President has announced a lot of works of improvement that will finish in 20 years for Limassol. Just wait 20 years until things get even worse when those work finish and do no difference.
KostiPalama on
Problem: traffic
Solution: motorcycle
Phunwithscissors on
This city will devour the island
WeeklyThroat6648 on
Meh. Love from Athens.
icancount192 on
That’s some cursed cities skylines right there.
If the game has taught me anything is to make everything one way streets and roundabouts.
D_Extr0cinary-Gv on
I am convinced at this point that to travel in cyprus cities you need a helicopter
Ok_Resident1386 on
Δυστυχώς τον τελευταίο χρόνο το ζουμε καθημερινά οποιαδήποτε ωρα θελήσεις να βγεις να πας κάπου……Ειναι πραγματικά απίστευτο με στο που συμβαίνει στους δρόμους χωρίς ίχνος αστυνόμευσης στους δρόμους για καλύτερη κυκλοφορια
Ok-Kaleidoscope2831 on
these problems were solved in many city, we know what works what not.
But Cypriots will not like the thing that actually works. Less car, public transport, priority for pedestrians, bikes and PT.
bbbonthemoon on
There are like four traffic accidents at the same time on your map, its just unlucky, its not that bad usually
Denguish-Khan on
Parallel roads ftw. Waze and Google maps sends everyone on the same roads. Can never fully get away from traffic but there’s a lot of little chunks you can do that make a big difference
Nothing will change unless public transport is improved. If public transport is consistent and available with time it will make a big difference. Making more roads is not the answer.
Resident-Yak-2039 on
One thing I haven’t seen discussed enough: mandating flexible working hours. Most of the congestion is just everyone heading to the same place at the same time, stagger that and you’d be surprised how much it helps without spending a cent on infrastructure.
My company offers it and I shifted to leaving earlier to beat traffic. The difference between leaving at 8:00 vs 8:10 is genuinely noticeable, which tells you how fragile the peak hour balance is.
Until public transport becomes actually reliable (which we all know isn’t happening anytime soon), this seems like one of the most realistic and low-cost levers available.
elelem-123 on
Worst Greek city after Athens
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14 Kommentare
President has announced a lot of works of improvement that will finish in 20 years for Limassol. Just wait 20 years until things get even worse when those work finish and do no difference.
Problem: traffic
Solution: motorcycle
This city will devour the island
Meh. Love from Athens.
That’s some cursed cities skylines right there.
If the game has taught me anything is to make everything one way streets and roundabouts.
I am convinced at this point that to travel in cyprus cities you need a helicopter
Δυστυχώς τον τελευταίο χρόνο το ζουμε καθημερινά οποιαδήποτε ωρα θελήσεις να βγεις να πας κάπου……Ειναι πραγματικά απίστευτο με στο που συμβαίνει στους δρόμους χωρίς ίχνος αστυνόμευσης στους δρόμους για καλύτερη κυκλοφορια
these problems were solved in many city, we know what works what not.
But Cypriots will not like the thing that actually works. Less car, public transport, priority for pedestrians, bikes and PT.
There are like four traffic accidents at the same time on your map, its just unlucky, its not that bad usually
Parallel roads ftw. Waze and Google maps sends everyone on the same roads. Can never fully get away from traffic but there’s a lot of little chunks you can do that make a big difference
Oh you sweet summer child…
https://preview.redd.it/7oxci37cjkzg1.png?width=650&format=png&auto=webp&s=6bdfaebdef9e06b97f7f0ea0ec3b8c679c2ac2c4
Nothing will change unless public transport is improved. If public transport is consistent and available with time it will make a big difference. Making more roads is not the answer.
One thing I haven’t seen discussed enough: mandating flexible working hours. Most of the congestion is just everyone heading to the same place at the same time, stagger that and you’d be surprised how much it helps without spending a cent on infrastructure.
My company offers it and I shifted to leaving earlier to beat traffic. The difference between leaving at 8:00 vs 8:10 is genuinely noticeable, which tells you how fragile the peak hour balance is.
Until public transport becomes actually reliable (which we all know isn’t happening anytime soon), this seems like one of the most realistic and low-cost levers available.
Worst Greek city after Athens