• ThinkBeat 12 hours ago

From life in Oslo, Norway.

In so far as improving the comfort of passengers using mass transit the best way to attract more travelers and retain travelers is to run enough busses, trains, subway trains, during rush hour so that the passangers are not packed like sardines ass to dick for 30 mins or more twice a day.

Then cooling inside the inside the passaenger area is also key Sweating like a pig while playing a sardine makes the experience even worse.

Starting work drenched in sweat and the smell of other poeples perfume and cologn is not a good start.

• bluGill 12 hours ago

I agree, but that costs a lot money. It costs $100/hour (this is likely low since I haven't checked in several years what inflation has done) to run a bus. That is one bus, even a tiny city will need more than 100 buses to just provide bad service, and would need 5-10 times as many just to give good service. If running buses were free everyone would have a bus every 5 minutes, with many different routes to choose from. Providing good places to wait for your bus is cheap by contrast, the cost of a single bus will upgrade many bus stops and the investment will last longer than the bus (though you need to maintain it)

You are wrong about rush hour. You need to provide good service all day, not just during rust hour. People who have good rush hour service and then a "family emergency" pops up mid day when they discover service is bad will go back to driving just in case that happens again. Plus running all day service at the same rates ends up breaking even - between staff willing to take less per hour, and good service enticing people to ride you can generally break even on your costs.

• jodrellblank 9 hours ago

> "That is one bus, even a tiny city will need more than 100 buses to just provide bad service, and would need 5-10 times as many just to give good service"

You say that as if it's an unthinkable impossibility. As of 2017 London had 8,600 busses carrying 6.5M passengers every day. Yes a big city needs a lot of buses, so they have a lot of buses. No problem. What would it cost if there were no buses and 6.5M more car journeys every day? And the roads and parking spaces for - what - 1M+ more cars to account for that?

What financial cost to the city for roads and infrastructure and traffic lights and signs and maintenance, what financial cost to the people needing cars, what time cost of humans stuck in traffic, what health cost of less exercise, what health cost of pollution, what accident cost?

• h2zizzle 11 hours ago

Busses are a band-aid that get employed as a cure too often. Ideally, you're running trams at surface level with decently-distanced stops and biking/walking infrastructure in between. Busses require infrastructure - large roads - which discourage pedestrian activity and encourage personal vehicle use. You want people walking near businesses that they might patronize, not flying past in large vehicles that make the space uncomfortable for pedestrians.

• bluGill 9 hours ago

You need roads anyway! Most of the businesses need to get trucks in to deliver the things they need. Thus you can reuse those roads for buses for places that are less busy and this is cheaper than a train. The real trick is how to get private one passenger automobiles off the roads.

In very dense areas you should have both roads and trains. However only the most dense cities in the world can support that, and then only in their most dense which is often small. For everyone else buses save money over trains.

• Retric 7 hours ago

A one lane road with minimal parking can handle a crazy number of deliveries and busses. Allow cars on that road and suddenly it’s almost useless as a transportation option.

Thus the urban infrastructure dilemma.

• trainsarebetter 9 hours ago

But buses actually don’t. you just pay for it later. Roads are one of the fastest deteriorating forms of infrastructure. the hole “ but rail dosnt make money” argument ignores the fact that… roads don’t ether

• bluGill 4 hours ago

Extept that you have to maintain the roads anyway. taking a few buses off won't save much so long as the road for trucks exists.

• gamblor956 6 hours ago

The time frame before a rail line will save money over buses is measured in decades.

With buses, you don't include the cost of road maintenance because buses share the roads with millions of other vehicles so the allocable cost is neglible.

• some_random 10 hours ago

Is there a single city in the world with trams/subways/trains/etc but no buses?

• h2zizzle 5 hours ago

Very few, if any, but there are cities that use busses for what they're good for, and not as a bad urban planner's trams.

• hansvm 11 hours ago

Busses are huge though. You can get fares cheaper than the cost of gasoline for an equivalent single-passenger trip just by using the available seats and ignoring standing room completely. The seats are pretty wide, so that satisfies the anti-sardine requirement easily.

The point about needing good service all day, not just during rush hours, is more interesting. If your hypothesis is that people just want the experience to not be terrible while they're in the bus, more trips during rush hours definitely suffices. You do need a minimum level of service in the middle of the day for the idea to be practical for some people. Surely 15-30min routes are fine though?

• bluGill 9 hours ago

7 minutes max is good. Anything longer than that is bad, though you can accept up to every 30 minutes, anything more than that is unacceptable. I used to ride a every 30 minute bus, and I always started checking where the bus was (as opposed to the schedule/time!) long before I wanted to leave. A couple times I made a mistake and arrived at the stop just after the bus left, and was then in for an unacceptably long wait for the next bus.

Mid day you need better service than rush hour. People going to work generally have a schedule and they have input into it - they can plan their day around when the bus goes. People doing errands in the mid day do not know when they will be done, if there happens to be a line when you go to the checkout you miss your bus. When you are at work you have more control over when you leave and so will always make your bus.

When people see your bus system as a way to get to work and a car is for everything else you can do worse service than when you want people to get rid of the car.

• kedihacker 10 hours ago

Per 15 minute is maximum for good service. 30 minutes is infrequent. 10 is very good.

• antennafirepla 11 hours ago

Everything costs money. The cost is relatively low to the public and economic benefit from plentiful public transit. Breaking even financially would be icing on the cake. Public transit is a service, we should expect it to cost money — and not necessarily pass 100% of the cost to passengers, since it needs to be affordable to provide the full benefit to people.

• mousethatroared 10 hours ago

Let's agree that the service should be subsidized. Let's establish that Im amenable to a free service 100% tax payer.

I am, in fact amenable to this.

How do you establish fairness though?

Best case scenario, say in the US ex-NYC, you will always have 20-40% of people needing to ride their cars because the tails of the distribution are prohibitively expensive.

Nor are these people necessarily wealthy - the economically wealthiest class of people are urban dinks.

So how to do you establish fairness to this 20-40% of people subsidizing the others?

• rsynnott 10 hours ago

> So how to do you establish fairness to this 20-40% of people subsidizing the others?

Well, for a start, they're not, necessarily. That thing they're driving on, it didn't magically appear, you realise. Road maintenance and construction is a _huge_ part of total transport spending.

• GauntletWizard 2 hours ago

Yes, and road maintenance is proportional to the fourth power of the axle load. Busses are typically loaded at 4-8 times the per-axle weight of passenger cars.

• godelski 4 hours ago

  >  It costs $100/hour to run a bus
That sounds pretty cheap!

Googling suggests you can get 40 people on the average bus, but let's say that's 20! Let's be super rough to get guesstimates. California has an average gas price of $4.83/gal[0] and average car is like 24mpg. We'll take that at 60mph and assume you're driving that (mpg is usually worse in cities). So let's say ($4.8/g) * (1/24 g/m) * (60 m/h) = 12. So at half capacity the bus is more than half the price. That's even before we include things like insurance, maintenance, and anything else (like parking fees). Sure, we're super rough, but given how big the difference is I'd be surprised if refining switched the conclusion.

Of course, there's extra convenience of cars, but a lot of time we don't need that extra convenience. A lot of times we're going the same way everyone else is and our convenience becomes inconvenient. There's also lots of extra conveniences of public transportation too. If you've experienced good public transit you probably prefer it in most situations.

I agree, things need to run all day but I disagree that it costs a lot of money. I think the bigger issue is the negative feedback loop. Public transportation sucks, so no one uses it. -> Public transportation can't get more funding because no one uses it. -> No one uses public transportation because it sucks. Unfortunately this is one of those things where "build it and they will come". It won't happen right away, momentum is a bitch, but it can't ever happen without making the investment. And clearly it is actually cheap.

[0] https://gasprices.aaa.com/?state=CA

• bluGill 4 hours ago

if you can get the money to buy and run all those buses and run them for several years while people figure out they are good. They also need to be good - many buses run terrible routes that won't get you where you want to go in a reasonable anount of time.

• godelski 3 hours ago

I recognize this. Please read my last paragraph.

• rsynnott 11 hours ago

> You need to provide good service all day, not just during rust hour.

Providing good service at non-rush-hour is comparatively easy, though; it just has to be relatively frequent. Particularly for buses, the trouble at rush hour is that you can effectively hit capacity for a line; you get buses waiting for other buses to leave stops, and so on.

• bluGill 9 hours ago

While true, if you have good all day service and run into that problem you have more than enough demand to build a train.

• fads_go 8 hours ago

Yes, it costs, and yes, to make public transit a valid alternative service needs to be frequent all day.

However, all of the maintenance around allowing private transport is also a cost. That includes all of the private costs for car ownership. If public transport is a valid option, then car ownership becomes a choice.

A tiny city might need 100 busses, but how many cars does that replace? What is the full cost of those cars? If everyone made a monthly "bus payment" instead of a "car payment" (actually payments when you add insurance, maintenance, ...), I think we'd find the bus system much less expensive.

• seszett 11 hours ago

> even a tiny city will need more than 100 buses to just provide bad service, and would need 5-10 times as many just to give good service

Wikipedia says De Lijn (the company that provides public transport for Flanders) has 2200 busses total. Service could be better but it's not awful either, and that's for a whole region of 6 million inhabitants, so I think your numbers are quite off. A tiny city only requires a handful of busses, a medium one use 50 busses or so.

• rsynnott 11 hours ago

I assume that the major urban areas also have decent rail and tram systems, though. It makes a big difference.

Dublin has a metro population of about 1.5 million, and has about 1,400 buses (excluding intercity and private services); however its rail and tram systems are, er, inadequate. Berlin has about 1,600 buses for a metro area of 6 million, but of course has a far better rail and tram system.

• seszett 11 hours ago

Right, I totally forgot that the bus network here is only there to fill the gaps between the tram lines, which might not be the case in other places.

• rsynnott 10 hours ago

Yeah, there's a route (or set of closely related routes) near my office which, at peak times, has a 100 person double decker bus about once per _minute_. Really, it should be a tram route, but that would require building a tram line, and Dublin tends to see that as an immense undertaking to be done only once a decade or so (and this decade's one is already planned out).

• Scoundreller 7 hours ago

Have they made any efforts to make peak demand... less peaky?

That's kinda a problem with big capex transit projects: you're spending all this cash to 24/7 fix a problem that only exists for 5-10 hours/week.

• f6v 9 hours ago

Just keep in mind that a company car is a major perk all salaried employees strive to get because that allows them to commute to work for free from all those tiny villages.

• itsoktocry 8 hours ago

>You are wrong about rush hour. You need to provide good service all day, not just during rust hour.

Your first half talks about how high the hourly rate to run a bus is. Then in the second half you recommend the same service level for busy versus non-busy times? Seems sub-optimal.

• bluGill 6 hours ago

All day service ends up increasing all hours use - including rush hour.

however no matter what it is expensive and you need years of service before people change habbits. Often the expense is so high that 'you cannot get there from here'

• aftbit 10 hours ago

Do you have any source or more information on the $100/hr figure? That seems shockingly high to me. It only costs about twice or three times that to run a small airplane or a farming combine.

• mousethatroared 10 hours ago

Is it surprising though?

Without looking up the data, off the top of my head.

The bus driver needs a commercial license with air brakes, is a public employee and has benefits.

He has to be making 75k/year + overhead. Let's say overhead is 50%

$56.25 / hr.

Then there's the diesel cost. A large bus must get ~ 10 mpg highway, but a city bus is all stop and go - disastrous for a vehicle as massive as a bus. Let's say it gets 4 mpg.

$4/gal diesel * 30 mph average speed / 4 mpg = $30 / hr on diesel.

We're at $86.26/hr.

You could argue my driver makes too much, and my mpg is too low, but I havent included:

- routine maintenance

- fixing broken vehicles

- cleaning

- amortization

So, play with the numbers if you will; but $100/hr has to be a good, round estimate, for running costs.

• mapt 9 hours ago

> Then there's the diesel cost. A large bus must get ~ 10 mpg highway, but a city bus is all stop and go - disastrous for a vehicle as massive as a bus. Let's say it gets 4 mpg. $4/gal diesel * 30 mph average speed / 4 mpg = $30 / hr on diesel.

We've already got decent electric bus options implemented in a number of cities, and they're only going to get better. That's before you consider hooking them up to wires like a sensible transit network.

Municipal fleets often make it a point to use alternative energy with buses, like CNG before batteries were a practical option. They do it for public image, because of the urban air quality issues with old-school diesel exhaust, and for cost reasons.

A more interesting point is pavement. Public buses, garbage trucks, and schoolbuses are some of the most significant non-weather-related causes of road wear, and this is only going to get worse the heavier the axle weight if you try to run long-range battery banks. Road wear scales with axle weight raised to the fourth power. Arguably there is a case to be made for the articulated or even bi-articulated designs if it allowed you to drop axle weight, with significant benefit to the Packed Like Sardines problem. Articulated EVs have a lot more freedom to redistribute the weight and to power individual axles more intelligently.

• rsynnott 10 hours ago

> Then there's the diesel cost. A large bus must get ~ 10 mpg highway, but a city bus is all stop and go - disastrous for a vehicle as massive as a bus. Let's say it gets 4 mpg.

Increasingly, most buses would be either electric, or heavy hybrid (ie electric with a diesel generator).

But also, consider the money they take in. My local bus system's buses take up to 100 people. The charge is 2 euro for a journey where the last leg starts within 90 minutes of the first leg, on any mode of transport. However in practice the average journey would be in the 30 min range. So if the buses are constantly full, that's 400 euro per hour takings!

Of course, it's not really that high; the buses are not always full, some people are using monthly or annual tickets, which are cheaper, some people are kids or over 65 or otherwise get cheap or free travel, the trains and trams also have to be paid for, and so on. But it's sufficient that they were actually able to cut the price (it used to be up to 3.50 for a single bus journey); the increased use from the cheaper simpler system offset the reduction in revenue per journey.

• bluGill 9 hours ago

In the US every transit agency published their costs to the FTA. I looked that data up about 5 years ago, and I can't remember how to search it, but it should be online if you want to figure it out. (unless Trump has removed that?)

• PeterStuer 10 hours ago

Honestly, for 'emergency' things a taxi service is a good complement. Busses are good at regular routes between frequent routes/hubs, not for 'I need point to point immediatly now'.

The goal should be more to cover peoples normal transit needs. So plenty of routes with stops very near most people's homes and destinations, and a high enough frequency at most hours of the day and night to not cause too much waiting frustration.

• naming_the_user 12 hours ago

100% this - make it more comfortable and handle the rush.

I live in London, we have tons of public transport.

In the middle of the day, outside of rush hour, I use it a lot and it can be really pleasant, particularly suburban rail, you can stretch out a bit, there is often air conditioning, a nice view from the window, etc.

When it's busy I will drive even if it takes longer because my car is guaranteed to have personal space and is clean.

• mhotchen 14 hours ago

I think about this often. I hear people talking about why we need sunscreen these days and in my mind it's simply due to the lack of foliage and natural shade in both modern urban and rural areas (which are largely farm land these days)

• infecto 13 hours ago

Wouldn’t the simpler explanation be that we are more aware of the risks to over exposure to the sun? We certainly can use more trees but most folks spend most of their time indoors for work.

• ghaff 12 hours ago

In general, perhaps especially in the US, a lot of people are more inclined to mitigate all kinds of risks today than they were a few decades ago. See also seat belts, helmets, etc. Per another comment though I don't see any evidence that extends to not even going outside and, while my dermatologist is 100% on-board with sunscreen and hats, she's never even hinted that I might spend less time outside,

• bluGill 12 hours ago

No doctor tells you to never go outside in normal situations. If there are high pollution or severe weather events they will tell you stay inside for the duration. I'm sure there are others, but they are not common so it doesn't matter that I can't think of them.

However many people only go outside in the context of walking from their car to the door of wherever they are going, and some who work from home can go for weeks without going outside at all. This is a bad thing, you need exercise (though it could be inside), but realistically many people are not getting enough.

• ghaff 9 hours ago

Certainly, and especially outside of an urban environment, walking any real amount takes a degree of intentionality that is easy to put off.

• wongarsu 12 hours ago

Depends on what you mean by "these days". If you ask "why do white people need sunscreen" a large part of the reason is that we evolved this skin tone in a Europe that was completely covered in forest until agriculture became widespread. If you ask "why do people wear more sunscreen than in the 50s" the answer is risk awareness. And especially in the last 10 years a much bigger awareness of the effects of skin aging.

• sorenjan 11 hours ago
• WaitWaitWha 10 hours ago

No.

"The peoples of Europe are fair-skinned and reddish, because they live in a cold climate and are not scorched by the sun."

Source: Hippocrates, On Airs, Waters, and Places, 5th century BC.

"The physical characteristics of the Germans are consistent: blue eyes, reddish hair, and large bodies."

(Tacitus, Germania, chapter 4)

Egyptian tomb paintings from the New Kingdom (c. 1550–1070 BC) visually represent foreign peoples with distinct skin tones - "Europeans", in the form of Sea Peoples or early Aegean peoples (e.g., Minoans or Mycenaeans), were sometimes shown with light red or pale skin tones.

• fwip 9 hours ago

The agricultural revolution was roughly 10,000 BC, wasn't it? Your sources are more recent than that, and so don't disagree with the point the parent post was making.

• wongarsu 6 hours ago

According to [1] more like 6000-4000 BC for Europe. Granted, that's still before 1700BC.

From a cursory study of Wikipedia my rough summary would be: Europe used to be roughly divided in the "Western Hunter Gatherers" (WHG) and "Eastern Hunter Gatherers" (EHG). The WHG typically had dark skin, dark hair and blue eyes, the EHG were typically light skinned with brown eyes. Blond hair may have originated from EHGs in North Eurasia and spread from there. Around 6000 BC farmers from Anatolia (~modern Turkey) started moving into Europe, the EEF (Early European Farmers). Those were typically smaller than European hunter-gatherers, light skinned and dark haired. They migrated North, partially replacing the EHG and WHG, partially mixing with them, and in some places the EHG and WHG simply took up farming. But Easter Europe is less amenable to farming, meaning the dark-skinned WHG diminished the most while the light-skinned EHG and EEF became the dominant groups in Europe's genetic diversity

1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_European_Farmers#/media/...

• WaitWaitWha 8 hours ago

Yes, there was an agricultural revolution during the neolithic times. We have evidence this for the Southwest Asia aka Middle East, Asia around the Yangtze and Yellow rivers, South, Central and North Americas.

I am open to this hypothesis (conjecture?), it just lacks supportive evidence. On the other hand, we have ample evidence that agricultural revolution did not "turn people white" in the other regions.

• codr7 6 hours ago

Also, no one was selling sunscreen back then.

That all started in the seventies when skin cancer was invented.

• wodenokoto 12 hours ago

It is. Sunscreen recommendations usually also applies if you plan on staying in shade. UV (like visible light) reflects off of walls too.

• ricw 12 hours ago

It’s actually much more that the ozone layer, which filters uv, is much thinner than it was even 60-70 years ago. The ozone layer might be growing again, but at a very slow pace.

Simple fact is, we’re much more exposed to uv than prior generations.

• dgacmu 12 hours ago

"much" more might be overstating it? We get about 6% more UV:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/03/100316142529.h...

Which corresponds with the ozone layer being about 5% thinner:

https://www.clo.nl/en/indicators/en021819-ozone-layer-1980-2...

Not good (or good for us) but also not a huge huge change, since we stopped the thinning of the ozone layer mostly in time.

• roflmaostc 12 hours ago

actually the reflectance of UV is usually much lower than visible light.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-01315-1/figures/2

• ekianjo 12 hours ago

People are moke likely to cover themselves too much and refrain from going outside which in turns makes them vitamin D deficient which is way worse than potential UV induced cancer risks

• andra_nl 12 hours ago

Can you support this claim somehow? Because on the face of it this sounds dangerously wrong.

• jodrellblank 8 hours ago

This dietician blog on the British Heart Foundation website suggests it's wrong but partly right[0], saying "although having low levels of vitamin D is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease, the low vitamin D is a result of lifestyle factors that increase your risk of heart disease and stroke, rather than the cause of increased risk.".

The leading causes of death in the UK[1] are heart disease, lung cancer, influenza, dementia, vascular disease (stroke?) and lower respiratory disease. Skin cancer is 1% of cancer deaths, and for melanoma the peak of diagnosis is people 85-89 years old[2]. Considering average life expectancy, people are generally diagnosed with skin cancer a few years after they die.

The partial claim "refrain from going outside which in turn .. is way worse than potential UV induced cancer risks" could be right. Avoiding exercise and increasing your heart disease risk, in the hope that you'll avoid one of the more treatable and less fatal cancers in very late life, is probably the wrong tradeoff. Not to do with Vitamin D or covering up or suncream though. Still, why not do both - cover up and go out, lower heart disease risk and lower your chances of skin cancer diagnosis in late life.

[0] https://www.bhf.org.uk/informationsupport/heart-matters-maga...

[1] https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthan...

[2] https://cks.nice.org.uk/topics/melanoma/background-informati...

• pjc50 12 hours ago

Also the 20th century abandonment of the hat.

(remind me, what was the California "bus shelter" design that was basically an expensive stick and got widely ridiculed on here?)

• huhkerrf 11 hours ago

It was called La Sombrita: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Sombrita

And, it's even worse than just not working. It's a shelter to provide shade _for women_ that provided almost none. Because apparently shade is now part of the gender wars.

• fwip 9 hours ago

As somebody who took daily bus trips for nearly a decade of my life, I would definitely prefer the meager shade from these to the bare bus stops they were replacing. Standing in the sun for even fifteen minutes waiting for a bus can be miserable.

I'm not sure what your point about "gender wars" is. Is this pole too effeminate for a man to be shaded by?

• RunningDroid 6 hours ago

> I'm not sure what your point about "gender wars" is. Is this pole too effeminate for a man to be shaded by?

They were referring to this: >Its purpose was to assist female bus riders by offering shade during the hottest hours of the day and providing sidewalk lighting at night.

• huhkerrf 4 hours ago

> I'm not sure what your point about "gender wars" is. Is this pole too effeminate for a man to be shaded by?

TFA address this: "Its purpose was to assist female bus riders by offering shade during the hottest hours of the day and providing sidewalk lighting at night."

• jollyllama 12 hours ago

"La Sombrita"

• stefs 12 hours ago

imo: people used to be outside a lot more. by summer they usually had a good tan, so they didn't suffer the sunlight that much. of course this did lead to _premature_ (from our modern point of view) skin aging.

heat and light are different factors, even though they mostly come hand in hand. outside, heat is definitely a bigger problem than it used to be, but also we don't spend as much time outside. if heat became a problem people used to take time off, rest during the hottest times of the day and work earlier/later.

• npteljes 10 hours ago

>why we need sunscreen these days

It's not about foliage, it's because we like to look as young as possible - or put another way, as undamaged as possible. Sunscreen adds to that a lot, because it mitigates sun damage. At a given age, people used to look much older than we do now, and that is partly because of less sun exposure.

• elric 12 hours ago

> Municipalities are attempting to create safe and comfortable transit systems in the face of climate change.

Citation needed. Over here, municipalities are trying to find further ways of reducing the cost of public transport. Spending money on comfort is simply not going to happen. Belgium's 2nd largest city's transit system has famously malfunctioning escalators (some of which have been broken for half a decade). The offering is reduced year after year, while prices go up.

I wish things were different.

• onlyrealcuzzo 11 hours ago

That's the cost of more and more of the budget going to pensions, as more and more of the "workers" are 65+ retirees...

• elric 11 hours ago

Everything is a tradeoff. I'm sure pensions will become more affordable if we keep killing people by means of air pollution and car crashes. /s

But I'm sure we'll keep subsidising company cars.

• cadamsdotcom 14 hours ago

Trees are relaxing to look at when your bus is late :) and 3.2C cooler than shelters!

Though most know such things intuitively, hard numbers help transit designers make their case.

• nuc1e0n 12 hours ago

That's without mentioning the fact that trees emit chemicals into the air that help make it rain. It was discussed here on Hacker News recently.

That will help to lower temperatures across a wide area.

• fuzzy_biscuit 11 hours ago

And they're natural filters. It's a win/win/win.

• padjo 12 hours ago

People who want to chop down trees for any reason other than them being in danger of falling down really baffle me.

• tppiotrowski 10 hours ago

There are a few other reasons that aren't baffling:

roots destroy water pipes and heave sidewalks and pavement. They can interfere with power lines as well. :(

• dylan604 10 hours ago

sounds more like poor planning than anything else.

• bluGill 11 hours ago

Non native trees can be a harmful invader to the native environment and should be chopped down. If you can get a large enough area to do it at once chopping down all of a type of tree can stop the spread of disease thus saving tree father away that get isolated (though you can argue these are trees in danger of falling anyway)

• sillystu04 12 hours ago

I hate male trees because they make hay fever much worse. Cutting them down and replacing them with female trees would achieve all the good benefits of trees without affecting hay fever.

The only downside of female trees is that they shed pods, fruits & seeds into urban environments. But even this might conceivably have some benefits to biodiversity.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/may/16/how-urba...

• lippihom 10 hours ago

A note about hay fever - not sure how bad yours is but mine was debilitating (hated leave the house during spring). The last two years I've been doing immunotherapy shots in the winter and this year my allergies are almost completely gone. It's been an unbelievable quality of life change. Would highly recommend if you have insurance that covers it (tho looking back now, I'd also gladly pay out of pocket).

• padjo 6 hours ago

Ironically the tree outside my house was recently removed because the fruit annoyed people. Personally I thought the tree was well worth the hour or two a year it took to remove the fruit in autumn.

• CGamesPlay 10 hours ago

This comment sounded very strange to me, but as the linked article says about "male" trees:

> Growers’ breeding of purely male diodar trees had created, said Ogren, “something that doesn’t even exist in nature”.

• badmintonbaseba 12 hours ago

Would the female trees do that if there weren't any male trees around?

• bluGill 12 hours ago

Not many male trees are needed to breed so even if one is around you get the problem.

Not all trees have separate male and female trees as well. If you only have one type of tree you have no biodiversity and that is almost as bad as no trees.

• 0x000xca0xfe 11 hours ago

Yes! It's insane to me how many people value concrete more than trees.

• stackedinserter 11 hours ago

My former landlord (his wife, actually) forced our neighbours to cut down their beautiful apple tree because in August, every two years, apples fell on the ground and made mess on a shared lawn.

• MattSayar 9 hours ago

Reminds me of a Technology Connections video describing how helpful awnings are in reducing temperatures inside your house [0]. Are there any modern-looking awnings that wouldn't look out of place in my neighborhood?

[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uhbDfi7Ee7k

• lucidguppy 14 hours ago

You can have a pretty good simulacrum of a forest using only two tennis courts worth of land (a pittance in most US cities that have 30% reserved for parking).

Look up Miyawaki method.

• mykowebhn 14 hours ago

This is great for focusing on providing adequate public transportation.

I would also love to see attempts at providing heat stress mitigation FOR trees.

• rightbyte 14 hours ago

Design #12 looks nice. The same performance as trees.

It has annoyed me alot that buss shelters seem to be built like sun ovens only protecting versus rain and wind.

• nottorp 13 hours ago

The protection from wind is the problem when it's hot - no air movement and thus less cooling inside the shelter than outside it.

On the other hand, most trees won't protect you from rain.

Maybe it's best to have a shelter under trees.

• metalman 14 hours ago

heat stress mitigation for trees, could actualy be exploited for our, and there benifit. treat a tree as a bunch of fancy pumps, which it is, and choose trees that have best shape and canopy for cover, that are also water hogs, as they do pump a lot of water from the ground to stay cool, so give them extra via burried waterers that drip feed them water to there roots, and they will cool the surrounding area a bit more, set enough of them up, and paint all availible roofs with the new super reflective paints, and it might be possible to create niehborhood islands of cool

• MeteorMarc 4 hours ago

Trees as shelter works as long there is water for the trees(evaporation cools, like in sweating). With increasing heat stress there is not enough water and the trees will simply die. Or burn.

• tppiotrowski 10 hours ago

Planting trees is hard. Phoenix AZ has a tree planting program called the Shade Phoenix Plan and they publish public reports.

Watering and maintenance are a big cost. Iirc it's about $1000 to plant a tree. $100 for the tree and $900 for the irrigation and labor to plant it. In the first 10 years of the program 2/3 of the 106,000 planted trees were removed due to accidents, storms, not enough water/aging. [1]

[1] https://www.phoenix.gov/content/dam/phoenix/heatsite/documen...

• potato3732842 10 hours ago

It being difficult to grow trees that provide good in phoenix is literally the nick cake "you don't say" meme.

Expecting something like that work without questionable degree of investment to make some tree work survive of its element is contradictory to all the adaptations that make plant life suitable for arid climates (i.e not providing a ton of area to the sun relative to their mass).

• tppiotrowski 10 hours ago

Fair. I used Phoenix because it's the only published city shading plan I've come across. It could just be that arid/hot climates are the places trees are needed. The study linked was in Houston, Texas.

The Phoenix report is valuable because it provides lessons that should be avoided going forward: change the laws so property owners are not liable if a tree outside their business hurts someone, don't plant a tree if you can't irrigate it, work with local residents to plant and water trees to save on labor and increase success, etc.

If there's other municipal shade reports I'd love to read them. Helping people find shade is what I do for a living. [1]

[1] shademap.app

• viburnum 3 hours ago

Milwaukee started its shade program in the 1980s.

• jodrellblank 8 hours ago

Like the startups which try to make solar systems to condense drinking water from the air. They demonstrate it in wet climates where the idea works but the solar panels don't because it's cloudy and cool. Those environments don't need drinking water because they are rainy. Then they try it in deserts where the water is needed and the solar panel bit works, but the whole thing doesn't work because there's no water in the air - that's why the water is needed there(!).

ThunderF00t Busted! videos on scammy startups keeping on raising money for this fundamentally unworkable idea:

- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vc7WqVMCABg - Zero Mass Water

- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vss1ke5tTvI - Fontus self-filling water bottle

- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vss1ke5tTvI - self-filling water bottle lab experiment what would be reasonably possible

- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OfmQcY_sEt0 - WaterSeer part 1

- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_gPSyU564Io - WaterSeer part 2

Drinking game: drink every time he says "it's a. de. humidifier."

• newer_vienna 9 hours ago

"Here's a scientific study that shows that trees and shelters are nice because they provide shade"

thanks, I guess. I didn't need a study telling me something I already know and agree with

• Ylpertnodi 8 hours ago

Someone got paid: it all keeps the money flowing. Always check if the fence serves a purpose.

• amunozo 13 hours ago

We all know this. We need political will.

• JohnMakin 10 hours ago

At least in CA, we're going the opposite direction - complete removal of shelter, even the benches have dividers on them so people can't sleep. This is meant to deter homeless, but the city also doesn't really provide them anywhere else to go, so things that provide additional shelter at bus stops are essentially a non-starter for the city.

• profsummergig 7 hours ago

Do we need reasons to plant cities in urban areas now?

Look at photos of Tel Aviv. Lush green trees everywhere. Compare it with any other city in the desert. Completely changes the quality of life.

• nickdothutton 10 hours ago

Given the cost of maintaining trees, I’m surprised councils in the UK haven’t just removed street trees and “planted” metal ones.

• washmyelbows 13 hours ago

Trees good, study finds

• vanschelven 12 hours ago