Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
Streetsblog USA

The People Left Behind By Car-Centric Planning

There are five schools within a mile of this location in Albuquerque. Photo: Better Burque

The child walking in the dirt along this high-speed road in Albuquerque isn't the type of person America has designed its transportation systems for.

Engineering formulas and public budgets typically focus on eliminating delay for motorists. A kid walking to school is an afterthought, or worse, an inconvenience in a system that aspires to scientific efficiency in moving cars.

The writers at Better Burque flagged this Google Street View photo as an example of how the city and county should be doing better for people on foot. It's no surprise that a child is walking here:

There are five schools within a one-mile radius here, and many trailer parks, including the one noticeable in this Google Street View. One school, Robert F. Kennedy Charter, is mere feet from this kid.

Despite the obvious failure to design this street so kids can safely walk to school, when drivers harm pedestrians in this type of environment, it's the victim who gets blamed. A few lines appear in the local paper failing to note anything about the configuration of the street or the driver's behavior, and that's the end of it. Patterns of preventable deaths resulting from known design flaws are treated as isolated tragedies we have no control over.

But car-centric roads and land use patterns endanger people on foot every day. They're captured all the time in photos like this one in Nashville:

It is cruel that we do this to people. And then if they're killed we blame them.

Photo: @norakernel @walkbikenash pic.twitter.com/G2QjMlLDjS

— Streetsblog USA (@StreetsblogUSA) November 14, 2017

More people need to see what a hostile environment we've made for people outside of cars, so we're going to do a crowdsourcing project. Do you have photos of people trying to navigate dangerous situations on foot? Either your own work or pulled from Google Maps? Send your images to angie [at] streetsblog [dot] org or tag them on Twitter with #walkinginthemargins.

More recommended reading today: PlanPhilly writes that job sprawl is part of what's keeping many central Philadelphia residents mired in deep poverty. And Seattle Transit Blog explains how the region's new transit fare card will work.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

Pasadena Seeks Input for Transit Service Overhaul

Several lines could be condensed on the north side of town, a new line is proposed from Huntington Hospital to JPL, and Dial-A-Ride could give same day service.

March 17, 2026

Tuesday’s Headlines

Record heat, Santa Monica, LAX people mover, Culver City, westside bus lanes, K Line, Griffith Park, MacArthur Park, car-nage and more.

March 17, 2026

This Week In Livable Streets

Metro NoHo-Pasadena BRT meeting in Burbank tonight, Westside safety project meetings, Metro board committees, SGV bike rides, and more.

March 16, 2026

Eyes on the Street: Short New Protected Bike Lane on Pacific Avenue

Installed as part of Downtown Long Beach's Resa mixed-use development, the northbound protected bike lane extends for one block, immediately south of the Metro A Line Pacific Avenue Station

March 16, 2026

Monday’s Headlines

ICE, record heat, LAPD, Pasadena 710 plans, Long Beach parklet, carpool cheat, Seal Beach e-biker injures ped, car-nage, gas prices, and more

March 16, 2026

Rosemead Creates Subcommittee on Bus Rapid Transit with Neighboring Cities

After a contentious city council meeting, the motion passed.

March 13, 2026
See all posts