• @ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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    121 year ago

    It can, they often use it

    Sand doesn’t melt ice but it provides traction; too much and it’s slippery again, too little and it does nothing

    If you have a busy road where it’s constantly being moved around as well as melting and freezing again then it’s not ideal

    The dirt also has to be cleaned up

    • @jerkface@lemmy.ca
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      31 year ago

      The dirt also has to be cleaned up

      You mean the dirt CAN be cleaned up. This is a pro, not a con. The salt also needs to be cleaned up, and it’s a LOT harder.

        • @jerkface@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Water washes salt away better (and into our streams), it’s easier on our pipes

          You get that’s the actual problem we’re trying to solve, right? Water washing salt away is the opposite of cleaning up!! We still need to recover that salt, only now it’s in our ecosystem.

    • smoothbrain coldtakes
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      01 year ago

      Fair.

      Doesn’t sound like there’s a great solution overall.

      Imagine if we were crazy enough to heat the streets from underground.

      • @FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Shifting away from car dependancy would reduce overall traffic and make sand more useable and reduce total salt used when salt is still needed.

        • smoothbrain coldtakes
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          1 year ago

          The problem with that is you’re not going to reduce traffic and shift away from car dependency because the entire GTA is designed exclusively for cars. If I want to go to Costco I have to take the highway. If I want to walk to the local McDonalds it would take me at least a half an hour to get there from my house. If I want to take a bus, it takes 30-45 minutes before one passes, and the routes are inconvenient, almost always requiring a bunch of transfers. You easily triple or quadruple your journey time by trying to take public transit.

          The GTA is too far gone in suburban sprawl to really reduce car dependency unless we tear down all the low density single family detached homes and replace everything with 15-minute-cities-style mixed residential, we’re never going to actually reduce the number of cars on the road, and with more suburban projects still sprawling further, the issue is continuing to compound.

          They wanted to use the Glen Abbey golf course for residential real estate and they estimated another few thousand homes, which in a best-case scenario include higher density duplexes and such, but would more than likely be generally full of single family detached, contributing probably about on average a car and a half. I can tell you already Oakville does not have the road infrastructure to handle even more cars, and zoning approval for denser real estate is fucked because everybody on the council is NIMBY as all get out.

          • @FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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            41 year ago

            “We cant not design for cars because we already designed for cars”

            Toronto existed before cars. People walked or took the tram. It can’t be fixed over night but it can be rebuilt to be less car centric.

            • smoothbrain coldtakes
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              1 year ago

              We can design for pedestrians, my point is just that the majority of the GTA needs massive massive reworks to be pedestrian friendly.

              I’m not saying we can’t, it’s just that we haven’t for the last two generations, and now it’s even harder to break the habit.

              • @frostbiker@lemmy.ca
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                1 year ago

                The best time to start was two generations ago. The second best time is now.

                Allow mixed-use 3-5 story buildings everywhere, remove parking minimums, and watch how transit corridors fill with liveable neighborhoods.

      • NoIWontPickaName
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        11 year ago

        It wouldn’t even be that hard really, but it isn’t something you could easily retrofit into place