worldpopulationreview.com/…/road-quality-by-count…
According to this scoring of road quality, the non-UK European average is — if I haven’t missed anything — 4.46, and the UK is 5.17.
Comment on Nearly 500 seriously injured in e-scooter collisions in Great Britain last year
danielquinn@lemmy.ca 3 days ago
I’m willing to bet that the miserable state of the roads and pavements has a lot to do with this.
worldpopulationreview.com/…/road-quality-by-count…
According to this scoring of road quality, the non-UK European average is — if I haven’t missed anything — 4.46, and the UK is 5.17.
I’ve driven a little around Portugal, and their roads were the worst I’ve ever driven on. Not just potholes, but the roads were often wonky and/or not flat (think like undulations like waves as you’re driving along), missing road markings etc. The quality drop was really noticeable when you drove from Spain into Portugal. It was about 8 years ago so it’s possible they’ve really got their act together since then, but I’m skeptical about how reliable their data is if Portugal is listed as the country with the 5th best roads in the world…
You missed a lot. There are so many things wrong with a statement like this.
The biggest problem though is that it’s just a bad argument. Having roads better than another place does not make our roads “good”. At best it establishes ourselves on a spectrum of mediocrity. I saw this constantly living in Canada where people would talk about our mass transit as “better than what they have in the US” like that’s something to be proud of.
Our roads are objectively shit. Potholes are everywhere and the pavements are literally crumbling. For a scooter, these are all serious hazards because of the wheel diameter. Those are objective facts, so lets stop with this “well at least we’re better off than ${someplace slightly shittier}” because it ignores the objective shitty state right in front of us.
Drusas@fedia.io 3 days ago
And lack of appropriate lanes for them on the streets.