Why Europe Is Insanely Well Designed

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  • Опубліковано 5 чер 2022
  • Why Europe Is Insanely Well Designed
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    Link to sources:
    docs.google.com/document/d/1u...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 7 тис.

  • @OBFYT
    @OBFYT  Рік тому +2996

    I want to give some clarification because a lot of people misunderstood what I said in the video and I missaid some things as well.
    1. The map at the beginning of the video is of "Mass transit railway lines" that go between nations, which I then compared to mass transit railway lines that go between US states. The map also includes ferry routes, which I know is a bit confusing because I didn't state that in the video so apologies for that. Here's an interactive map so you can click around for yourself: www.eurail.com/en/plan-your-trip/railway-map
    2. I do switch between talking about the European Union and Europe a few times throughout the video which might have been a bit confusing as well.
    3. When I say that the "EU's" road network is not nearly as congested as the US' it's true, and I think people got confused because they thought I meant Europe, which would have contradicted my statement because European nations are in the list I show. I do know that I said Europe instead of the EU once when showing the list however so that's a mistake, sorry for that.
    4. The fuel prices I showed were from 2021 because I felt they were more accurate long-term since prices have gone insane recently.

    • @daimendimen
      @daimendimen Рік тому +47

      Need to update that gasoline prices, in Norway 1 liter cost 2.7 dollars,

    • @pettylein
      @pettylein Рік тому +67

      It's just the Eurail/Interrail Map. It doesn't show every major railway line in Europe, especially in eastern and southeastern Europe. The other map, you showed, with the high speed railways is more accurate.
      The purpose of this map is to show popular routes across Europe to popular destinations and major cities, e.g. London - Penzance is not an important railway line in Europe.

    • @crazyoncoffee
      @crazyoncoffee Рік тому +30

      Well, you said each yellow line represents a rail line and there most certainly is not a physical rail link between Great Britain and Ireland and there aren’t two links between the UK and France

    • @Ian58
      @Ian58 Рік тому +62

      Saying that Europe is less congested with showing that Europe has 7 of the the most congested cities. America 0. Then you follow by saying it’s weird how the place with more roads has more congestion. Except the table you showed previously counters that.

    • @freepalestine4192
      @freepalestine4192 Рік тому +47

      A few issues here:
      Europe has double the population density of America. The denser areas of America actually do have much better public transit than the rest of the country.
      America has the largest rail network in the world, and it used to provide excellent passenger service. It could do so again if more local public transit was available from stations on that network.
      Los Angeles did tear up its street car tracks a century ago, but it’s currently building out its heavy rail subway and light rail streetcar network again. These trains will serve as arteries, with bus routes from train stations serving as capillaries in a circulatory system of public transit. Many other American cities are currently building out similar networks.
      Freedom of travel in the EU isn’t totally a good thing. Sure, rich Northern and Western Europeans can vacation easier and poor Southern and Eastern Europeans can go get jobs easier. But Southern and Eastern European countries suffer brain drain and get stuck with low value added manufacturing, resource exports, and tourism industries. Meanwhile most of the wealth flows straight back to banks in Northern and Western European countries. The system benefits the rich far more than it benefits the poor.

  • @klyntarsunite8317
    @klyntarsunite8317 Рік тому +1871

    For those who didn’t know: The first map isn’t actually all of Europes train tracks, just the most major ones. There are 99% more

    • @justpenguincz
      @justpenguincz Рік тому +117

      i think that everybody knows that. In USA there is also more than 6 train tracks

    • @iggiewalsh2237
      @iggiewalsh2237 Рік тому +45

      @@justpenguincz there really arent that many active ones.

    • @ade5182
      @ade5182 Рік тому +26

      @@iggiewalsh2237 i live at the italian-austrian border and over that 1 track we have 6 more train tracks, ad for every italian region and ur already 120 more or less added for 1 country

    • @idkactually8565
      @idkactually8565 Рік тому +5

      So the train tracks on the first map are over half of the train tracks in Europe?

    • @ade5182
      @ade5182 Рік тому +5

      @@idkactually8565 actually no they are around 1/5 or 1/4 of them if we use a mountainous region as example

  • @AhimtarHoN
    @AhimtarHoN Рік тому +4486

    The rail network at the start is not actually the rail network, it shows most major cities and to which major cities they are connected to. The actual railways are waaaay more complex

    • @smarty265
      @smarty265 Рік тому +198

      yea and the map at 0:33 right after the usa map also doesnt show every single rail in Europe not even close

    • @lilbruh1151
      @lilbruh1151 Рік тому +44

      @@smarty265 only shows the ones that go across countries i belive

    • @timontoth2728
      @timontoth2728 Рік тому +61

      @@smarty265 he literally said those are high speed ones

    • @goldminer754
      @goldminer754 Рік тому +8

      @@timontoth2728 Yeah but it was not up to additions made in recent years

    • @llollo7631
      @llollo7631 Рік тому +25

      @@timontoth2728 Not quite, the map represents lines between major connected cities from different countries. Those rails cross more cities in their paths. The don t represent the path of the rails themselves. Moreover, Italy's or France's rails would literally fill the map with no visible gaps if they are drown with such thick lines.

  • @aidanrupert404
    @aidanrupert404 Рік тому +829

    The thought of not having a car growing up in Kansas is almost insane to me. Now that I live in Prague, I personally think that great public transportation is far FAR better in almost every way possible. Hands down. So cheap, so efficient, I don't have to worry about leaving my car and getting an uber when I get wasted on a night out, and honestly, I think it contributes a lot to my mental health, you feel far more connected with people. You don't feel isolated! If I were a city planner back in the states I would put a MASSIVE focus on public transportation in cities, it'd be a no brainer.

    • @FriendlyCroock
      @FriendlyCroock Рік тому +16

      Why is the internet talking about europe as if europe is a country again?

    • @FriendlyCroock
      @FriendlyCroock Рік тому +1

      It's as if a train filled with Stew Pead passengers crashed on youtube.

    • @wafabilalkhawatmi2605
      @wafabilalkhawatmi2605 Рік тому +16

      @@FriendlyCroock because everyone asumes that western Europe and scandanavia in the same as eastern Europe and the balkans

    • @saytam_ar
      @saytam_ar Рік тому +14

      Like yeah the Public transport is really cheap... Here in Ústecký kraj in the litle town of Bílina, The bus cost only 2 czech crowns...which for any american out here is 0,080 dollar.

    • @AW-jy4bt
      @AW-jy4bt Рік тому

      @@leonardo718 you're right but chill out bro

  • @leonistifter9172
    @leonistifter9172 Рік тому +74

    Im from switzerland. Here most people go to school with a bike, which saves money and is good for the environnement. The people that live further away take the bus or train. What always amazes me is that theres always a bus-/ trainstation no matter where u live. Its so practical especially for students.

    • @NymNion
      @NymNion Рік тому +28

      And on top of that, your flag is a big plus!

    • @Petoru
      @Petoru Рік тому +6

      ​@@NymNion Pepepains

    • @markgreaves6151
      @markgreaves6151 Рік тому

      @@NymNion docYell YOU'RE NOT FUNNY

    • @FranXiT
      @FranXiT Рік тому +5

      We're so sorry for our streamer

    • @crispybacon261
      @crispybacon261 Рік тому

      @@FranXiT fancy meeting you here flushE

  • @iNdA1981
    @iNdA1981 Рік тому +1548

    I am living in Hannover, Germany. I once read that our public transport company guaranteed that in the city nobody has to walk more than 250m to reach a bus or tram. You can reach every part of the city with those in a short and efficient timespan. Most of the time we do not appreciate this system but if we visit other countries we realise what we have at home and well the system works.

    • @podunkman2709
      @podunkman2709 Рік тому +22

      Yes, exciting journeys with cultural enrichers evereday. What a fun!

    • @letsplaybsgo
      @letsplaybsgo Рік тому +53

      @@podunkman2709 Get off your high horse

    • @elenakosseva5064
      @elenakosseva5064 Рік тому +25

      I visited Hannover this summer and I gotta say it is a lovely city!

    • @Snibble
      @Snibble Рік тому +2

      It works untill you want to take a train to a country next to your neighbours.

    • @iNdA1981
      @iNdA1981 Рік тому +35

      @@Snibble Never had a issue with that. I took a train direct to Vienna and Amsterdam several times. You can travel to several major and smaller Cities.

  • @joey199412
    @joey199412 Рік тому +4204

    Just a small correction. At 5:58 you claim that EU citizens are able to move freely to other schengen EU countries and stay up to 3 months. THIS IS FALSE. You are allowed to stay INDEFINITELY in other schengen countries as a EU citizen. You can buy/rent a home and work in the other nation without even notifying anyone and it's your RIGHT as a EU citizen to live in another schengen EU nation indefinitely.

    • @fixfoxofficial
      @fixfoxofficial Рік тому +612

      You also need no passport

    • @yaanonymous9663
      @yaanonymous9663 Рік тому +233

      Depends on the country i think.
      German foreign office:
      Since the entry into force of the Freedom of Movement Act/EU on 1 January 2005, EU citizens are no longer required to apply for a residence permit after entering Germany. However, they need to register, like everyone else, with their local residents registration office

    • @tobiasL1991
      @tobiasL1991 Рік тому +449

      No this video is correct:
      EU citizens with a valid identity card or passport may:
      -enter another EU Member State without requiring an exit or entry visa. Family members who are not nationals of a Member State do not require either an exit or entry visa if they possess a valid residence card;
      - live in another Member State for up to 3 months without any conditions or formalities;
      - live in another Member State for longer than 3 months subject to certain conditions, depending on their status in the host country:
      ---- those who are employed or self-employed do not need to meet any other conditions,
      ---- students and other people not working for payment, such as those in retirement, must have sufficient resources for themselves and their family, so as not to be a burden on the host -country’s social assistance system, and comprehensive sickness insurance cover;
      - have to register with the relevant authorities if living in the country longer than 3 months. Their family members, if not EU citizens, require a residence card valid for 5 years;
      - be entitled to permanent residence if they have lived legally in another Member State for a continuous period of 5 years. This also applies to their accompanying family members;
      - have the right to be treated on an equal footing with nationals of the host country. However, host authorities are not obliged to grant benefits to EU citizens not working for payment during the first 3 months of their stay.
      Freedom of movement only applies to people who work or are self-employed, those that aren't like retirees or students have rules like mentioned in the video.

    • @mat4701
      @mat4701 Рік тому +29

      It’s mostly very easy to travel. No passport required for most countries if you’re an european citizen

    • @ssgtblackmamba7991
      @ssgtblackmamba7991 Рік тому +48

      @@mat4701 no passport required, BUT, a travel document is required as you must present one IF asked for it by that member state's authorities. (Which almost never happens in my experience). An id card inside of Schengen is also considered a travel document (so that's where ne 'no passport' comes from).
      I worked as an immigration officer for a couple of years. Rules might have changed in the meantime though, or my memory is failing me.

  • @kaliyuga1476
    @kaliyuga1476 Рік тому +56

    It always amazed me how the train was invented in the UK and had an important role in US history, yet here in Spain it never became a thing in its early days because Spain is the second most montainous country in Europe apart from Switzerland, but nowadays it has as many highspeed railways as France

    • @joseph1150
      @joseph1150 Рік тому +5

      Spain didn't have much of an economy for a very long time, after the new world gold and silver dried up and the stupidity of the Franco regime. It still has serious lack of development outside of the main urban centers and large swaths of it are virtually empty. Having access to the EU markets and free movement of people plus pretty good education system has greatly accelerated Spain, but it still lacks basic industry and probably never will have those industries due to specialization of economies.

    • @no_soy_rubio
      @no_soy_rubio Рік тому

      @@joseph1150 yeah, Spain was doing great until the 2008 recession

    • @joseph1150
      @joseph1150 Рік тому +2

      @@no_soy_rubio It has some fundamental weaknesses due to not having a robust construction industry, weak industrial base, and leans too heavily on foreign markets and tourism. It's relatively decent growth over the last couple decades is largely a result of playing catchup and having access to the more developed parts of the EU as neighbors and close partners. It's true potential as a country is nowhere near realized given its large unemployment level and under utilized expanses.

    • @FabianRichter-yc7cu
      @FabianRichter-yc7cu 2 місяці тому

      Austria is the most mountainous country. 78% are mountains. Compared with the size, austria has double the amout of mountains than switzerland (only 45% and half the size)

  • @bbfan77
    @bbfan77 Рік тому +31

    I'm European and I visited Texas recently, I have to say the difference in infrastructure is startling, and the lack of walkability throughout the cities also, in Europe every city is walkable, you can't do anything in the US without a car :/// I drive a car, but I still go to work by bus and by foot every day because it's cheaper, more eco friendly and more convenient (parking and gas are expensive! :'))

    • @Bru946
      @Bru946 Рік тому +3

      @@examplenameyoutube Certain parts of the USA are walkable, just not the suburbs or outside of the metro. You can walk around cities and use pretty decent public transit like NYC, Boston, Chicago, and Seattle (I would add san franscisco too but idk if you wanna walk around there LMAO) but cities such as those can be walkable. I'm from Chicago and currently do not own a car, I had one then sold it once I realized I really did not need it.

  • @Thesupermachine2000
    @Thesupermachine2000 Рік тому +9269

    I don’t think the maps used (at least of europe), both for rail and highway systems, reflect the real life situation very well. In both cases you show the official international routes in both cases. On top of that there are thousands of extra lines in every country, this is the same with highway networks. The rail network in europe is much more comprehensive in comparison to this map..

    • @baronvonlimbourgh1716
      @baronvonlimbourgh1716 Рік тому +414

      These are just main arteries for the continents.

    • @redhidinghood9337
      @redhidinghood9337 Рік тому +155

      I think he was refering more to high-speed rail as opposed to just normal rail

    • @fanzypantz
      @fanzypantz Рік тому +109

      The map for the US probably shows the same, railways between states and across the country. I'm sure they have plenty more, smaller railways.

    • @lkjhfdszxcvbnm
      @lkjhfdszxcvbnm Рік тому +63

      Man, he just showed straight lines. You must've realized it's just schematics.

    • @duranvt3856
      @duranvt3856 Рік тому +33

      The train rail example is very bad. There are like 20 different types of rail roads which makes inter capital travel insanely slow

  • @konradsigsgaard7663
    @konradsigsgaard7663 Рік тому +2003

    The incredible thing is that Europe has all of these projects going on in a net of different countries, cultures and plans.

    • @haglasu1468
      @haglasu1468 Рік тому +37

      Which shows that unity doesn’t help anything with life quality.

    • @trent6319
      @trent6319 Рік тому +6

      I mean the US has projects that span states, cultures and local goverments. Its not that different the US is just a bit more centralized.

    • @lsfornells
      @lsfornells Рік тому +301

      @@trent6319 you don’t get it, really. Europeans from different countries speak different languages that can’t be understood among them, and you find that by just walking a few meters across country border locations. There’s nothing comparable to that in the US

    • @haglasu1468
      @haglasu1468 Рік тому

      @@trent6319 The US doesn't have culture.

    • @trent6319
      @trent6319 Рік тому +4

      @@lsfornells i mean yeah there's only the two large languages in the US which does make it simpler

  • @aquila519
    @aquila519 8 місяців тому +6

    Living here in the U.S, we are overly dependent on personal vehicles. The public transits we do have are often quite sketchy or just simply arent that great. Having a car is nice because you can be completely independent and just go wherever you need to. But at the same time, everything is so spread out and so far apart so that in itself, is inconvenient despite the fact we have our own personal vehicles. And its become a problem especially in big cities like LA where traffic is notoriously ridiculous due to the mass amounts of cars and people.

    • @NarutoHugsMikasa
      @NarutoHugsMikasa 3 місяці тому +2

      LA is an exception. Cities like Chicago, Washington and NYC do have good public transport, don't they ?

    • @zacatack8679
      @zacatack8679 Місяць тому

      @@NarutoHugsMikasayes but it’s still sketchy

    • @NarutoHugsMikasa
      @NarutoHugsMikasa Місяць тому

      @@zacatack8679 why

  • @mayav7751
    @mayav7751 Рік тому +22

    Yes! Lived in Belgium for ages. Stayed above a shop in city Center. Could do all my shopping in the street and had a tram stop in front of my appartement. Bike lanes everywhere and very safe so I could cycle out at night to wherever I wanted and always felt safe (single female). My cousin who still lives there has started learning to drive this year (he is 45 and never missed a car before)

  • @EdVonPelt
    @EdVonPelt Рік тому +996

    The map for European railways and road networks are missing a lot of detail. The Autobahn network alone can equal any US area for density. And the French, Swiss or Italians aren't that far behind either.

    • @SimpWhiper
      @SimpWhiper Рік тому +13

      yes and no Germany is behind the rail infrastructure they promised to build if for example the Gotthard base tunnel was finished but they didn't

    • @Racko.
      @Racko. Рік тому +42

      @@SimpWhiper Because of incompetence and political mismanagement, Germany is notoriously known to have an overall issue in making new infrastructure projects and not halting it for some unknown reason up along the way, the do extremely with construction in other countries until it’s back in Germany, their rail schedules are laughable at best, but still better than a lot of places, and have u forgotten what happened to the BrandenBurg Airport that was felt abandoned for years

    • @coolcat-nq4mj
      @coolcat-nq4mj Рік тому +7

      What the hell even is that "road network" map? like pull out an actual map for both, they both have equally the same amount of roads

    • @Freshbott2
      @Freshbott2 Рік тому +4

      That’s a good point. A more useful comparison for this video would net the fact Europe tends to build lots of highways for freight and interregional travel outside cities and less often within them. USA tends to force concrete spaghetti through historic urban neighbourhoods and everything along the route rots.

    • @Banom7a
      @Banom7a Рік тому

      @@Racko. In German even corruption is done with precision lmao

  • @puddin4884
    @puddin4884 Рік тому +3575

    I was born and raised in the UK but moved to The USA at 22. I had never felt more isolated! In England I could easily look up bus timetables, many of which would take me exactly where I needed to go, use the bike lanes or cycle tracks to go to the town centre or take a train for the day to the next city over and it would be quick and cheap.
    Here in the USA I felt I HAD to have a car and learn to drive, its near impossible to function in society without one and that’s terribly sad.
    EDIT: for context, my town in the UK has less than 40,000 people and is about an hour and a half away by car from any large city, and we STILL had good public transport for nearby towns, villages and cities. Low population density isn't an excuse if it makes sense for people to use it!

    • @luzhang2982
      @luzhang2982 Рік тому +73

      UK is also insanely smaller, the bus and train ticket prices much higher, and there isn't as many places to go. Quick and cheap? You haven't been to UK recently. Bus pass prices are significantly better in the US, and the buses were nowhere near cheap. The drivers will also pass you by even if you're at the stop. US doesn't do that. They have specific times at each stop unless its completely empty.
      UK mass transit is neither fast nor cheap.

    • @joaquinelorrieta4203
      @joaquinelorrieta4203 Рік тому +327

      @@luzhang2982 sure the us is a big country, but density wise it’s not that different, and even then, cities in Europe are as big as cities in the US, the cities in the us are designed around cars, that’s just a fact.

    • @666Tomato666
      @666Tomato666 Рік тому +123

      @@luzhang2982 but it's not larger than individual states, let alone particular agglomerations. The problem is that the US cities are built for cars, designed for cars, and everything else is distant second. With people actively campaigning against public transport, because they think it would bring crime and people of color from "inner cities".

    • @kp2xd340
      @kp2xd340 Рік тому

      GO BACK TO EUROPE

    • @luzhang2982
      @luzhang2982 Рік тому +33

      @@joaquinelorrieta4203 No, the population density is incredibly varied in the US, and overall the population density of the UK is much greater.
      There's also vast swaths of the US that literally have only one person per thousand km sq

  • @perpendicularmouse
    @perpendicularmouse Рік тому +12

    From Finland: public transport works only in bigger cities and smaller cities and towns it is much more easier to just own a car to even move around the town if you don't live at the center. As a teen it took me 2km walk to get to the nearest buss station. My town does have a railway going through but not for people. So the system doesn't function like it should and I never learned to use public transport bc there wasn't any to use

    • @stepanfedorov561
      @stepanfedorov561 Рік тому

      Greetings from Viipuri.

    • @andrewpropson8464
      @andrewpropson8464 Рік тому +1

      Yes you understand finland has a much closer in terms of density of america so you guys look much more similar to us in terms of transportation thank you i love the fins

  • @angelinataylor4159
    @angelinataylor4159 Рік тому +14

    Unfurnately trams weren‘t removed only in America but also in some cities in Europe. For example, I am from Kiel in Germany and our tram system also got removed many years ago. And now politicians think about adding a new one because it’s way better for the climate than driving with a car or bus. So why did they even remove it then?
    And: Great video haha, I love seeing what people of other counties think about Europe.

    • @theengineergaming602
      @theengineergaming602 Рік тому +1

      Because nobody lives there

    • @bretagnejean2410
      @bretagnejean2410 11 місяців тому

      Do, erase and redo.😅
      In my city had cobblestones during many centuries...all had been pull up in 1950 for modern bitumen and now since 20 years they redo cobblestone because its pretty , clean and cheap in longtime.

  • @gerbrandlub
    @gerbrandlub Рік тому +787

    Dutchie here, manager project control for mostly infrastructure. When you ask what can still be improved, realistically it'll mostly be incremental additions with the current technological limitations (which is usual in a historic context I know). For instance, we're redesigning a street in a major city centre at the moment. We want to untangle cyclists and pedestrians by offering the cyclists an alternative. Problem is, the best alternative is also used by lorries to supply the city-centre shops making it a bit less safe. We'll widen the street of course, remove parking spaces (always a huge protest) but the best alternative would be to have specific supply-raillines underground in urban centres. But those are mega projects and not feasible at the moment.
    When it comes to international traintravel, we're getting there. Last march I traveled to Austria from the Netherlands by train and it was just as fast as with a regular car (and cheaper). But one hiccup and you're screwed with transfers. More reliable trains and schedules would see more people taking PT as a viable alternative.

    • @oisnowy5368
      @oisnowy5368 Рік тому +30

      As a fervent cyclist without a car, thank you for your efforts!

    • @alexcazacu1
      @alexcazacu1 Рік тому +11

      As a fellow dutchie, what city haha?

    • @coenlammerts8816
      @coenlammerts8816 Рік тому +7

      And how about making public transit in the netherlands cheaper its not really a cheaper option than a car

    • @sergeantmajor_gross
      @sergeantmajor_gross Рік тому +1

      How much was a one way train ticket to Austria from the Netherlands?

    • @gerbrandlub
      @gerbrandlub Рік тому +11

      @@sergeantmajor_gross one way depended on the day you were traveling. On the weekends it was about 70 euro, during the week it was less than 50. Also depended on when you booked. If I was quicker it'd be cheaper

  • @maxymvandenbogaert8345
    @maxymvandenbogaert8345 Рік тому +602

    I am from Belgium and i live in a minor city, the proof that our transit system works is that i can buy a train ticket right to Amsterdam for 10 euros and be in amsterdam 3 hours later. Also your map of highways in europe is too simplified.

    • @brickonblock5183
      @brickonblock5183 Рік тому +30

      Yeah true and the map of trains lines as well.

    • @MasthaX
      @MasthaX Рік тому +15

      10 euro's? Must be some sort of deal because NS is extremely expensive, it would cost me 20e for a single ticket to get to Amsterdam, and I live only about an hour from Amsterdam. That would be 40 euro's just to sit in a train for 2 hours.... Europe may be "well designed" but it's extremely expensive to use public transport. A cheap car will save you allot of time and money.

    • @Woef718
      @Woef718 Рік тому +3

      That is crazy i live in the netherlands and it cost me 50 euro to just go to amsterdam and back.

    • @vodkaboy
      @vodkaboy Рік тому +4

      @@MasthaX I can't wait for some "European transport pass" to be a thing, imagine having a titre de transport valable everywhere in Europe. even with a high price tag it would need to be subsidies, but considering how expensive cars are for the entire society, I think it would be worth the collective cost.

    • @HUNdAntae
      @HUNdAntae Рік тому

      Well yes, but it's not a huge achievement if you consider that the entire BeNeLux is just a bit larger area than the Transdanubia part of Hungary(which is also considered a small country). So yes, cheap and efficient, but in that particular case, it's nothing to marvel about.

  • @kristapskalve3797
    @kristapskalve3797 Рік тому +77

    By just quick glance at the map provided of railway's of Europe, there's a hug amount of missing lines. From my travels I can say about 13 country's:
    1) Spain: North Pontevedra-Santiago was built already10years ago / some missing in north / Valencia in south is not correct.
    2) Italy: Bologna-Venezia has line connecting them (without goin to Verona) this summer had.
    3) Croatia: had way more lines
    4) Bosnia: I saw A lines- but didnt use them myself
    5) Montenegro: had some extra lines-and interesting mix of Soviet and Italian trains on them.
    6) Slovaks: had more too
    7) Netherland: so many lines that you wouldnt be able to see grey color in this map there
    8) Poland: There 1/10 on this map, bet trains like to take 5min on arrival, especially in Wroclaw and Warsaw
    9) Lithuanians: had some more line I saw, but havent use them, but there should be line to Klaipeda
    10) Latvia: There is 4 missing branches that span a country
    11) There's Line between Parnu And Tallinn missing.
    * Bonus: *Poland , Lithuania, Latvia , Estonia building new highspeed line - not marked on map at all.
    12) Finland: There was a line form Helsinki to Ravoniemi(arctic circle) already 8 years ago
    13) Oh!... And the Swiss...
    Point is ... If I could see these - probably this map doesnt have even half of whats there in Europe. And it wasn't good source.

    • @essaly7969
      @essaly7969 Рік тому

      Switzerland is entirely covered

    • @HonestMan112
      @HonestMan112 10 місяців тому

      No shit. Theres probably more lines in london than the entire US

  • @pimmyflores8739
    @pimmyflores8739 Рік тому +4

    Also, major cities are spread out in the U.S.. In Europe, you can drive one hour and be in another country. In Texas, you can drive 11 hours and be in the same state.

    • @amanojaku9157
      @amanojaku9157 Рік тому

      You can take a train for 20 hours and still be in Sweden. We're not all small countries.

    • @MegaRitmos
      @MegaRitmos Рік тому +1

      That's because the trains are so slow

    • @ryszardadamski
      @ryszardadamski Місяць тому

      A high-speed rail line could be built in Texas, connecting Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Austin. Distances are just under v320 (200mph). Dallas-Austin-Huston. Dallas-Austin-San Antonio. San Antonio-Austin-Huston. Houston has 7 million people. Austin 2 million. San Antonio 2 million. Dallas 5 million. 16 million people served by intercity rail.

  • @martintirpak1033
    @martintirpak1033 Рік тому +259

    I am from Slovakia and the tram shown at 1:45 is actually the one I use on my daily commute to work!
    Btw, the railway line through the middle of Slovakia does not really exist as depicted. You can travel this route without changing trains, but not through mountainous Slovakia as shown. These trains go through Czech republic instead.

    • @decimusdecius7858
      @decimusdecius7858 Рік тому +16

      Czech there for the Škoda tram comment. Upvote you have from me!

    • @markomilojevic8122
      @markomilojevic8122 Рік тому +4

      ​​@@decimusdecius7858Ty vole 😁

    • @laujovo5368
      @laujovo5368 Рік тому +11

      As far as I know those lines only show the connections between two cities and don't necessarily describe the actual rail line (I mean, trains don't really go only in straight lines, do they...)

    • @solok4150
      @solok4150 Рік тому +1

      Hostel??😱

    • @martintirpak1033
      @martintirpak1033 Рік тому +9

      @@solok4150 forget Hostel, Slovakia is beautiful small country, rich in both history and natural wonders ;)

  • @tokarukora7272
    @tokarukora7272 Рік тому +721

    The thing is: The train lines in Europa were less DESIGNED than developed in very small iterations. The various countries made their train tracks where knew it would be intelligent, and they were connected then. The towns were first, the train came later, when people already knew where they would be interesting to use.

    • @user-mo7qf9wt1e
      @user-mo7qf9wt1e Рік тому +7

      Europa 😂 that's Jupiter's moon

    • @karolinaj5045
      @karolinaj5045 Рік тому +120

      @@user-mo7qf9wt1e Depends on the language. In a number of European countries Europe is spelled Europa: Spanish, Polish, German, Norwegian, to name a few.

    • @taiqidong9841
      @taiqidong9841 Рік тому +42

      @@karolinaj5045 And Dutch...

    • @ubi8439
      @ubi8439 Рік тому +39

      @@karolinaj5045 and Portuguese

    • @theblocksmith645
      @theblocksmith645 Рік тому +22

      In the us it was for the most part the other way around the train lines were designed and towns developed around them to support the infrastructure the lines were not made for connecting towns they were made for connecting the east coast to the west coast and a few mines/farms

  • @lexalyntof5671
    @lexalyntof5671 Рік тому +17

    i think the good thing about europe, (i can only speak of denmark) is that the public spaces like bars resturants and even normal shopping is all very close by normally at the center. then the city if it is big has a few grocery shops scattered around the outskirts. this makes it much easier to go shopping and you feel all the more connected, together with public transport that takes you trait to the city center and out again if you wish to do so. the lovely thing here is that it is a choice to have a car, not a nessecity. you can easily get around. and of course its way more beautiful in europe (just not as much in denmark, its flat as fuck here)

    • @mardus_ee
      @mardus_ee Рік тому

      You have Tivoli and Legoland :-)

    • @Skybreaker6
      @Skybreaker6 10 місяців тому

      Well, flat terrain is good for bikes, in my city (cuz t'he ground inclination) If you had to go in summer from t'he city center to my House in bike... xD

  • @crankybastid2197
    @crankybastid2197 10 місяців тому +4

    It's well designed because its smaller than the US and was developed almost a thousand years ago for walking and horse traffic. Shops are closer to home, schools, hospitals, etc. The US is designed for automobile traffic.

  • @diegorovaglia6945
    @diegorovaglia6945 Рік тому +542

    The problem with Europe's public transportation systems (Italian here) is that, even if they are not always perfect (maintenance and punctuality), they are just the better alternative, compared to the car, in cities.... but that ONLY applies to medium-large cities. The moment you strive just a little further away from the downtown areas, you NEED to have a car. There are the occasional buses here and there and the local train lines are good enough, but they can't physically cover all of the areas that need to be served.
    So, if you live in a city and do most of your business there (work, family and friends), you don't need a car at all, but if you live in the countryside or even in smaller towns... good luck surviving without a car.

    • @D4PPZ456
      @D4PPZ456 Рік тому +101

      In other words, the majority of your population can get by without a car, which means that you experience significantly less traffic when you, someone who needs to drive, uses the road.

    • @alejandrodelabarra2838
      @alejandrodelabarra2838 Рік тому +16

      Of course!!
      They want you to NOT having a car.

    • @robinboonstra107
      @robinboonstra107 Рік тому +38

      I understand your point, however i live in a town of about 30.000 residents. I have acces to 8 trains every hour going in 2 directions (4 one way, 4 the other) and many busses giong to various smaller towns (of which multiple are basically some houses along a street). You can also rent a bike at the train station. I do have to be clear that this is the netherlands, however it is in the more remote part. The closest bigger city being Leeuwarden (just less than 95.000 residents). My point is mostly that if done correctly public transport will be able to get you basically anywhere you need to go.
      Edit: i want to make clear that im not trying to bash your opinion, im just giving you my opinion. I hope everyone who sees this has a nice day

    • @mimmiblu6138
      @mimmiblu6138 Рік тому +33

      @@robinboonstra107 sorry but this simply cannot work for Italy. Cities in the Po Valley are all very well connected because we live a densely populated *flat* area but as soon as you go either North to the Alps or South to the Apennines everything changes dramatically: they're so scarsely populated montanous areas that comparing them to the Netherlands simply does not make sense. For example: I live in a town of 32.000 inhabintants in Lombardy, I do not use my car at all here, but I use it to go to my holiday house in the Maritime Alps... there are buses to my village of 800 inhabitants there, but only 3 times a day... it is 20 km of curves and 600 m altitude difference from the nearest town on the coast... having a more frequent bus service would simply not be financially viable.

    • @kuto608
      @kuto608 Рік тому +6

      I should point out that we live in London, a city of 9 million and we still need vehicles because public transport just doesn't cater to our needs. Not everyone will be able to use public transport, people still own vehicles in the city for a reason but yes public transportation within the A406 is pretty good and we do use buses and trains when possible.

  • @marcegger7411
    @marcegger7411 Рік тому +906

    honestly, my biggest issue about Europe and specifically France (I'm french) and Italy (studied there), is that although large towns and cities are incredibly well connected it becomes an insane hassle to go to most smaller villages and towns as they might fall off the grid. For that reason and pretty much that reason only I would consider buying a car whilst living in Europe, and that pretty much points out the achilles heel of this system. Unless covering essentially 100% of the towns and villages, there will always be at least one person incentivized to buying a car. It shouldn't be a hassle to have to live in the countryside, and it definitely shouldn't be a hassle to visit your family living in the countryside.

    • @SV-mc1jq
      @SV-mc1jq Рік тому +129

      I have noticed that this is an issue mostly in the larger European countries, like Germany/France/Spain. In the Netherlands, even the smaller villages and towns are accessible via bus. Sure, one might have to walk for 20 mins extra apart from the bus, but at least it is accessible. The geographic size of the larger countries + the fact that Netherlands is flat making transportation easy is the difference, I suppose.

    • @ZhaoZhouYun
      @ZhaoZhouYun Рік тому +61

      Is car rental (incl. sharing) out of the question? I mean, car ownership could be problematic for those living in an urban setting with limited parking space, but free floating car sharing has been a life saver in many instances.

    • @D-A-A-
      @D-A-A- Рік тому +9

      @@SV-mc1jq Netherlands is completely different they do it alot better, the tram is a big thing in the dam plus the city is designed for biking really or walking but your gov push biking and public transport more than cars, but by pushing people to walk and cycle in the city centre you don't need as much public transport like London. Count how many buses go past you in a hour in London 😂so to me cos alot of people bike or walk in Amsterdam that would mesn you can focus on the public transport which goes to the outer villages making it a better service than other places in Europe

    • @hylje
      @hylje Рік тому +79

      Having cars in the countryside is no issue whatsoever. There’s space. Barely anyone lives there. Many jobs and occupations in rural areas require you to operate a vehicle anyway, as you’re literally working the land and we do that with heavy equipment nowadays.

    • @u.s.navy_pete4111
      @u.s.navy_pete4111 Рік тому +6

      In the future when you can simply rent self-driving cars for a couple days, this will sort itself out.

  • @tarataun
    @tarataun Рік тому +3

    Great video and pointing out taxes fact was really smart :] I live in Prague that is in top 10 lists of public transport and I can only agree with that. I mostly walk everywhere or using public transport for longer distances. When you are drunk you call taxi and its at your place usually in two minutes at any time. I own car as well but using that only for trips out of cities or big shoppings so mostly 3x a week. I think that except things mentioned in the video that is also one thing that is different from US - that Europeans are use to walk. Vilages, small cities or major cities - there is pedestrian infrastructure everywhere. My wife lived in Texas for a year and she toldme that she missed just walking around but in US everything is so spaced out that is not possible nor fun. Also night walks are not safe but that was maybe just her experience.

  • @FinlandGuy747
    @FinlandGuy747 6 місяців тому +3

    Im from Finland. I have to say Helsinki-Tallin and Helsinki-Stockholm ferry routes are very important for Finland. It comnects Finland to other countries. We don't have trains we could take to other countries.

  • @MagisterVeritas
    @MagisterVeritas Рік тому +253

    I've been a helicopter pilot for 9 years throughout Europe. I've never gone to my job (the airport) with my car. I've always used trains, buses and in the worse case scenario a taxi/Uber. Now I live in Mallorca and go to work with a bike.

    • @MagisterVeritas
      @MagisterVeritas Рік тому +127

      @Backroad Runners yes, I'll take the anything, thanks

    • @georgeq_q
      @georgeq_q Рік тому +73

      @Backroad Runners bad day bud?

    • @georgeq_q
      @georgeq_q Рік тому +25

      @Backroad Runners I'd say yes by the looks of it

    • @tiagoacosta8826
      @tiagoacosta8826 Рік тому +53

      @Name Avarege Fat USA Citizen:

    • @Thiiink
      @Thiiink Рік тому +1

      @Name post wall women- classic

  • @modiglian
    @modiglian Рік тому +766

    2:16 Tokyo, I remember before traveling I saw some people on youtube saying how the transport system was maze-like and confusing… but when this Madrid-native arrived, had no problem at all either underground or on the surface, being used to conmute bus-train-metro since young age, Tokyo and Osaka felt like home, with kanji characters on top 😇

    • @Arltratlo
      @Arltratlo Рік тому +9

      i am from a town with just busses..... and i still managed London, Paris, New Yorck and Philadelphia!

    • @Stalkingwolf
      @Stalkingwolf Рік тому +7

      i was 2019 in Tokyo and it was very easy to understand.
      but some said they made it new over the years. years ago ( or maybe centuries?) even for the people of Tokyo it was very confusing.

    • @jg54sayaka11
      @jg54sayaka11 Рік тому +11

      @@abyssandchill4545 that seems very unlike Japan but definitely nice nonetheless

    • @lifeinguangdong5844
      @lifeinguangdong5844 Рік тому +6

      Tokyo is pretty easy to navigate the only thing that sucks are all the different companies. It's like 30 different companies and in a lot of cases you need to pay again when you transfer to another line ran by a different company.

    • @derusername7218
      @derusername7218 Рік тому +8

      we Madrid natives grew up getting lost in Nuevos Ministerios and Chamartin xd

  • @MontyD
    @MontyD Рік тому +5

    traveled around Europe for a bit. The idea you couldn't visit a city without a car is alien to me

  • @prind142
    @prind142 Рік тому +5

    One thing people fail to understand about the US railroad is that it was not designed with public transport in mind after a certain point. It's very heavily designed around freight, so much so that increasing public transport via train would likely be more of a detriment to the economy than a benefit. Even as it stands they charge a significant amount to ride the train in the US because you are directly competing with freight.

    • @Bru946
      @Bru946 Рік тому

      The USA's freight system is actually really really impressive. But at the sacrifice of public transportation.

  • @dkundih
    @dkundih Рік тому +491

    2:00 that is NOT the European road network, that is a TEN-T corridor map (Trans European Network - Transport) which is actually representing the international corridors of which many are, in fact, railways and river transport routes. You can clearly see that in the example of Croatia/Hungary on so called 'Mediterranean corridor' (railway Rijeka - Zagreb - Koprivnica - Gyekenes - Budapest) and 'Rhine-Danube' corridor that is a river corridor that lies on those two rivers.

    •  Рік тому +16

      I wanted to highlight exactly the same fact. They need to be precise if they want to convince people

    • @dkundih
      @dkundih Рік тому +8

      @ I do agree that all of the information provided in the video needs to be checked, however I do not deny that EU transport system is generally better than the US one. Partially due to economy differences of course, where EU gives a lot of subsidies payed from taxes in order to make public transport affordable, while US with lower taxes does not interfere the market as much. And of course, I am not talking about the infrastructure that is being funded from the national budget of both unions, but the subsidies to local bus companies to connect rural places where their service is often not profitable, completely free travelling with train for everyone under the age of 19 (in my country, Croatia, at least), affordable tram tickets (1 USD for a 60 minute ride in any direction!), free public mechanical and electric bikes (also in my city, Koprivnica), free buses that connect suburban areas and the frequently visited city locations (hospital, university, malls...) and lots of other measures I probably missed out.

    • @Illuminat-ve5ue
      @Illuminat-ve5ue Рік тому +2

      but the US map is also only the interstate route map i think

    •  Рік тому +11

      @@Illuminat-ve5ue Yeah maybe, but the european map way off the reality. Take France for example, the country has more than 100 motorways over 10000 km. However on the map, it is like the country only has 5 or 6 of them...

    • @huskytail
      @huskytail Рік тому +14

      @@dkundih you have fallen into the "US- low taxes, not meddling vs EU- high taxes, protectionism" fallacy. The major difference is not the total amount of taxation but prioritizing the subsidized industries.

  • @silvestrossouthernitaly9795
    @silvestrossouthernitaly9795 Рік тому +598

    Geography is always a major factor. Here in Southern Italy there is very little public transportation but they are building the second- SECOND- tunnel under Monte Bianco, in the north. Southern Europe is largely forgotten about, when it comes to national infrastructure.

    • @ruevyvlogs3631
      @ruevyvlogs3631 Рік тому +131

      Sounds more like Italy is thrashing south Italy than that Europe is responsible for it. I think you guys get a lot of money from the EU. Well deserved of-course, but should be well spent as well.

    • @maxgarz8576
      @maxgarz8576 Рік тому +118

      @@ruevyvlogs3631 North Italian here. That's exactly the case. Italy has immense potential and is treated and managed like garbage by those who should administer us and our money. It's a shame.

    • @Finkiu
      @Finkiu Рік тому +24

      Well, in Spain is different, most of the railways are focused in Andalusia. Northern part of the country is almost forsaken, due to the complexity of orography I guess, but still.

    • @ruevyvlogs3631
      @ruevyvlogs3631 Рік тому +37

      @@Finkiu Swiss is very much a train country without it really being suitable for trains.

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU Рік тому

      (Southern) Italy is notorious all across Europe for corruption. Even in Venice, they made EU money for the dam system "disappear", only to get a second fund with which they actually installed the system.
      I wouldn't be surprised there was actual money provided for a rail system and then it simply vanished into a politician's or the maffia's pocket, or was used for another project like you say.

  • @CitiesByMaps
    @CitiesByMaps 8 місяців тому +1

    Apparently American passenger rail like Amtrak rent out rail roads from freight rail companies which means passenger trains don't get priority on the railway freight trains get priority which causes delays for passenger trains and even can end up cancelling passenger trains.

  • @manuelhecki
    @manuelhecki Рік тому +1

    what sucks in europe is close up rail traffic. i live pretty close to munich (1h with car, approx. 60km), but going back and forth with train would run me 30€. especially when going shopping with friends we almost always go by car, bc it gets way way cheaper when splitting the gasoline than it would be to buy a group ticket for 5 people

  • @MuddyRavine
    @MuddyRavine Рік тому +353

    One comment about the US Amtrak map in the beginning. Some of those greens lines are currently cargo only. As in, Wyoming has no passenger rail. On another note, those red splotches, and they should include Wyoming as well, are incredibly large and unpopulated, for the most part. As a European you cannot imagine how few people are in some of these areas. Take for instance, Wyoming. Wyoming is roughly (I'm sure someone will correct me) the same size as Poland, or about 8 times the size of Belgium. Poland has about 38million people, Belgium has about 11million people, Wyoming has 600,000 people. If you put the United States on Europe you can cover from Madrid and Dublin to Ukraine and Turkey and well into Russia almost to Kazakhstan and down into Syria. The distances are enormous compared to what people in Europe think is a long distance. The US needs to work on regional rail. Just as nobody in Europe wants to take the train from Lisbon to Vilnius, nobody in the US want to take a train from Sacramento to Raleigh.

    • @BlackPawnMartyr
      @BlackPawnMartyr Рік тому

      Thanks for this reply. Its amazing how ignorant Europeans are. Its like they cant take account any other extraneous variables and must only come to the conclusion that we arent doing it because we just arent as smart and sophisticated as Europe.

    • @mrfleming79
      @mrfleming79 Рік тому +18

      Regional train is ideal for the States, the issue is, just with anything America, politics! The red tape issues and etc makes it hard to accomplish anything.

    • @Biditchoun
      @Biditchoun Рік тому +54

      A REALLY high speed train would actually make a lot of sense to travel between Chicago and the east coast for example. It's far easier to zoom at 400 km/h without having to pass all the controls at an airport, so in the end it could be as fast as taking the plane. But cheaper. And way better for the planet.

    • @wckdaintgood
      @wckdaintgood Рік тому +6

      We honestly could’ve been had way more rail lines dedicated to passenger rail but most rail lines in America carry cargo.

    • @Meiseside
      @Meiseside Рік тому +14

      but we can also travel at the night train in Europe. So we can sleep from one city to an another one.

  • @jackhaugh
    @jackhaugh Рік тому +106

    I’m an American that lived in Europe; Germany specifically, for 7 years in the 90s. Seeing the overall public transportation system there compared to the US really made me envious.
    I think the US is still far behind Europe in every aspect of public transport, most glaringly the rail system.

    • @snorfallupagus6014
      @snorfallupagus6014 Рік тому +3

      Yes - let’s put commuter rail in places with low population density, like Wyoming.

    • @andrewpropson8464
      @andrewpropson8464 Рік тому +4

      @@snorfallupagus6014 ye some people some how don’t understand oh hey america has a smaller way way wayy more spread out population than Europe and the cities we do have a re far denser making it difficult to build rails and other infrastructure through them

    • @concernedcitizen6572
      @concernedcitizen6572 11 місяців тому +8

      @@snorfallupagus6014 lol no one is saying to start with Wyoming what are you talking about. We could build up and re-invest in corridors first where the majority of Americans live. IE large metros and their surrounding suburbs.

    • @concernedcitizen6572
      @concernedcitizen6572 11 місяців тому +3

      @@andrewpropson8464 We already have public transit of some kind where most Americans live (IE in most US metros). All it will take is continuing/increasing our investment. It is not impossible and there is no need for extra excuses when we are already so far behind the rest of the developed world. Where is the famous "can-do" American attitude?!
      We need more transit options. More transit options = more freedom. Especially this will help our fellow Americans who cant drive. (Elderly, disabled etc) and those who are too poor to maintain/own a car.

    • @papaicebreakerii8180
      @papaicebreakerii8180 11 місяців тому

      @@snorfallupagus6014 being Fr there are areas where it could be better. I live in east PA and it’s p dense but only a couple cities are connected with rail. Last time a passenger train stopped at the local train station was decades ago and it supports a county of 150000 ppl. Shit j don’t make sense

  • @japanse_samurai9456
    @japanse_samurai9456 Рік тому +1

    A few downsides to traveling with train and tram is that it is very crowded and it takes way longer to travel, sinds there mostly isn't stopping a train/tram directly at your destination

  • @taikai1119
    @taikai1119 Рік тому +2

    As a German I wanna say one thing. (The following accounts for Germany, not all of Europe)
    The Big Problem about public transport in Germany is that the tickets are too expensive, not unaffordably expensive, but still on the long run more expensive than owning and maintaining a small car.
    I used to own a 1994 Ford Fiesta, and no matter how hard I tried and wanted to go public transport, it was either no possible in my area, or later when I moved to a town, driving my Car was still cheaper than getting a Train or Bus ticket.
    And that's a massive issue, if driving your Car is cheaper or just slightly more expensive than choosing public transport, most people are gonna choose the comfort and flexibility of a car over rail or bus.
    Again, not for all of Europe, looking at the Netherlands I always feel like they are 20 years ahead of everyone, their public transport is superb, their cycling paths are amazing.
    Whenever I visit the Netherlands, I don't even think about using a car

    • @Takethislife9
      @Takethislife9 11 місяців тому

      How is public transport not affordable in germany? i just locked up the price for monthy public Flatrate in berlin (wich is 88€, wich is 95 in US dollars) We can take me as an example, i have a very low income of 1600€ a month, 700€ goes to my rent and another 100€ for internet and radio. 88€ for transportation is not much. owning and maintaing a car is much more then 88 bucks a months here.

    • @taikai1119
      @taikai1119 9 місяців тому +1

      My argument no longer fits, since there's now a new Ticket that lets you use all trains, trams and busses in German for 49€ (InterCityExpress not included)
      The "Deutschlandticket" and it is a very good thing to exist which I got immediately.
      Before, owning and fueling my car was a rough estimate of 120€ per month (1994 Ford Fiesta Petrol 1.1l engine/ that includes tax, insurance and fuel, maintenance not included in my calculation)
      And it was about the same for a monthly ticket to get from 1 city to the other, which my first comment was based off of.
      And I am fairly sure that if it's literally the same price, people will choose the flexibility of a car, over the unreliability of public transport.
      Germans know that already but German Railways run so unreliable that it became a meme, too many canceled or delayed trains, and it's looking only mildly better for busses)
      tho again, with the introduction of the 49€ ticket, the whole price question changed and my point is no longer relevant.

  • @gemjamjones2656
    @gemjamjones2656 Рік тому +213

    I think its also important to note that a lot of european countries are trying to retain or redevelop communities within cities/towns. So you can live in a town center above a shop and easily do a food shop, get to work, school, meet friends etc without having to drive out to an industrial estate, or drive in from a suburb.
    Also having just retail on a high street is no longer working so a lot of places are diversifying and finding solutions to make it more attractive, pedestrian friendly and enticing to live and visit.
    However in the US whenever I've been it always felt like everything was so far apart! You had to drive ages to get to anything from your hotel, house, apartment. We were the silly europeans trying to walk to a restaurant or shop on a basically non existant pavement.
    Another note living in Germany you can make a fairly accurate guess as to who the Americans are... the ones with the massive 4x4 gas guzzlers, that don't fit in our small streets, parking spaces etc. Its amusing.

    • @MustacheDLuffy
      @MustacheDLuffy Рік тому +1

      They’re allowed to bring their cars over?

    • @aromanticdisgr-ace4083
      @aromanticdisgr-ace4083 Рік тому +11

      @@MustacheDLuffy When they go to find a rental there are usually a couple larger cars to choose from. Though it wouldn't surprise me if they were only there to rent out to Americans...

    • @Kraken9911
      @Kraken9911 Рік тому +4

      @@MustacheDLuffy There are many American military personnel in Europe that bring their cars from America for free.

    • @MustacheDLuffy
      @MustacheDLuffy Рік тому

      @@Kraken9911 That’s military personnel. Maybe you can tell they’re Americans by their uniforms

    • @MustacheDLuffy
      @MustacheDLuffy Рік тому

      @@aromanticdisgr-ace4083 is it because they have more money? Not every person likes bigger cars

  • @pavlvs_maximvs
    @pavlvs_maximvs Рік тому +385

    I lived on campus at Stanford as a foreign student from Spain and I felt like in prison. Without a car I was disabled: I couldn’t reach a a bar, a restaurant to meet friends, or even a supermarket to buy groceries. There was no Uber at the time. The bike helped, but even with it, distances were huge.
    Whenever I took public transportation in the area it was mainly weirdos or very poor people on it. Sometimes it was scary. It’s a complete strange feeling for a European university student.

    • @oddeinarstrand4466
      @oddeinarstrand4466 Рік тому +1

      This isnt about the you brodie or the people you were lipsing, videos about the design of europe

    • @bernardogabriel6200
      @bernardogabriel6200 Рік тому +16

      the poor prince had to take the bus along with poor people? truly scandalous

    • @Andres-ul9wo
      @Andres-ul9wo Рік тому +8

      Te falta calle bro

    • @rigoapple
      @rigoapple Рік тому

      Oh no, you can't have a car? Your life must be very tough. Bruh I highly doubt you even have friends with that mindset or feeling bad just by taking a bus with common humans in it, you felt disable without a car in a campus? Have you ever walked more than 25 minutes a day in your life like a normal person or ride a bike more than 15 minutes? Mueve tu trasero príncipe, los españoles siempre demostrando como son patéticos 💀

    • @YellawayHD
      @YellawayHD Рік тому +134

      @@bernardogabriel6200 nah it’s just bizarre that public transport in the US is a working class thing, in countries with actual functioning public transport systems it’s used by everyone. Reliance on cars for everything is unhealthy, to say the least.

  • @artem_skok
    @artem_skok Рік тому +20

    In the EU it is ridiculously difficult to park a car in a big city. All parking lots are taken practically 24/7 so you have to be planning your transportation in advance and know on which time and day of the week you can find a parking lot. (From my experience in Warsaw Poland). Also parking almost everywhere is paid.

    • @Dinjvald
      @Dinjvald Рік тому +20

      That’s the point. Use public. Or suffer. Or plan ahead. And pay ofcourse. This way there are a lot less cars in center of cities and it’s wonderfull.

    • @loukaspappas8476
      @loukaspappas8476 11 місяців тому +2

      Yes because european cities can't afford to have too many people driving in the city, it's very densely populated.

    • @PradedaCech
      @PradedaCech 9 місяців тому +2

      So...that's a good thing, right?

    • @Vemon.
      @Vemon. 9 місяців тому +5

      There is one thing i would like to say about this: "I bardzo kurwa dobrze."

    • @infj4w511
      @infj4w511 7 місяців тому +1

      Why were you parking a car withing a fricking city in the first place? A city is for shops, for people, for jobs, etc. Not for spending government money on giving your car parking space, so that actually profitable buildings can't be placed there

  • @knuffelcavia
    @knuffelcavia 7 місяців тому

    With all the public transport in the Netherlands, there are area’s where people are still in Need of cars. First because they live in places where no bus of train stops, because its not very populated (Overijssel, Drenthe, Groningen…) and second because travelling bij train is expensive.
    When me, my husband and kids are visiting my parents in Eastern Germany, it is cheaper and faster to take the car.
    And the highways in the Netherlands are still getting extended with more lanes, because there are so many cars. We have rush hour as well over here!!
    And if you want to pay only 30 dollars to get from Paris to Amsterdam, you have to book your Tickets far in advance. Spontaneous travel is expensive. Not everybody lives in the Randstad!

  • @mat4701
    @mat4701 Рік тому +189

    Great vid! I'm from The Netherlands, 26y/o and i don't have a car. Not even a licence, and it barely effects me. We go to work by bike, we go on vacation by train/bus and we take this all for granted. Gas is about $2.5 per liter now by the way😂

    • @Joe_2025
      @Joe_2025 Рік тому +10

      Not everyone does this. I live in Breda and commute to Gorinchem, public transport in Brabant is terrible, so I must drive. I also have to get cheaper gas in Belgium 😂

    • @horowitz8680
      @horowitz8680 Рік тому +2

      Autoloze Zondag pt 2; electric boogaloo

    • @mat4701
      @mat4701 Рік тому +4

      @@Joe_2025 Nee niet iedereen. Maar zeker weten een hoger percentage dan Amerikanen:)

    • @u.s.navy_pete4111
      @u.s.navy_pete4111 Рік тому +1

      Who cares about the price of gas when you don't need it!

    • @draphotube4315
      @draphotube4315 Рік тому

      Yo hoe gaat tie kerel,

  • @jakoberson4162
    @jakoberson4162 Рік тому +176

    In Sweden, long distance rail is often weirdly expensive and most times it's cheaper to fly

    • @richardc316
      @richardc316 Рік тому +29

      It's the same in the UK, its normally cheaper to fly for example London to Edinburgh than get a train.

    • @AlexWellbelove
      @AlexWellbelove Рік тому +15

      @@richardc316 Agreed, I would use rail a lot more often if it wasn't just cheaper to drive or fly long distance.

    • @susannemoseidbryhni9898
      @susannemoseidbryhni9898 Рік тому +10

      Same in Norway. Some of our tracks only were built because the nazis were extracting minerals during ww2… we have terrible railway systems and doesn’t go to half of northern norway

    • @bombaa7448
      @bombaa7448 Рік тому +6

      @@richardc316 Oh man. Once flew to UK for 20 pounds and expected the train ticket to not be far away from that. It was 50 pounds for 3 hour ride with 3 different trains, absolutely horrible.

    • @basic_time
      @basic_time Рік тому +3

      @@richardc316 in italy the train is A LOT more cheaper than flying

  • @ovengaya
    @ovengaya 11 місяців тому +4

    I'm from Spain. I've studied in school, highscool, university, and worked in 3 different cities. I've never needed a car, nor I own one. Watching how the USA is designed seems distopic and
    counterproductive to me.

  • @finlaysharpe844
    @finlaysharpe844 Рік тому +5

    Ive lived in Ireland which (although it is in Europe) has a system based on highways and cars much like the US. I moved to Vienna recently and I have to say I've never felt so unencumbered and free to do and go as I please. It's so much better than having a car. I will probably not buy one as long as I live here. And I guarantee that anyone who moves to somewhere with a transportation system as good as this will agree whether you think you will or not

  • @diggernick901
    @diggernick901 Рік тому +277

    I think one of the most important factors is that of gradual historical development, with initial reliance on much slower modes of transportation, as opposed to almost immediately motorized cities. You can find a microcosm of such difference in Russia - west of the Ural mountains, where cities are mostly medieval, you see a large network of convenient roads (rail included). Once you go to the mostly post-18th century Eastern Russia, it's the same problems that the USA infrastructure faces.

    • @chickenfishhybrid44
      @chickenfishhybrid44 Рік тому

      Yeah people act like it just so dumb that US cities and the US in general is so car centric.. it should be no surprise since alot of the boom and buildup of the US happened after the car was invented.

    • @YarikBYcurrahee
      @YarikBYcurrahee Рік тому +13

      Not in this case. In Soviet times, no one had a car at all, they were available only to officials. Accordingly, public transport developed. Nowadays, almost everyone has a car, but at the same time, urban infrastructure is being reduced due to the fact that cities do not have their own money.

    • @allasar
      @allasar Рік тому +12

      The US is older than the train, so your argument makes no sense. In fact, given that US cities are younger and more grid based than European ones, it would have been a lot easier to implement a railroad network in the US than in the EU.

    • @sechmascm
      @sechmascm Рік тому +3

      @@allasar And yet they've failed miserably. It's not about ease. They didn't because their focus was on cars

    • @Laerei
      @Laerei Рік тому +1

      World War 2 and soviet rule/city planning straight up ruined most of the cities in my home country Estonia. The city councils are working hard and spending millions in urban planning to fix that but it takes time and even more money. But in general, the cities are not very pedestrian and cycler friendly.

  • @soundscape26
    @soundscape26 Рік тому +275

    This was nice... never get tired of watching drone footage of European cities.

    • @MrMessiah2013
      @MrMessiah2013 Рік тому

      Noij eht ria ecrof.

    • @sergpie
      @sergpie Рік тому

      @@MrMessiah2013
      I’d wait until after NATO’s pet-project in Ukraine.

    • @BobuxGuy
      @BobuxGuy Рік тому +7

      @@sergpie Yep, deffinetly NATO invaded ukraine

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Рік тому

      @@sergpie Legit... look at the destruction NATO is bringing to Ukraine. Those damn NATO people... 🙄

    • @DustinLaGriza
      @DustinLaGriza Рік тому +1

      I wish there was more tree coverage though.There's hardly any green in these shots of European cities.

  • @SubEatingBurger
    @SubEatingBurger 7 місяців тому +1

    I have to agree with 99.9% of this video, the really ONLY thing that‘s bit annoying sometimes, is that there are so called „Baustellen“ (construction sites) spread all over the whole city, y‘all in america just repair a street within a few work hours while we need a whole year to repair one city-mainstreet. Well we have much better quality streets and they‘re much better built but still.
    And there‘s the part that the contractors often cry about every construction site in europe cus either there‘s a „Denkmalsbrunnen“ (a „monumental“ small fountain) whoch can‘t get destroyed NO matter what.

  • @haydenp3936
    @haydenp3936 Рік тому +15

    The population density is never considered in these situations, those areas in the US that are empty of public transport are mostly empty of people, I love in Wyoming and if there was public transport here it would be in the vast spaces between towns, usually a 2-4 hour drive between the "big ones" so there would be very expensive very rarely used public transport

    • @SteenaBabeana
      @SteenaBabeana Рік тому +2

      Speaking as a native of Dallas, I can tell you from first-hand experience that our public transit is nowhere near where it should be, especially seeing that it's a part of the 4th largest metropolitan area in the country. The DART rail line, for example, is quite extensive but it only runs to and from downtown. Also, recently, the city had the number of bus stops reduced down, as if they weren't already extremely lacking before. I'd say the only major US city with viable public transportation is NYC, possibly Chicago as well. ☺️

    • @mardus_ee
      @mardus_ee Рік тому +1

      @@SteenaBabeana Add Portland, Oregon, and the Minneapolis−St. Paul Twin Cities agglomeration. I don't live in the area or in United States, but compared to NYC and Chicago, the Twin Cities system is probably not super, but not awful either, and continues to develop.

    • @SteenaBabeana
      @SteenaBabeana Рік тому

      @Mardus_EE ooh that's really cool to learn, thanks for sharing! glad to hear public transportation is growing and improving in more cities across the US. 😄

  • @roryscarlett4313
    @roryscarlett4313 Рік тому +41

    You didn't mention something very important to smaller cities, I live in Oxford, England and there's a really good bus network. The City Centre is pedestrianised so you really don't need a car. A similar thing is happening in London with the Ultra Low Emissions Zone in the centre to stop polluting cars.

  • @blotski
    @blotski Рік тому +7

    I live in Manchester in the north east of England. A few years ago an American friend from Florida came to visit us. One evening we went for a meal with friends in Liverpool about 30 miles away. We went on public transport, which I always do when I go out because it's easier, you don't have to trouble with finding parking and I can drink! We walked from my house to a local tram stop (10 mins). Went by tram to Victoria Station (15 mins) and got a train to Liverpool (about 35 minutes). The Liverpool train station is in the centre of town and we walked from there to the restaurant. We had a great time, had a bit too much too eat and drink, walked back to the station and did the same journey in reverse. We got the last tram home and it was packed with people who'd been out in Manchester and it was loud, friendly and there was a bit of singing. My friend told me she'd had a wonderful evening and one of the highlights for her had been the trams and trains. She said she had never in her life used public transport. Apart from private cars she had only ever been in a taxi.

    • @noticedruid4985
      @noticedruid4985 Рік тому +1

      Well that's because, the size in US makes public transportation rather infeasible, for large swathes of the US. For like in Manchester you might be within walking distance to shops or your local pub.
      In the US on the other hand, you could easily see a good 20 or so miles (32km) to your nearest store.

  • @tiagogomes7834
    @tiagogomes7834 Рік тому

    The city I live in Portugal (Aveiro), there's barely any traffic lights for example (we have them to reduce/control speed). We have A LOT of roundabouts, its a great way to save time, even tho some people are a bit crazy sometimes. 😅

  • @annalang5687
    @annalang5687 Рік тому +1

    A huge plus that I never see mentioned in these videos is that children and teenagers can use the public transport system by themselves, while they can't drive a car until 16 in the US and 18 in most of Europe. It's so much easier to get around as a teen when you don't have to ask your parents to drive you and it hugely expands their horizon. Also, most areas of interest, for example for tourists, are very well connected even if they are remote, so there is no need for giant car parks at the entrance of national parks or tiny towns. Just enough space for a bus stop and you're good.
    It's very frustrating to visit countries that are entirely designed around care usage where you're lucky to find one public transport connection between to major cities because people prefer to take their car even when the walking equivalent is 15 minutes (I'm not even talking about the US here).

  • @BenjaminVestergaard
    @BenjaminVestergaard Рік тому +119

    I'm from Denmark... I'd love to have a gas guzzler, but only for fun. Wouldn't use it for regular day commute.
    With the public transport actually working, I'd still like to have a car in some cases, but with electric vehicles getting ranges that actually make sense...
    I don't see a need for a V6 or 8 to make the everyday work. And petrol is kinda expensive.
    I could, however, see it as a fun thing to rent once in a while.

    • @baronvonlimbourgh1716
      @baronvonlimbourgh1716 Рік тому +22

      I have 2 gasguzzlers in the netherlands, i only use them for travel and rally's.
      A RS6 bi-turbo and a challenger str8.
      Use public transit 99% of the time, cars have no place in cities really.

    • @Racko.
      @Racko. Рік тому +12

      That works too, the problem with EV is that they’re still cars, and aren’t really that much better than gas guzzlers that elon musk wants ppl to believe

    • @idah5496
      @idah5496 Рік тому +4

      I’m Norwegian, but I’m visiting Denmark often (Also looking into moving there). Compared to Norway u have a much better public transport system. One thing I don’t to be quite interesting is how u find pedestrian/bicycle roads on the countryside, which is unusual most of the time here. Also ur cities feels a lot more pedestrian friendly, but to be fair our cities are on average smaller
      I think one of the main causes is that u have a higher population density to support the system (Norway has about 15 per km^2, u got 137). We often live in quite spread our. Sadly I think most of Norwegians will keep being dependent on cars, unless they live in a city. Luckily we have a hight number of electrical vehicles already (I always have a small culture shock when I don’t see that many teslas in the road)

    • @jordanrosenberg9816
      @jordanrosenberg9816 Рік тому +3

      I'm from the USA and my family has 6 cars XD

    • @9876karthi
      @9876karthi Рік тому +3

      It is kind of needed in the US when you travel long distances imo. I also thought about why one needed a truck or big vehicle. I went for a long solo trip once, across Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado. My 2.0 L sedan was struggling on highways, there was not enough pull on the straight loooong slowly elevating highways in New Mexico or Arizona...let alone Colorado. It was barely managed, the other trucks / SUVs were just passing me without an effort.

  • @ntw9218
    @ntw9218 Рік тому +167

    The European rail and highway maps were both too oversimplified to make any conclusions. Europe also isn't a single country, so not everything said is true for all of it. The main point still stands though

    • @mavenwander2374
      @mavenwander2374 Рік тому +4

      Yeah. Take Switzerland in these maps as an example. Only a tiny fraction of highways and roads they have were shown on the maps.

    • @MiiSbk
      @MiiSbk Рік тому +1

      I was thinking the same… the moving paths that were paved later, where the ones that “happened” (people started using it, it wasn’t really planned). US simply planned too much, square routes and stuff that is super inefficient…

    • @ntw9218
      @ntw9218 Рік тому +6

      @F. A. I'm an EU citizen...

    • @houndofculann1793
      @houndofculann1793 Рік тому +1

      @F. A. Europe isn't a single country, full stop. EU does have many qualities that make it much closer to a single country than Europe as a whole, but it's important to keep those two distinct since many European countries don't belong in the EU and one dastardly kingdom decided to even leave

  • @MYZEDJ
    @MYZEDJ 4 місяці тому

    What maps do you use? Europes Road Network is more dense than the US one as well.

  • @MrRafaztar
    @MrRafaztar Рік тому +2

    I’m European, Portuguese living in uk. And the increased costs of personal transport is not supplanted by good public transport. It just pushes poorer people to not have cars and lower working families to spend loads on fuel. I don’t know how it is in America but it’s not all sunshine and rainbows in Europe

  • @gabriellaa.c.1156
    @gabriellaa.c.1156 Рік тому +329

    My parents lived in the US for a while. They came back to Europe because the weren't adapting well to the country. They kept saying it was because things were too different there. Fun fact: whenever I asked what exactly was that different, the first thing coming to their minds was "the roads were too big" 😭 No but seriously, they explained to me that basically, if you don't have a car in the US, you're f*cked, you cannot go anywhere. That felt so weird to them, even though they did have a car themselves. I cannot barely imagine living in such a place. I now study in Paris and I still don't have a driver licence because having a car in that city just doesn't make any sense so meh why bother?

    • @damianflr
      @damianflr Рік тому +17

      I am 21 and don't have a driving license nor a car. College was always easily accessible with either a bike or public transport and even now with a job I still make use of the great public transport here in the Netherlands. When I was 18 I made a roadtrip through the US with some friends and it felt weird. Places only accesible by car which make those places really isolated from the world. For example even a small town nearby where i live has 2 bus stops while having a population of just 400 people. It felt just odd and weird and also very unorganized in the US. It's a great country, but some things could better.
      Question, would you recommend going to Paris by car or train? Train rides are kinda expensive ( 135 euros if you dont buy a ticket like 6 months before) and going by car would just be around 60 euros for fuel expenses, although i imagine going by car would be hell in such a big city?
      Also whatever you may study I wish you all the best and good luck with it. :)
      ( your daily positve message on UA-cam lmao )

    • @highlymedicated2438
      @highlymedicated2438 Рік тому +4

      You don't even have a driver's license yet? I wouldn't brag about that especially to women. That's the difference between boys and men

    • @damianflr
      @damianflr Рік тому +55

      @@highlymedicated2438 would only be "'bragging" if i even had the intention to get something from this girl. which i dont. i am just saying something as an reply to point out my personal facts and as to the reason why i dont have it. because it aint necessary. So your comment which i assume is you thinking i somehow simp over this random girl in youtube make no sense at all. Mind your own bussiness or get to know the difference between simping and just an normal comment. That's the difference between boys and men mate.

    • @Kraeuterbutter
      @Kraeuterbutter Рік тому +3

      @@damianflr think about parking-costs as well

    • @bintisf
      @bintisf Рік тому +2

      @@damianflr flights are usually cheaper

  • @swiffer25
    @swiffer25 Рік тому +114

    Speaking as an urban planner, I recommend reading The Life & Death of Great American Cities (by Jane Jacobs) and also Cities for People (by Jan Gehl) these are extremely valuable pieces of knowledge for subjects like this.
    In Europe there is one outlier when it comes to urban planning designing and that's Belgium, it's basically all road with houses built against every street possible, low density and relying too much on cars like the US. It will be an interesting case to see how this develops.
    Nearly all architects and urban planners in Europe are starting to realise the importance of providing spaces for PEOPLE, not cars.

    • @nunya___
      @nunya___ Рік тому +11

      ...but the US is _mostly_ rural not urban. That's why cars make sense.
      In cities and towns the US actually has public transit. The impression is that it's only cars.
      BTW Book (American Cities) I see lots of new mixed-use developments with small community parks and other such spaces all over the US, even in small towns and cities. Very nice. :)

    • @jabon9617
      @jabon9617 Рік тому +7

      The US is still planned mostly for cars instead of for people, sadly. The fact that a big part of US is rural doesn't excuse the way cities are designed. There's been some progress in recent years, mostly in places like California but it still pales in comparison to pretty much any EU country, at least from what i've seen. The amount of soulless parking lots, the grid street outline, the stroads, the missing middle housing, the very scarce and usually not very safe bike infrastructure is hige and it's all the effect of generational car-centric planning. I, living in pretty much the suburbs of not too wealthy EU country, have access to busses, trams, intercity rail, top notch bike routes etc within walking distance and it just gives more freedom to people of different social status and of all ages. Kids living in the suburbs in the US are mostly limited to their own neighbourhood and places their parents can drive them to until they get their own driving licenses and become one more car on the road contributing to the traffic. Yes, some US cities started paying a bit more attention to things like communication and walkability but it's still nowhere near european standards

    • @mryan4452
      @mryan4452 Рік тому +4

      Hmm i agree and disagree. You kinda forget that living outside the city gives you your own space. In Ireland we do similar to Belgium, housing dotted everywhere. But people love having their own space and garden. Try getting Irish people into apartments - not happening. Apartments are essentially viewed here as something for students and people in their early 20s. When you 'grow up' you buy your own house with garden. Me personally I live in an apartment, but that's the general view in Ireland. The attitude needs to change here, more public transit, more green spaces in cities, larger more liveable apartments (the apartments in Ireland are oftenlike chicken houses, tiny).

    • @GreyDeathVaccine
      @GreyDeathVaccine Рік тому +4

      @@mryan4452 Same here, in Poland. Most of adults want to have house (country or suburban) at the age of 30. However, the problem is low wages and the ability to accumulate (18% tax on interest on the account!). Those who can take out a mortgage pay it off for 25-30 years, and the banks force them with expensive compulsory insurance (banking market in my country is the wild west).

    • @Rhand007
      @Rhand007 Рік тому +4

      @@GreyDeathVaccine My biggest shock as a foreigner (EU) in Poland... No houses available in the city, almost everything is taken up by appartments. Small appartments at that. And being unable to secure a loan because prices are insane and the way loans are structured (wibor 3m/6m) is also mindblowing. I couldn't believe my ears when not a single bank offered a fixed rate loan, I mean they do but even then after 3-5 years it switches to 3M/6M floating rates. So still renting in Sopot and nowadays even being unable to save much due to inflation.

  • @tripylsd
    @tripylsd Рік тому +1

    The EU road map is way more complex than that. That's the 2013 TEN-T road map network, but it should be compared with, at least, the E-road network (which also doesn't cover the whole high speed roads network from each country, just a few).
    A video like this should need like an hour to explain EU transportation and cities distribution. Its way more complicated with big pros and big cons

  • @quentin6893
    @quentin6893 Рік тому

    At 2:00 the road network is not the highways of E.U. but only the roads that cross countries, France have a lot more of highways than what we see on the map and these are at the same speed than the ones we see on the map.

  • @markanderson4967
    @markanderson4967 Рік тому +9

    2:14 “European cities don’t feature particularly prominently” in the list of congested cities. *Top 3 cities are in Europe* *wait most the cities are in Europe*

    • @AvadaKedavra4172
      @AvadaKedavra4172 Рік тому +2

      I think he forgot Eastern Europe exists. But all his points stand if he just renamed the video "WESTERN Europe".

    • @tp43793
      @tp43793 Рік тому

      5.5 out of the top 10 are European cities

    • @caam0000
      @caam0000 3 місяці тому

      ​@@AvadaKedavra4172I still don't understand his point. There isn't any American cities on the list either.

  • @Dummigame
    @Dummigame Рік тому +76

    Personally, I live in germany and have basically no problem getting around, even if I'm too young to drive.
    There's sidewalks on basically every even remotely majorly used road, and the ones that don't usually are used to give access to homes and other roads that do. Sidewalks never just end seemingly randomly, and major ones also have spaces on the road (which are often colored red) specifically for people on a bike.
    And that's not even mentioning other ways to get around, like trains.
    While the trains barely manage to arrive on time, it's quite a well structured system.
    Major stations are able to bring you to as an example the underground trains or buses.
    Basically every town, even a very small one, gets a train station.
    It's not hard to basically get anywhere that you'd wanna go to.

    • @lukasw9067
      @lukasw9067 Рік тому +6

      When you leave the big cities it becomes very hard to get anywhere without a car. And when you do wait at an remote train station it is not uncommon that the train is just missing (so you have to wait an 30-60min for the next one). This problem occurs because the Deutsche Bahn was privaticed (That means it has to earn money like a usual company). Because of that the Deutsche Bahn save money everywhere (for example train tracks) and now the infrastructure is not working properly anymore).

    • @reshi1745
      @reshi1745 Рік тому +5

      Pov: Deutsche Bahn

    • @fallencloud2946
      @fallencloud2946 Рік тому +4

      Dein Englisch ist echt gut! Muss aber dennoch Lukas W. rechtgeben. Since the Deutsche Bahn is heavily privatized they do not really fulfill the their service as intended in the German constitution.

    • @ducklingscap897
      @ducklingscap897 Рік тому +4

      @@lukasw9067 Deutsche Bahn is mostly responsible for inter city travel. Travelling between cities on a smaller scale (or travelling in cities) is the responsibility of the regional train associations.
      Also why does everybody think that Deutsche Bahn being privatized is the root of the problem? If politicians cared about public transport they would fund it well enough. But they don't. I really don't see what would change if Deutsche Bahn was owned by the state again. It would just be owned by people who don't care about it and I doubt politicians wouldn't try to save money.

    • @lukasw9067
      @lukasw9067 Рік тому

      @@ducklingscap897 Yeah your right, its not the only reason for the problem but a part.

  • @danielleinad5135
    @danielleinad5135 11 місяців тому

    First video that showed a video of my town :D nice! (the red Skoda tram in Bratislava,Slovakia)

  • @thorstenjaspert9394
    @thorstenjaspert9394 Рік тому +1

    Public transport is developed very well in German big cities. But on the country side out of the cities the public transportation network can be very thin. If you live somewhere in the countryside, in a village, the bus comes only for an hour. Here you're depending on cars.

  • @Tonyx.yt.
    @Tonyx.yt. Рік тому +55

    2:03 NOPE those are highways of "european interest" actual highway network is FAR more dense, like 3-4 times more

    • @auxencefromont1989
      @auxencefromont1989 Рік тому +2

      Yeah we have more than 3 highways in France

    • @ResidentOfficial
      @ResidentOfficial Рік тому +1

      @@auxencefromont1989 And rail network is ridiculous too. I am slovak and there are much more railways than on the first pic.

    • @dorderre
      @dorderre Рік тому

      Yea you only need to take a look at the Autobahn network in the Ruhr area to notice how far off the map in the video really is :D

    • @rednael500
      @rednael500 Рік тому +1

      The map labeled as "EU Road Network" here is actually a map of european rail corridors (EU-TEN-Rail) which is a plan of high speed and cargo rail routes connecting major cities and sea ports.

  • @TheB0sss
    @TheB0sss Рік тому +235

    I'm from the Netherlands and I could probably say we have some of the best infrastructure even within the EU. But as you said, nothing is perfect, it is in fact not very cheap at all to use the national railway lines.
    They're thinking about changing that soon but I'm not sure yet. For now, even with the super expensive gas prices (it went up to €2,30 per liter), going from one side of the country to the other is cheaper by car if you go with more than 2 people.

    • @UnitedPacci
      @UnitedPacci Рік тому +9

      Either way the citizens will pay it one way or another if they change.

    • @osuprogression2182
      @osuprogression2182 Рік тому +17

      I'm from France, and when i saw "30dollars" from paris to amsterdam i was like "more like 80e just to go from paris to amsterdam lol"...
      But i agree with the fact that netherland is freaking expensive for everything compare to france, despite having more or less the same "life level"

    • @BenitoCarmela
      @BenitoCarmela Рік тому +4

      I live in the Netherlands currently and think you have great train lines, but the bus lines are still bit poor in some cities, if they could improve that then it would be the perfection. And have to say that going by bike everywhere is not always duable, weather is fucking rainy or cold most of the time. In Spain is the other way around, less train lines but lot of buses in the city.

    • @osuprogression2182
      @osuprogression2182 Рік тому +2

      @@BenitoCarmela Tbh, i dunno where you went in France, because in most "major cities" there are a bus every like 5 to 10mins, i'm not living in such a big city (Valence in France) but there's more than 30 bus lines + something around 25 to 30 "express bus lines" (those lines are mostly used by students) and it's covering more than 50 to 60 KM around Valence, I think it's pretty big and it's the same for most "common/big agglomeration".
      But i do agree with the fact that "small towns" doesn't have that much bus lines

    • @BenitoCarmela
      @BenitoCarmela Рік тому

      @@osuprogression2182 I haven't been in France so much, I was comparing the Netherlands and Spain because I lived in both.

  • @juligm7396
    @juligm7396 Рік тому

    One of the few Problems are that people who lives in Villages that are Not nearby any Bigger City, there the Bus just comes every Hour or less. Just Thinge about it, when a Student wanna get to school and he misses his Bus. Then he has to Wait an Hour, so the next Bus is coming.

  • @ferdinandovaticone9662
    @ferdinandovaticone9662 7 місяців тому

    you showed for example the bicycle lane map in then video, but in Italy isn't like the Netherlands or Germany. if you want a bicycle lane you have to go in big cities but neither, you have to go in north Italy, because in south there are less lane than in center Italy or north. so so it could be handled better. the same for underground and train lane, because Italian government cut almost all the money for the infrastructure, especially in south.
    btw thank you for the beautiful video.

  • @MichalBrat
    @MichalBrat Рік тому +19

    A pretty unexpected shot of the bookstore I work at in Bratislava at 1:45 :-)

  • @tcg2282
    @tcg2282 Рік тому

    It is indeed amazing but one thing is that small movements with bus here in belgium wil cost tou big bucks because one hour on bus tram will cost you 2.5€ for one hour and the train si even more expensice

  • @fleurtjefleur8941
    @fleurtjefleur8941 Рік тому

    For context in the netherlands: i live in a village with maybe 4000 people, we have 3 busstops at maybe 5 minutes walking distance. I can get to the other side of the country within 4 hours. It is however, still expensive, around 30 euros/dollar. (€60 to and back, quite much as a student)

  • @ewanlaux4591
    @ewanlaux4591 Рік тому +9

    7:18 uhmmm, even if as a European citizen I love our public transportation network, unfortunately a rail travel from Paris to Amsterdam is way more expensive than 30$. It’s actually about 150$, and at it’s cheeper it’s about 100$. Sometimes even flights are cheeper :(

  • @TinglingTaco
    @TinglingTaco Рік тому +50

    Hi, Dutch man here. Seeing the bike lane map made me really appreciate the fact that there are so many bike paths here. I couldn't imagine what it would be like to have to grab the car to get to work or to the city center.
    Thank you for making this video.

    • @Stephan1988
      @Stephan1988 Рік тому +9

      It helps that the Netherlands is so flat. My country Greece might be all beaches and islands but it’s incredibly mountainous. So difficult to use bikes in such an extend.

    • @Skankhunt668
      @Skankhunt668 Рік тому +1

      Guy from flanders here it is also very useful that our countries streets are always very lit up at night

    • @pg5200
      @pg5200 Рік тому +4

      @@kataclysmad1065 Actually, both Switzerland and Norway are developing bike infrastructure FAST. Electric bicycles really flatten the mountains :)

    • @solar7427
      @solar7427 Рік тому

      There aren't very many countries where you can bike from south to North without ever needing to leave a bike lane

  • @ZyryZ09
    @ZyryZ09 11 місяців тому

    you should overlay a population density map over the train line maps

  • @aleaallee
    @aleaallee Рік тому

    I live in spain and sometimes public transportation sucks. If I wanted to go to my job in the least amount of time on public transport it would take me over an hour because I'd have to walk to the bus stop and wait for the bus and then the bus would need to take many stops. It takes me half an hour or so to drive to my job.

  • @bloedlul
    @bloedlul Рік тому +51

    Travelling international by train in Europe is not cheap. It's mist of the times cheaper (and faster) to go by plane.

    • @Jac0bIAm
      @Jac0bIAm Рік тому

      Yep, definitely true

    • @Racko.
      @Racko. Рік тому +7

      Planes face serious competition to High Speed rail in European nations, so they basically have to sell you tickets also near the price of a restaurant meal especially with low cost airlines like Ryannair

    • @vodkaboy
      @vodkaboy Рік тому +5

      we all pay (even poorer people) for these cheap plane tickets. "free" market my ass

    • @Banom7a
      @Banom7a Рік тому

      RyanAir 12€ is amazing though ngl (that was eon ago)

    • @Stanga96
      @Stanga96 Рік тому +5

      It is cheap if you plan the trip in time and buy the tickets months before. However I disagree regarding the plane. Planes are cheap if you don't have bags, moreover, while train stations in big cities are nearby the center, airports are almost always outside the city, which make you lose time and money.

  • @alexandermuller950
    @alexandermuller950 Рік тому +72

    In my pov, Netherlands, France, UK, Austria, Switzerland and Germany are the countries that are insanely well designed in Europe tbh!

    • @Spideclips
      @Spideclips Рік тому +9

      Western European countries are mostly well designed than eastern European countries.

    • @Rantasalmi47
      @Rantasalmi47 Рік тому +12

      @@Spideclips *cough cough* Northern Europe *Cough cough*

    • @GregVidua
      @GregVidua Рік тому +17

      Scandinavia too. Spain has done a lot to catch up as well.

    • @alexandermuller950
      @alexandermuller950 Рік тому +5

      @@GregVidua never went to Scandinavia but would surely go there someday

    • @sfdjk
      @sfdjk Рік тому +3

      Austria is not and from my experience germany neither but i havent been there a lot

  • @timoklap
    @timoklap Рік тому

    In estonias capital Tallinn, citysents have free puplic transport. So the city is less crowded with cars

  • @no_soy_rubio
    @no_soy_rubio Рік тому +1

    I'm from the UK, here it doesn't matter if you use private or public transport, it's expensive af. On the railways the infrastructure was set up for the demands of Victorian Britain, and modernising it is extremely difficult. But there's something great about taking a train from the centre of one city to the centre of another - much better than taking a plane to the outskirts of somewhere to the outskirts of somewhere else

  • @Sonicfan138
    @Sonicfan138 Рік тому +255

    It's pretty indicative (and hilarious) of the public transit systems in the US that the only public transit you showcased was in New York City. Because outside of NYC, there's very few cities that actually have even passable public transit.

    • @gio160
      @gio160 Рік тому +42

      Not really. Chicago, Philadelphia, San Fransisco, Boston, and Washington DC just to name a few others. Sure they’re nowhere near european standards in most respects but they have great coverage

    • @kronk9418
      @kronk9418 Рік тому +33

      @@gio160 There’s no use replying to individuals who have superiority complexes. This channel harbors the closed-minded, as can be seen with the constant US-bashing on every video. Pure ignorance is not worth valuable time.

    • @user-ox4bv3it4i
      @user-ox4bv3it4i Рік тому

      @@kronk9418 well the problem already seen mentioning there was hes listing major us cities, capitals of states or the country and within the colonies area which is far more developed compared to state infrastructure like Wyoming or Montana fir example

    • @Picsou1638
      @Picsou1638 Рік тому +9

      I studied NYC public transport, it simply have the best underground in the world with the Parisian one.
      But it’s also the only city in North America which have a good public transportation, compared to nearly all European city...
      One of the reasons is that big places in Europe where build hundred and hundred years before cars, so they often don’t have enough place for parking and lot of cars..
      USA built their cities when cars already existed, or simply expanded without verticalizing which favored the car.
      For NYC it was geographically necessary to verticalise, in case of the river and sea. And of course a huge increase in population.

    • @gio160
      @gio160 Рік тому

      @@user-ox4bv3it4i
      If you actually think people want transit in rural Montana, I’m sorry for you, because you somehow missed the entire point of my comment. Public transit in rural areas cannot work in the modern day US. People are advocating for transit in cities that people LIVE IN which SHOULD have better transit. Like for example: Miami, Atlanta, Houston, LA, and mostly other medium sized sunbelt cities. That’s where people want transit.
      That isn’t me saying these cities with ‘good transit’ by US standards are great either. NJT has horrible rail coverage of southern NJ, SEPTA’s workers get paid jack and they have plenty more lines they could operate with if they electrified them or brought some Diesel engines, The NYC subway practically runs on signaling from the 1920s, CTA can be unreliable at times, and metra’s scheduling on some lines is so awful you might as well just drive. Also, all of the listed systems get don’t get much funding to begin with (besides the MTA)
      Maybe that’s too much to expect from an OBF comment section, however.

  • @vegabtw
    @vegabtw Рік тому +50

    I dont quite know where u got the maps or what does it strictly represents but the highway map of europe is highly dubious, and that map of yellow lines representing railnetwork is again more like a visual representation than an actual map

    • @gabriele7381
      @gabriele7381 Рік тому

      yeah right? I think it's a map of trans European highways but there's no way that France or Italy have so few.

    • @QQYMQ
      @QQYMQ Рік тому +8

      That "highway" map of Europe represents the Trans-European Transport Network and includes not only roads but also rail, airports and even water infrastructure. So it represents planned corridors that the EU considers important, it's clearly NOT a representation of highways in Europe.

    • @simtwelve
      @simtwelve Рік тому +4

      absolutely! the map he has chosen is the EU TEN-T network map, which is used to coordinate investments and improvements to EU transports (roads but also railways, airports, seaports...) - it's definitely useful, but VERY different from the map of highways in the EU (which i would say its even more widespread and dense than the US one)

    • @vegabtw
      @vegabtw Рік тому

      @@gabriele7381 makes sense then

    • @groucho1080p
      @groucho1080p Рік тому

      @@gabriele7381 yeah a lot of highways are missing like the Milano Bari

  • @FinlandGuy747
    @FinlandGuy747 6 місяців тому

    I think a big problem is that some countries like my homecountry Finland has a different rail width than other countries so you can't have train between those countries.

  • @viniciusferreiradasilva4388

    I live in Brazil where neither the private or public transport is much decent, but whenever I need to go somewhere I call in an app driver to take, less hassle and cheaper not keeping up with taxes and maintenance. tho sometimes I am afraid of phone thieves and I ask someone else to call in the app lol

  • @gnork973
    @gnork973 Рік тому +23

    I live in a rural region in Austria. I mean most of Austria is pretty rural. The big cities within 20km have 10-20k inhabitants wich still is kinda big from my perspective. And still, we, in a 800ppl village have bus routes and just 5km away there's a train station that easily connects us to pretty much anywhere.
    And normally us folks from rural reagions don't like Vienna. Cuz Vienna is different. I mean nearly every fourth Austrian lives in the urbanized region of Vienna wich is kinda insane.
    But omg. I love the public transport there. It's so convenient and easy to use. A big reason why I want to live there at some point.

    • @someoneanyone7196
      @someoneanyone7196 Рік тому

      In Wien sind viele Ausländer! Der meistens multikulturelle Stadt in Österreich

    • @Kraeuterbutter
      @Kraeuterbutter Рік тому

      @@someoneanyone7196 und ?

    • @AF_FA
      @AF_FA Рік тому

      @@someoneanyone7196 was willst du jetzt damit sagen?

    • @Nakkiteline
      @Nakkiteline Рік тому +1

      It seems to be quite common for europeans that live in more rural areas that they don't enjoy their countrys capital. It's just different, way faster way of life in these bigger capital cities than smaller towns and villages. Me and my friends doesn't enjoy Helsinki either. Heard a lot from french people that Paris is just different, and same trend seems to be in most of the countries.
      I think it's different in usa since theres so much more big cities, and their capital is small compared to their bigger cities. Could be same trend in rural areas versus biggest city in state thought, would like to hear from americans on this front, and why not from other europeans too.

    • @jraqn
      @jraqn Рік тому +2

      ​@@Nakkiteline i live on the west coast of the us, and the opinions usually are about regions rather than individual cities. like there is a huge difference between southern and northern california, and east vs. west oregon and washington is like night and day. the differences are complete opposite in climate, demographic, political leaning, population density, primary occupations, etc. i feel like most states have that, where specific regions/ city groupings have massive differences compared to others parts of the state. i do know that certain cities like las vegas, nevada and austin, texas are outliers in general tho. Its not so much the capitals of the states, but its moreso wherever the population density is highest/most urbanized area that tends to be the outlier.

  • @metaphysicalretardation
    @metaphysicalretardation Рік тому +14

    People do often ignore the fact that here in Europe, public transport is only that efficient in extremely densely populated areas. Almost all transportation in rural areas is via cars and trucks.
    The US has much more and much larger rural areas than Europe. You would either have to make so many stops that any small trip would take hours or take stops so far apart that it's impossible to get anywhere without a car after getting off a bus or a train.
    Sure, I can and have gone from one end of my city to another for literal pocket change, but it usually takes about an hour to travel a measly 10km (Or about 6mi for the US folks).

    • @vodkaboy
      @vodkaboy Рік тому +1

      so you're telling me that Americans build a society that literally can't be without cars and oil ?

    • @metaphysicalretardation
      @metaphysicalretardation Рік тому +1

      ​@@vodkaboy Pretty much
      Europe would most likely be the same if it was uninhabited up until the modern ages

    • @navilluscire2567
      @navilluscire2567 Рік тому

      @@metaphysicalretardation
      Wouldn't that just mean we just need express lines to wherever you wanted to go? Plus just have more bus services for local areas. I also wonder how you'd suggest we handle the ever growing congestion problems or the problems with less and less space for housing and public spaces because we have to make more room for cars, parking spaces and roads which requires more buildings demolished.

  • @suus2punt0
    @suus2punt0 Рік тому

    3:03 I life in the Netherlands…… it s now like 2,06 euro’s per liter and to get a car is about 2000 euro’s and to get a drivers lisens is about 3100 euro’s

  • @Darkkamikazegirl
    @Darkkamikazegirl Рік тому +1

    wow crazy how bad there is no railway in the entire state of south dakota where here in germany u just need to drive at max 20km to reach the next railroad station

  • @rao803
    @rao803 Рік тому +70

    The bad thing of public transportation in Europe is that it isn't usually as great in rural areas. So many people need to take their car to the cities to work and they have to face the obstacle of car restrictions the city councils impose.

    • @alessiobenvenuto5159
      @alessiobenvenuto5159 Рік тому +12

      Yeah, but still better than extremely spread out suburbs.

    • @sergpie
      @sergpie Рік тому +3

      I guess that’d depend where; there are tiny little hamlets and towns in Italy that are serviced by regional trains, that are generally an hour at most to the nearest high-speed station. Barring extremely rough terrain and isolated, high-elevation comunes, even the rural networks in most European countries fare better than some urban networks in America. I live in San Diego and on Sundays, Broadway will have no buses running on it after 11:30pm. Broadway. In a downtown. Of a city of 3.4+ million…

    • @missa2855
      @missa2855 Рік тому +3

      @Furnizorul Koala in a village with less than 300 people you don't get any busses driving through for you to get to the store and back.
      So you NEED a car, and you know what? That sucks so much when the car registration tax is 180%.

    • @mattevans4377
      @mattevans4377 Рік тому +4

      @@missa2855 I think you actually hate village life, you just haven't admitted it yet.
      Amenities are where people are. You either put up with the people, or go without amenities.

    • @danielAgorander
      @danielAgorander Рік тому +1

      While true, in comparison I would point out that while "not great" in the rural outback of Sweden where I grew up, in contrast to the USA public transportation still did exist. I was able to live with 20km to get to the closest town larger than 500 people (and closest town with a grocery store...), and still technically not need a car. It was inconvenient, so most people around there would indeed have a car, but not as inconvenient as there being no public transport at all. For example, I could hop on the 55km bus ride to the county capital, go on an absolute pub crawl with my mates, and no-one needs to find a driver to get home, because there's a bus. :P

  • @erkhaz7429
    @erkhaz7429 Рік тому +6

    At 2:02 you are mistaking the Interrailway european map for a road map. This video is full of mistake

  • @gabry96colo
    @gabry96colo Рік тому

    as an italian that lives and works in the northen part of italy ( but not in the city) i still use the car for most of my travels. i have the possibility to take public transport to go to work but i still need the car to reach the train station. everyday travel time using trains is around the same during rush hours/workdays, but is around double during weekends or holydays, cars are still better if you don't find traffic. if i put cost into the equation travelling by using only the car in a month will cost me more than 2 times in gas ( we're talking 2-300€/mo only for going to work, so is basically "working an hour everyday" to pay for the gas needed to reach the workplace) of what i spend using public transport so i use the car only when i really need it . if i want to reach Milan during the day i will prefer using public transport instaed of my car cause finding a public parking space is a nightmare during most days and is incredibly expensive. the city center has now blocked car accessto non residents, so i still need to take public transport to reach certain places

  • @grasarlia
    @grasarlia Рік тому +119

    To be fair to the US, we can see that most of the European rail lines are within the EU, and none of them extend to Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, which contain a large part of the European landmass (particularly European Russia). Also, Europe does have the advantage over the US of being more dense. There are many more destinations for railroads, trams, and buses because population centres are close together and the cities are pretty centralized. In the US, there is a high degree of urban sprawl which makes public transportation harder. However, I still agree with your points and that the US needs to invest more in public transportation.

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne Рік тому +11

      Well, the maps only depict high speed rail. And I guess there's little to no of such kind in 3 countries - Belarus, Ukraine and Russia. But almost any other country has.

    • @Honzicek22
      @Honzicek22 Рік тому +3

      All of the rail lines connect to all three coutries at multiple places, it's just not cool to go there nowadays 🙂 and these are of course not part of EU...

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne Рік тому +2

      @@Honzicek22 The maps only shows high speed rail lines.

    • @fuckeduphippie
      @fuckeduphippie Рік тому +22

      The dense point was imo the most important, I live in one of the “big red” areas on his Amtrak map, there’s simply no reason to run rail through it. We don’t have the population, and because of that, the traffic issues urban USA deals with, we don’t. Our roads are empty, you could go 45 mins without seeing another car. Public transportation is important for urban centers and the suburbs that surround them. But a lot of the US is empty, and investments in that kinda infrastructure wouldn’t be worth the cost for some of us.

    • @LodrikBadric
      @LodrikBadric Рік тому +5

      I agree with you. Nevertheless I'd argue that it is actually the other way round. The urban sprawl in the US is a direct result of bad city planning / no public transport options available and not the main hindrance to good city planning.

  • @toonpik7
    @toonpik7 Рік тому +14

    At 0:50, that map is someone's fantasy of what high speed rail in the US could look like. I think the Acela line is like the only high speed rail line in the US lol, there might be another one but i dont remember.

    • @Petri_Pennala
      @Petri_Pennala Рік тому +1

      Basic finnish train goes around 120miles per hour and he said it goes 150miles per hour so its not even fast☠️

  • @NothingIsKnown00
    @NothingIsKnown00 8 місяців тому

    Living in America for 3 years, I was struck by how problems just don’t get fixed. Highly congested roads? Build another lane perhaps but nothing as crazy as a rail track or even a bus lane. Everybody is stressed about filling out tax declaration? Don’t streamline the process (people are making money doing that). People are shooting each other left and right? Just learn to live with it. Don’t fix it.

  • @siggesnigel148
    @siggesnigel148 Рік тому

    you can get anywhere in sweden by just getting on a train if there isn't there is almost always a bus that goes to that place every hour

  • @Jannemann09
    @Jannemann09 Рік тому +7

    As many have pointed out, both the rail and road networks in Europe are much more complex. Also, in the densely populated German Ruhr-Valley, you can take the subway or „S-Bahn“ (city train I guess) to all the surrounding cities. It takes me like 20 minutes to reach 5 different cities with +100k people.
    And in Germany, we usually get a semester ticket (*as students), with which we can take all public transport option within our state