One ever-increasing cost of car ownership is parking. At my work, these are the new parking prices.
Combined with last year's increase, it's almost doubled in two years. $75 per week - that's 2 and a half times my total transport cost.
Mind you, it probably has to increase that much. We can't just keep jamming more and more cars into the city. And the sooner we realise this, the better.
I reckon the best plan is to leave the car at home. Less stress. Fewer fees.
Thursday, 19 June 2014
Sunday, 15 June 2014
Changing Gears - and changing mindset
Greg Foyster quits his job in advertising to explore alternatives to the life of long hours in a soul-destroying work, to afford a big house and endless possessions to put in it.
Changing Gears is the diary of his journey from Melbourne to Cairns by bicycle with partner Sophie, exploring and experiencing different - and more sustainable - ways of living.
Despite coming from the city, having cycled trough rural and regional Australia, he arrives in Sydney with a new perspective on cars.
During the book he reasons that most things we do are because it's the default option. And cars are one of the big ones.
He refers to them as "consumption amplifiers". and says that without them, we'd
The obsession with cars even affects our thinking. The funny side of this was when Greg and his wife would ask locals how far it was to the next town.
Giving up our harmful addiction to cars is one of the lessons learnt on Greg's trip that he (and we) can take back into our normal lives.
Changing Gears is the diary of his journey from Melbourne to Cairns by bicycle with partner Sophie, exploring and experiencing different - and more sustainable - ways of living.
Despite coming from the city, having cycled trough rural and regional Australia, he arrives in Sydney with a new perspective on cars.
Here cars were crammed into every conceivable space, and for the first time I noticed, really noticed, just how many of them there were.
In 20 kilometres, we saw nothing but shops to buy cars, government departments to regulate cars, workshops to tune cars, stores to get accessories for cars, restaurants that encouraged people to eat in their cars, and mega malls that can only be reached by cars. And that was just one stretch of road in one suburb. All of our major metropolises are like this. We are citizens of car cities.
During the book he reasons that most things we do are because it's the default option. And cars are one of the big ones.
Cars are the main reason we live in sprawling suburbs, own big houses, shop at massive mega malls, and sit on our bums all day. Cars don't cause these things, but they enable them.
He refers to them as "consumption amplifiers". and says that without them, we'd
live in smaller spaces more closely together, we'd have shops within walking distance, and we'd exercise more.
The obsession with cars even affects our thinking. The funny side of this was when Greg and his wife would ask locals how far it was to the next town.
people looked at our bicycles stacked with belongings and still said 'It's a 30-minute drive'. Cars have come to dominate our concept of distance to the point where we don't think in kilometres any more.
Giving up our harmful addiction to cars is one of the lessons learnt on Greg's trip that he (and we) can take back into our normal lives.
Sunday, 8 June 2014
More than 20 years!
Brisbane's Little Stanley Street hosts a series of restaurants with outdoor dining overlooking Southbank Parklands. One is the Eastern European restaurant Torba.
While our meal was prepared, a pretentiously expensive looking car arrived nearby. This prompted my girlfriend to share a recent realisation:
She's right of course. And I've written about how expensive driving is. But her thought is a great way of expressing just how much sacrifice is involved in owning a car.
PS. I recently did a course on behavioural economics, where one example was car buying. We compare one car with another, but struggle to compare across categories. We rarely ask a question like "Is this car worth more than two vacations a year?" to work out if there are better things we could do with our money.
PPS. We then caught the bus home - on free travel.
While our meal was prepared, a pretentiously expensive looking car arrived nearby. This prompted my girlfriend to share a recent realisation:
You know, my public transport costs me about $30 a week, tops. For the same price as a $30,000 car, I could catch public transport for 1,000 weeks. That's 20 years! And that doesn't even include petrol, registration etc.
She's right of course. And I've written about how expensive driving is. But her thought is a great way of expressing just how much sacrifice is involved in owning a car.
PS. I recently did a course on behavioural economics, where one example was car buying. We compare one car with another, but struggle to compare across categories. We rarely ask a question like "Is this car worth more than two vacations a year?" to work out if there are better things we could do with our money.
PPS. We then caught the bus home - on free travel.