One part of sustainability is related to how the community you live in is set-up. One aspect of this is how easy it is to navigate around a community without needing a car. In the neighborhood we live in it is easy to get around without a car, but some important places are so far away that most people would not chose to use these alternate forms of transport.
Unfortunately, however, the closest grocery store is about 4 miles away. There used to be two small grocers in this neighborhood, but much to my chagrin, they were absorbed by development (ASU and condos). I would love to be able to walk, bike, or take the bus to a nearby grocery store everyday and get a bag of groceries, but with the stores being so far away, I instead drive once a week and get several bags in order to save time; I don’t want to spend an hour or more each day biking or bussing to the grocery store.
1 comment:
Oh yeah, walkscore can be pretty misleading! Walkscore also doesn't take into account the urban form it's trying to "score." I'm not sure how it would code this, but I think the huge streets we have here (like Rural, University, and Southern) make it hard, and sometimes dangerous, to walk and that should reduce an area's score.
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