“The automobile has not merely taken over the street, it has dissolved the living tissue of the city. Its appetite for space is absolutely insatiable; moving and parked, it devours urban land, leaving the buildings as mere islands of habitable space in a sea of dangerous and ugly traffic.”
~James Marston Fitch, New York Times, 1 May 1960
We have written about the “friction of distance”, explaining why travel was more challenging-and communities therefore more compact-in the time before humans discovered the enormous energy sequestered in ancient carbon sinks. Alas, those sinks are not infinite so we must contemplate the return of the friction of distance to the level of the pre-oil days. Fortunately, humans can look to past experiences to reduce the height of the learning curve.
Continue reading Resisting Friction