Traffic & Transport
Our cities are choked by cars – here’s how experts would fix them | Travel and transport
1. Expand and improve public transport
The shift from fuel-burning cars to electric ones greatly reduces planet-heating pollution but does not make streets safer. For that, people need reliable options for getting around.
“Making sure public transport can meet the mobility needs of residents is step one,” says Alissa Kendall, the director of the Institute of Transportation Studies at the University of California, Davis. “If travel is prohibitively slow, if it doesn’t get you to where you need to go, it will never encourage those wealthy enough to own and operate a car to stop buying and using them – and it won’t serve the needs of those who are transit dependent.”
Sprawling cities such as those in North America are harder to connect than denser urban areas common in Europe and Asia. Even so, getting people out of cars and into buses could still save money. Free bus travel, for example, became a centrepiece of Zohran Mamdani’s successful New York mayoral campaign, but research suggests lower-cost tickets have only a limited effect on reducing car use.
Matthias Cremer-Schulte, a transport researcher at the Technical University of Dortmund, says: “The people who benefit most are often those who were already using public transport. The ones who really matter for reducing car use – people who drive because they need the flexibility – are rarely tempted by a cheaper bus ticket alone.”
2. Share space with pedestrians and cyclists
As cars came to dominate cities after the second world war, public space was redesigned around them. Pedestrians were relegated to narrow pavements and cyclists had to decide whether riding a bike on the road was worth the risk to their life.
Giving road space back to other forms of transport is one of the most powerful tools that cities have to get people out of cars. By carving out lanes for bikes, converting parking spaces into green areas and pedestrianising streets, mayors can encourage active forms of travel by making it safer and more convenient.
Measures sometimes criticised as a “war on motorists” are often, in reality, attempts to manage limited public space more efficiently, says Hannah Budnitz, a researcher at the transport studies unit of the University of Oxford. Cars are among the least space-efficient ways of moving people from A to B, especially in rush-hour traffic, and spend most of their time parked.
“If you only need a car once a week, you can’t have a seventh of a car,” Budnitz says. “If you only need a large vehicle that can take a trailer for your annual camping trip, you can’t have 4% of that car.”
To avoid the public backlash that comes with reducing road space, some cities, such as Münster in Germany, have run experiments in which streets have been closed to cars for a few months to let residents experience the difference first-hand. A similar approach has been used in Stockholm, which trialled pairing a congestion charge with expanded public transport before putting the policy to a referendum.
“Most of the time, once people have lived with it, the opposition softens,” says Cremer-Schulte. “Other cities struggle to do this because local politicians are understandably nervous – nobody wants to lose an election over a bike lane.”
3. Focus on suburbs
Cities such as Copenhagen and Amsterdam have shown it is possible to reduce car use to fewer than one in three journeys by investing in reliable public transport and extensive bike lanes. Yet many of the vehicles that remain on city roads come from outside urban centres.
“This mismatch between where people live and where people work is what entails such big problems,” says Susana López-Aparicio, a deputy director of the urban environment department at NILU, a Norwegian research institute. “We see at eight in the morning all European cities are affected by commuting and heavy traffic.”
Improving public transport in outer suburbs and commuter belts – areas often beyond the direct control of city mayors – can give people viable alternatives to driving. Ensuring more towns have essential amenities within walking distance – a concept known as the “15-minute city” – can also reduce the need for long journeys.
López-Aparicio observed this in a study on urban sprawl in Warsaw, Poland, and experienced it herself when she moved closer to the centre of Oslo from a house on the outskirts. “I have not only more public transport available, but also the supermarket, the post office, the hairdresser – all these things I can do by walking.”
4. Understand why people drive
In rural villages, where frequent public transport can be too costly to provide, or for people with certain disabilities, cars can be a lifeline for accessing work and services. But for many others, car-free options could be prove more attractive with just a few changes.
Understanding why people drive is the first step to reducing car dependence. In many European cities, public transport can look “quite homogeneous” at night because it is mostly used by young men who feel safe enough to travel, says Brian Caulfield, a transportation professor at Trinity College Dublin. “With deeper consultation, you can uncover the barriers that people have to using public transport, walking or cycling. When you better understand that, then you can better design alternative solutions.”
Those fixes can range from extending late-night public transport services and improving street lighting to introducing community car-sharing schemes in villages and small towns, where some drivers rarely need to use their cars.
At the same time, normalising the use of public transport can help challenge social stigma. In North America, for example, buses and trains are often associated with poverty and crime, while in much of Europe and Asia public transport carries far less cultural baggage.
In Norway, the former king Olav V rode the subway during the 1973 oil crisis to encourage people to avoid driving. Today, members of the royal family are still regularly spotted using trams and buses.
“Taking public transport is not something that you do because you are poor,” said López-Aparicio. “It is something that you do for the common wealth of the whole society.”
Traffic & Transport
Top-tier fun can be had on the buses | Life and style
At nearly 75, I have to sit on the front seat at the top of the bus like Justin Myers (49 ways to have fun right now!, 4 May). I have been known to let one bus go and wait for the next one if there are people in my seat. If it ever gets to the point where my legs won’t get me up there, I shall know that my time has come.
Liz Fairhurst
Banstead, Surrey
Sara Hudston’s country diary (6 May) chimes exactly with the sightings on our weekly butterfly count for Yorkshire Wildlife, similarly on a dismantled railway siding, here in North Yorkshire. The holly blues are particularly numerous this year, but we have yet to see an adder. We have, however, had a huge Morel toadstool, which can occur where there are heavy metal deposits.
Gill Mawby
York
Re cutting speed limits (Report, 7 May), back in 1977 Jimmy Carter reduced speeds to 55mph due to oil shortages. We were travelling for three months around the US on Greyhound buses and, I think, saw much more of the country because of the slower pace.
Jenny Langran
Beeston, Nottinghamshire
We are increasingly being informed of “bad actors” and “malicious’ actors” being involved in the “theatre of war”. Whatever happened to the thespian redoubt of merely “resting”?
Brian Robinson
Daingean, County Offaly, Ireland
Your correspondent refuses, at 58, to accept Zoe Williams’ “old age” label (Letters, 5 May). Just for their information, at 78, so do I!
Prof Gwyneth Boswell
Norwich
Traffic & Transport
Trains in southern England disrupted after fault in radio system | Rail transport
Trains in parts of southern England have been severely disrupted after a fault in a radio system.
Services out of London Waterloo, one of the UK’s busiest rail stations, have been particularly delayed.
A problem with the radio network preventing communication between drivers and signallers was reported towards the end of the morning rush hour, affecting the railway’s Wessex route connecting London with the south and south-west.
The fault has now been fixed, but disruption is expected to continue in places until the end of the day. A number of services have been cancelled, or delayed by up to an hour and a half.
Train companies advised passengers to expect some disruption, allow more time for journeys and check before travelling through the day.
The most-affected operator is South Western Railway (SWR), with trains struggling to return to normal. Some routes run by Southern were also curbed or delayed, while a number of CrossCountry, Gatwick Express, Great Western Railway, London Overground and Thameslink trains were disrupted.
The National Rail website reported that the technical problem had been resolved by 11am but warned: “Some services may still be delayed by up to 90 minutes or cancelled whilst service recovers. Major disruption is expected until the end of the day.”
SWR said services across its entire network “may be cancelled, delayed by up to 90 minutes or revised” for the rest of the day, reporting major disruption on its routes as far west as Exeter.
Southern said that trains on its Hayward Heath route would be running late or ending at Gatwick until at least 1pm.
Passengers have been told that they can use their tickets on alternative routes or operators at no additional cost.
A Network Rail spokesperson said: “Due to issues with radio communications, train services in the south-west and south have been subject to some delays this morning.
“Staff have worked to resolve the fault and train services are now returning to normal. We apologise to passengers for the disruption caused to their journeys this morning.”
Traffic & Transport
Trainline says Middle East tensions hitting European rail bookings | Rail transport
Trainline has said the US standoff with Iran is hitting its revenues, with rail ticket sales to foreign visitors to Europe affected.
The UK-based ticketing retailer said it expected revenues to stay flat or decline over the coming year, citing “the effects of geopolitical tensions in the Middle East on inbound air traffic into Europe”.
Airlines have reported later bookings, with considerable consumer uncertainty around summer travel plans. The US-Israel war on Iran, closure of the strait of Hormuz and subsequent blockades have raised doubts about global jet fuel supply, with carriers already beginning to cancel thousands of flights.
Shares in the company dropped sharply on its earnings guidance, with the Middle East tensions adding to Trainline’s prior warnings of headwinds, including UK ticketing policy.
The British government has frozen rail fares and indicated that it would set up its own ticketing website under the planned Great British Railways, while the expansion of contactless payments around London and other cities is likely to further eat into Trainline’s business.
The group, whose primary revenues remain UK-based, reported full-year operating profits up 43% to £122m, with revenue up by 2% to £453m for 2025-26.
However, it said it now expected sales of just £440-455m in 2026-27.
It said it remained Europe’s most downloaded rail app and is targeting further growth in Italy and France, where greater competition among operators on long-distance routes is expanding the ticketing market.
Jody Ford, the outgoing chief executive of Trainline, said it had been “a year of strong delivery with record net ticket sales and revenue, and continued double-digit growth in profitability”.
He added: “Ahead of the creation of GBR online retail in the UK, we are working closely with government to deliver on its commitment to deliver a fair and open regulatory framework. We strongly welcome the recent decision to open delay repay to independent retailers, our customers’ number one ask.”
Shares fell 7% in early trading but recovered to about 3% down by midday.
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