Scenarios about 'car-free zones'
Car-free zones are designated urban areas where motor vehicles are prohibited or severely restricted, prioritizing pedestrian, cycling, and public transit access instead. These spaces emerged primarily in the late 20th century as responses to traffic congestion, air pollution, and efforts to revitalize historic city centers. In alternate history scenarios, car-free zones often feature prominently in divergent urban planning philosophies or in timelines where fossil fuel dependence developed differently.
What If Copenhagen Implemented Different Urban Planning Strategies?
Exploring the alternate timeline where Copenhagen chose car-centric development rather than becoming a cyclist's paradise, radically changing urban mobility patterns across Northern Europe.