I’m assuming that most of you are from the US so probably using cars, but lemme know if you use trains, subways, buses, etc.
Me? Back when I was doing an internship I walked to a nearby station for 10 minutes then transited to another train line, which could be an instant or 20 minutes wait. After that I walked for 10 minutes to my work place. So it was probably about 40 minutes of commute. Of course, I live in tropical country so I’m drenched in sweat as I arrive in the office.
Fortunately every year my city’s public transportation seems to get better and as a result I barely needed to use cars.
10-second walk down my hallway to my computer.
Same. When I have an appointment with a costumer: usual a combination of private car, train and rental to reach the destination
10-second* walk
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Morning: walk 5 km uphill in the snow. Evening: walk 5 km further uphill in the snow to my second house. Next morning: walk 5 km even further uphill to my next place of work
…and so on until the weekend where I walk 50km back down the mountain to my first house, in the snow.
You should get some skis, that 50km would be much more fun!
I only get paid a nickel so I can’t afford skis. But sometimes an avalanche pushes me down faster.
A 30 minute walk across the city center
I live in a medium sized city (~95k) in Europe. It takes me around 15 minutes by bike to get to work.
4 years back it was a walk to the station and a half hour train ride.
Now I walk downstairs after waking up at 9:30.
Pre-pandemic I drove 15 minutes to the BART station, hopefully got parking. Walked 5 minutes to the train platform. Waited for train. 50ish minute train ride to downtown San Francisco. 10 minute walk to office. Pretty typical Bay Area commute.
Now, I take my dogs for a walk, get back home, make coffee, relax. Go upstairs and login to work. WFH is the new normal and it’s great.
50 min feels pretty long. How crowded is BART usually?
Where I got on, not too bad, I usually got a seat, but it quickly got crowded. Nowadays I hear it’s better; ridership hasn’t returned to pre-pandemic levels yet.
I live in a small town near Amsterdam and work twice a week in the office in Amsterdam.
My commute is:
- 3 minutes walk to train station
- 24 minutes train ride
- 12 minutes bike ride
What’s the bike situation? Do you take it on the train with you or use an app or smthg?
I wonder if they park their own bicycle near the station. Not sure if that’s even a thing
It’s a thing.
We park the bike near the station. Each station has extensive room for bikes. Larger cities often have underground bike parking.
TL:DR - Ride my bike along a precarious but not terrible inner city suburb of Melbourne Australia. It takes about 10-15 minutes to go 4km. I have the option of a 25 minute riverside bike ride if I’m willing to give up my sleep in.
I live in an “inner suburb” of Melbourne Australia, and I work at a community centre just a few tiny city suburbs away, 4km.
I have an e-bike that I use as my primary vehicle, because of the way my migraine disorder manifests and overlaps with another condition, I can’t drive a car. So I’ve learned how to get by completely carless - living in the inner city suburbs helps so I’m privileged in that regard. But the ebike has been a game changer.
Before covid I had a job about 6km away and I was wasting so much money on buses and uber, it was two buses and an awkward connecting power-walk that meant frequent missed connections and also pushed me just over onto the more expensive ticket because of how our public transport fee system works. So I would lazily uber to work several times a week. And since I was working part time, it wasn’t even worth it some days when I had a 2 hour shift. ~40% of my pay cheque would go to ubering to work.
Then covid hit and our state went into lock down. The community centre ran a food bank so my 2 or 3 hour part time shifts became 12 hour days as demand increased but staffing couldn’t. I’d always miss the last bus, and uber drivers were few and far between. I tried riding my bike but the 12km return trip was just a bit too far on top of the 12 hour day, so I bought an ebike.
I got a new job, closer, and a very nice ride. I have multiple route options, one of which is a gorgeous separated shared pedestrian-cycle path that follows the local river which I often ride home - I finish at the optimum dog walking time so I get to meet so many puppies on my leisurely ride home. But it’s very slow (because of all the dogs which aren’t supposed to be off leash, but are) so, my preferred route to work is the fast way. It cuts right through the the town centre, it’s an old industrial dock town so it’s pretty highly developed but never highly invested in, meaning the roads are horrible and full of trucks. But the council are working on it, and in the last few years they’ve installed some halfway decent bike infrastructure. The danger is worth the 15 minutes it saves me in the morning.
It’s 16 steps down to my basement office.
I work from home and yes, it’s as great as you think. I’m 11 years till retirement and I will NEVER work in an office ever again.
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In the US and currently fully WFH, but if I need to go into the office for some reason, it’s a 10-15 minute walk.
Walkability is pretty important to me, so I moved to a city with decent public transportation and don’t currently own a car. I use ride sharing apps or traditional car rentals on the rare occasion that I need a car, and even though they feel expensive, my annual car expenses are still significantly less than what I’d pay for parking alone if I owned a car.
so I moved to a city with decent public transportation
How hard is it to find housing there, and how expensive is it? I heard that housing in US isn’t in good condition
I drive 30 minutes into work, but it’s against traffic both ways, so it’s a smooth ride.
Well, only because we’ve separated the travel lanes
Two jobs, both 100% remote (one of them for 22 years).
Try not to trip over the cat.
When I’m not broken, an 8 mile cycle ride that takes around 30 minutes. I’m currently recovering from a broken kneecap and getting the bus in, which is about 20 minutes and 5 minutes walk each end.
10-15 minute bike ride. On the way I in traffic can almost be entirely evaded by swapping the section without bike lane for a bit of trail. The return is a bit more janky because the infrastructure designer probably died from aneurysm as they were designing the road layout.