Submitted via IRC for SoyCow1984
If you drive a car into the city center of Oslo next month, you shouldn't plan on staying long: There won't be any parking spots.
The Norwegian capital is in the process of eliminating the remaining 700 street parking spots in its city center by the end of 2018 as part of its plan to turn the area into a car-free zone.
"We're doing this to give the streets back to the people," Hanna Elise Marcussen, Oslo's vice mayor for urban development, said during a recent phone interview. "And of course, it's environmentally friendly." (The Scandinavian country, recently recognized as one of the world's most ecologically progressive nations, has plans to become carbon neutral by 2030 and halt the sale of fossil fuel cars by 2025.)
And it's not just Oslo that is turning away drivers. Popular tourist destinations across the globe are removing cars from heavily trafficked areas to reduce congestion, cut down on pollution, and make streets more welcoming to bikers and pedestrians.
(Score: 1, Offtopic) by The Mighty Buzzard on Thursday December 27 2018, @12:34AM
Call it by whatever name you like, it's still over thirty thousand contiguous square miles of city. And I was never comparing cities to cities. I don't particularly care how big your cities are. You can be city from one end to the other and it makes no difference. The point is you are tiny and we are large. You might get away with not owning a vehicle. It's not quite as easy when you can drive for over three thousand miles (five thousand kilometers if you prefer) in your nation without getting off the shortest route and without crossing an international border.
My rights don't end where your fear begins.