←back to thread

How good are American roads?

(www.construction-physics.com)
193 points chmaynard | 4 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
Show context
O5vYtytb ◴[] No.42194731[source]
Amazing that Minneapolis tops the city road quality chart, despite having the harshest winters. Do southern cities not build their roads so robustly? Or are they not maintained?
replies(8): >>42194913 #>>42194921 #>>42194941 #>>42195410 #>>42195819 #>>42196480 #>>42197306 #>>42197995 #
gorfian_robot ◴[] No.42194921[source]
the south is generally a poor region with terrible public sand social services
replies(1): >>42195069 #
1. O5vYtytb ◴[] No.42195069[source]
3 of the bottom 4 cities are in California.
replies(1): >>42195355 #
2. dmoy ◴[] No.42195355[source]
I mean, yea? CA has the highest real poverty rate (SPM) in the whole country.

Some of that won't translate as well to road quality due to the fixed cost portion of road repair (because the OPM rate isn't the highest (though still quite high)), but some of it will due to the not fixed cost portion (labor, etc).

But it definitely affects prioritization. People won't care as much about road quality relative to other things.

replies(1): >>42195872 #
3. firesteelrain ◴[] No.42195872[source]
This does not make a great argument for California. It appears as a failed state compared to others.
replies(1): >>42199715 #
4. dmoy ◴[] No.42199715{3}[source]
But it may explain road quality, which makes sense to me. MN has some of the lowest poverty rates and is on the opposite end of the scale there