is still not universally understood. Mees's book has a similar, message, overturning conventional wisdom and planning dogma. Let's hope the message gets through this time.
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An inspiring compendium 24 April 2011
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Comparative studies can be catalogues or they can identify reasons for success enabling others to adapt and build on them. Paul Mees mix of personal motivation and academic observation is an excellent example of a book that will hopefully inspire others to adopt more radical but practical approaches to reducing car use.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
I would back up everything said by the first reviewer that has also given this book a good rating. A very good message. I'm back on to buy a copy for a friend of mine as I have already recommended it to him. Buy it, read it and think about it, and help bring it about!
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