So … an Elephant and a Dragon board a bus.

October 5, 2008 at 7:17 am (Finance, Transportation)

This summer quarter (just gone) UCLA began a commuter program whereby it encouraged employee parking pass holders to turn in their passes (and get a full refund on the monthly parking fee that runs $63.00/month) in exchange for free Metro TAP cards, electromagnetic swipe cards granting access on all Metro buses, subways and light rail.

I’ve been wanting to inch towards a greener, less me-centric lifestyle for a while but … it’s only gone as far as that–wanting, not acting.

Finally, I was given a financial incentive–and, yes, sadly, it did come down to that.  (So much for eviscerating my soft me-centric center)

I ran the numbers:

A quick calculation of the standard fare of $1.25 each way, or $2.50 daily, had me looking at $10.00 of weekly transportation expenditure ($2.50 by four days, with Fridays off).  Multiply that by the average number of weeks per month (which comes in around 4.2 weeks per month on average) and I’m looking at $42.00 a month in transportation costs to and from work, already $21.00 under what I was paying just to have the privilege of being allowed to park at UCLA–never mind that this in no way means an employee is guaranteed a parking spot.

The view from my bus stop at Sunset Blvd. facing north on Highland Avenue

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Pop-Up Market in Bangkok

December 4, 2007 at 10:19 am (Transportation, Urban Planning)

Watch this–fully worth the :40 seconds of your time.

I totally stole this but full credit goes to the site, Street Use, and their Ambassador-at-Large, Todd Lapin.

“Street Use’s Ambassador-at-Large, Todd Lapin, filed this report about street use in Thailand. The contents of this short video clip entitled Train Runs Through Bangkok Market is very hard to describe, but I can assure you it is worth watching. What is most surprising is the speed of recovery. Mr. Lappin writes:

Watch this one through to the end… it’s a pop-up market on a train track in Thailand. Amazing.”

(via BoingBoing)

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