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Is our love affair with cars running on fumes?

Classic Americana not enough to keep us on highways

The ’57 Chevy was still a year away when the launch of the interstate highway system kicked U.S. car culture into high gear. But six decades later, changing habits and attitudes suggest America’s romance with the road may be fading.

After rising almost continuously since World War II, driving by U.S. households has declined nearly 10 percent since 2004, with a start before the Great Recession, suggesting economics is not the only cause.

“There’s something more fundamental going on,” says Michael Sivak of the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute.

The average American household now owns fewer than two cars, returning to the levels of the early 1990s. More teens and 20-somethings are waiting to get a license. Less than 70 percent of 19-year-olds now have one, down from 87 percent two decades ago.

“I wonder if they’ve decided that there’s another, better way to be free and to be mobile,” says Cotten Seiler, author of Republic of Drivers: A Cultural History of Automobility in America.

Those changes – whether it’s car trips replaced by shopping online or traffic jams that have turned drives into a chore – pose complicated questions and choices.

Trying alternatives

Each day, about 3,500 people bike the Midtown Greenway, a freight rail bed converted to cycle highway in Minneapolis, where two-wheel commuting has doubled since 2000. It’s still a small percentage, but more residents are testing the idea of leaving cars behind.

A second light rail line opens in June. Street corners sprout racks of blue-and-green shared bikes. About 45 percent of those who work downtown commute by means other than a car, mostly by express bus. That syncs with figures showing Americans took a record 10.7 billion trips on mass transit last year, up 37 percent since 1995.

“There’s a lot of people who want the less-driving lifestyle, definitely,” says Sam Newberg, an urban planning consultant and transportation blogger.

They include Kimani Beard, 40, who used to drive for a package express company. Now he’s a graphic and apparel designer who walks or bikes to a coffee shop a few days a week, with its Wi-Fi providing an instant office.

“I don’t want to drive anywhere,” he says. “I’ve spent my time behind the wheel, but I think I’ve done enough.”

Testing the bonds

Car culture is about an emotional attachment that can be hard to measure.

A good place to start is Carlson’s Drive-In in Michigan City, Indiana, where a car hop arrives at the window before you turn off the ignition.

“It definitely takes you back to an older time,” says Barry Oliver, recalling teen nights driving the strip and stopping here.

Places like Carlson’s were destinations for Americans embracing driving as recreation. As recently as the 1990s, Indiana had nearly 60 vintage drive-ins. Today, just five or six are left. Drive-in movie theaters, which numbered 4,300 nationally in 1957, have dwindled to just 350.

Where does that leave car culture?

“Gear heads live here,” says Todd Davis, a Lansing, Michigan, native visiting the R.E. Olds Transportation Museum from Orlando, Florida. Away from Michigan, “it’s not like that.”

But Davis’ cousin, Sol Jaffee, isn’t convinced.

“Kids will always be interested in cars! I mean, cars are America, don’t you think?” he said.

But at Wisconsin’s Oshkosh North High School, enrollment in driver’s education, no longer required for graduation or subsidized by the state, has declined 40 percent.

Like other states, Wisconsin eliminated funding for driver’s ed, raising the price of in-school programs. Today’s young people often rely on parents for rides, says driver’s ed teacher Scott Morrison. And then there’s Facebook and other social media. While most students still look forward to the freedom conferred by a license, a small but self-aware contingent says it can wait.

“I’ve never really needed” to drive, says senior Ashwinraj Karthikeyan. “It’s almost like a rite of passage for people to drive, but I know offhand probably about 15 or 20 people who don’t have their license.”



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