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sop

(18,772 posts)
Sat Apr 11, 2026, 09:38 AM 13 hrs ago

'A Lot Of Americans Aren't Sold On This Whole Car-Centric Life Thing After All'

"We live in a society designed for and built around the automobile, and many people don't seem very happy about it. A recent Arizona State University survey adds more fuel to the fire, revealing that more than half of Americans are at least willing to consider giving up their cars entirely. Specifically, 18 percent of respondents are actively interested in living car-free, while 40 percent say they are at least open to the idea."

" 'About 10 percent of the U.S. lives without a car now. If that demand were to be realized — which is unlikely, given the current land use situation we're in — we'd be reaching numbers similar to Europe,' Nicole Corcoran, the paper's lead author, told Streetsblog USA. That 10 percent mainly consists of city dwellers who have access to public transit, and lower income people who can't afford to have a car."

"However, people outside these existing demographics are now considering car-free living as well. This may have something to do with cars getting more expensive, traffic constantly getting worse, or gas prices spiking every time somebody sneezes in the Middle East. For the purposes of this survey, 'car-free' means people who don't own a car themselves, but might still use one. This can include everything from renting or borrowing a car on occasion to hiring an Uber or participating in carpools."

"According to the survey, people who would at least consider giving up their cars have a few things in common: Five key factors are associated with interest in car-free living: having prior experience living without a car, using alternative modes of transportation for at least five percent of trips, lower car dependence, riding transit regularly, and having less enjoyment of travel by private car. Further, we find that car owners interested in car-free living are a diverse group, with few significant associations between interest in car-free living and key socioeconomic or demographic variables."

Continued at link:

https://www.jalopnik.com/2144250/half-americans-would-try-giving-up-cars/

3 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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'A Lot Of Americans Aren't Sold On This Whole Car-Centric Life Thing After All' (Original Post) sop 13 hrs ago OP
LOL! Good luck with this here. To realize a reduction in car use, you have to have more Scrivener7 12 hrs ago #1
I live in a lovely apartment in West Palm, facing the intracoastal. At almost 86 there are few places I really need to SheilaAnn 11 hrs ago #3
Cars are dangerous, costly, inefficient, and take up so much landscape Martin Eden 12 hrs ago #2

Scrivener7

(59,684 posts)
1. LOL! Good luck with this here. To realize a reduction in car use, you have to have more
Sat Apr 11, 2026, 10:10 AM
12 hrs ago

population density to make public transportation and walkable shopping a possibility. That means apartments.

I live in an apartment in a walkable town and I love it. But my past conversations here about the need for more density to benefit the environment have been met by a really crazy bunch of objections including bonkers - and rude!- objections to apartment living. For example, knowing that I live in an apartment, one DUer told me he'd rather live out of a shopping cart.

It's really a blind spot here based on some nutty notions.

SheilaAnn

(10,738 posts)
3. I live in a lovely apartment in West Palm, facing the intracoastal. At almost 86 there are few places I really need to
Sat Apr 11, 2026, 11:24 AM
11 hrs ago

get to and I sold my car years ago. Circuit vans available for local travel, trains, planes no more than ten minutes away. I lovr not having to pay insurance, gasoline, new tires and general maintenance on a car. I get where I want to go....

Martin Eden

(15,671 posts)
2. Cars are dangerous, costly, inefficient, and take up so much landscape
Sat Apr 11, 2026, 10:49 AM
12 hrs ago

Other than that, they're great!

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