• bort
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    7 months ago

    When you add a new lane to a road, people think that the traffic will be easier there, so they take that route instead of their normal one

    so for these people the new lane will create marginal improvement, right?

    • Vrtrx@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      That’s the thing: Technically yes. It temporarily improves traffic. But only temporarily. IDK about you but spending billions of dollars to only temporarily improve traffic and then it ending up the same or even worse than before doesn’t sound like a good investment to me.

      • bort
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        7 months ago

        But only temporarily

        but is it?

        I thought the temporal improvement would be for everyone who already used the high way (because they will get to their destination a little bit faster). And for the few extra people, who start to use the highway but didn’t use it before, the improvment will stay.

        • EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          7 months ago

          That’s the thing, the number of new cars using that road ends up being at least one additional lane’s worth. So traffic moves at the same speed as it was before the extra lane, just now with one more lane’s worth of cars on that road.

          If anything, you might see marginally better traffic on other roads because of the cars that started using the new lane, but you’d be talking about a handful of cars per road. Probably not enough for any discernible change in travel time or congestion, and each new lane you add later will have diminishing returns because it will be a smaller fraction of the total number of lanes coming from any specific direction.