←back to thread

1163 points DaveZale | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
tlogan ◴[] No.44771408[source]
Maybe Helsinki isn’t special: just fewer cars. And they apparently only 21% of daily trips used a private car.

Helsinki has about 3x fewer vehicles per capita than the average U.S. city. So it’s not surprising it’s safer since fewer cars mean fewer chances of getting hit by one. Plus their cars are much smaller.

In fact, there are probably plenty of U.S. towns and cities with similar number of cars that have zero traffic deaths (quick search says that Jersey City, New Jersey has zero traffic deaths in 2022).

So maybe it’s not about urban planning genius or Scandinavian magic. Maybe it’s just: fewer things that can kill you on the road.

I wonder how the numbers will change when majority of cars are autonomous.

replies(12): >>44771469 #>>44771494 #>>44771498 #>>44772194 #>>44773223 #>>44773250 #>>44774089 #>>44774580 #>>44774620 #>>44774831 #>>44775458 #>>44779603 #
eCa ◴[] No.44771498[source]
The question to ask is, why are there less cars?

Public transport. As an example, just the tram network had 57 million trips in 2019. The metro, 90+ million trips annually. The commuter rail network? 70+ million. (Source: wikipedia)

So yes. Urban planning has a hand or two in it.

replies(6): >>44771634 #>>44771734 #>>44771971 #>>44773257 #>>44773797 #>>44775104 #
1. PeterStuer ◴[] No.44775104[source]
Public transport in and around Helsinki is extremely good. Both busses and rail are very reliable, comfortable and clean with free wifi everywhere.