Image by Claudio Beck licensed under Creative Commons.

In Louisville, a new toll structure makes it so you don't get a discount unless you drive more. Portland, Maine is building lots of new housing but maybe not enough for families. And a Dutch group thinks it's got a way to keep cyclists from crashing when they ride over streetcar tracks. Check out what's happening around the world in transportation, land use, and other related areas!

The Perverse Toll Booth: Louisville, Kentucky just recently completed a $2.6 billion bridge and spaghetti junction across the Ohio River whose tolling system incentivizes making more trips than necessary. After 20 trips across the bridge, the next 20 trips will be free, but only if you use them by the end of the month, meaning any trips above 20 and under 40 are charged at the regular rate. (City Observatory)

Housing, but the wrong kind: Planners in Portland, Maine are say new developments don't have enough multi-family units. The development market for new condos is strong, but not many units with more than three bedrooms have been completed. On the other hand, the city's data doesn't include single family homes. (Bangor Daily News)

A happy medium for bikes and streetcars: With the current boom in light rail and streetcar construction, it's increasingly common for cyclists to come into conflict with rail infrastructure that's on the street—stories of hitting the rails and flipping over the handle bars aren't very uncommon. But two Dutch researchers may make this a thing of the past with a mechanism that keeps street surfaces level while ensuring the rails still work for streetcars. (Treehugger)

Pedestrians are a known unknown: Soon after a young woman was struck and killed by a train in San Leandro California, students at UC Berkeley began devising ways to collect simple data, like how many people in the city walk, and how often. After noticing that streets were built and lit for cars, they devised a lighting system that made pedestrians on sidewalks feel acknowledged. The systems are the start of a learning process, hopefully one that changes the way we view different types of transportation. (Boom California)

A Las Vegas dream, deferred: Four years ago, Tony Hsieh set out to create an urban utopia in Las Vegas, away from the strip. But after $500 million in investments and bringing in companies from all over the country, it's still hard to call the project a success. Hsiegh hasn't conceded defeat, but his effort confirms that cities can be messy, unpredictable places. (Quartz)

Quote of the Week

“Many of us, it seems, have lost faith in the public realm. The private car is the embodiment of US individualism. The decline of our cities’ infrastructure is one expression of loss of faith in the public realm as a place of beauty and efficiency and an embodiment of what one journalist refers to as 'our anger and our pessimism.'” - John Rennie Short in Newsweek, discussing the woeful inadequacy of our national transit systems.

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Jeff Wood is the Principal of The Overhead Wire, a consulting firm focused on sharing information about cities around the world. He hosts a weekly podcast called Talking Headways at Streetsblog USA and operates the daily news site The Overhead Wire.