this post was submitted on 18 Sep 2023
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Definitely, but you can't expect infrastructure like you have in a city that you do outside city limits where both I live and where I work is. At some point, you just can't expect the money to be spent on that sort of infrastructure. I absolutely believe cities should move to be as carless and pedestrian and bike-friendly as possible, but you're not going to see that on county roads or rural stretches of highway.
I totally agree with this, micromobility isn't meant for 5+ miles/kilometers as that's the domain of larger vehicles that can handle speed.
Can I ask why you don't live in micromobility range and how that decision might be impacted of the cost of a car were eliminated?
Again, the place I work is not inside city limits. It's in a rural industrial park. Even if I moved to city limits, it still wouldn't be practical for me to bike to work because it doesn't solve many of the problems and create new ones. You might as well ask why I don't just get a different job. Which is getting to be unreasonable.
Fair enough, it doesn't seem like your stuation is one that micromobility attempts to address.
When I was much younger I lived at a place about an hours drive away from my work a decided that I'd rather pay more to live in a smaller place, closer to the workplace and regain almost 10 hours of my week. It was worth it to me. But I know it's a matter of preference and ability as I didn't need a larger home at the time.
Now that I'm in a city center (of a huge city, metro area more than 10 million people) for similar reasons, micromobility is a natural fit.