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10 things you might not know about how we travel around our cities

10 things you might not know about how we travel around our cities

About five years ago The Grattan Institute released a great report on Australia’s urban landscape.

To read the 87-page report go here.   

But for those of you who are short on time, I have pulled together ten things you need to know about this work.

Many of these are quite surprising.

10 things

1.    Most residents don’t live far from where they work, and this hasn’t changed that much.

2.    Commuting distances have changed little in most of our cities in recent years.

3.    Commuting times have also been largely stable over the last decade.

4.    Even before Covid, CBD and nearly inner-city jobs were only growing in Sydney and Melbourne but were shrinking in most other Australian cities.  Covid – outside of construction – has now put the kibosh CBD orientated new jobs.

5.    Most new jobs are still in other suburban areas, with three out of four jobs widely dispersed.  See the diagrams below.  Diagrams one and two are what is in most town planners’ heads, but the third diagram is what really goes on.

6.    Living in a large Australian capital city doesn’t mean travelling much further than living in a smaller capital or major regional town.

7.    The common urban myth “double the population means double the commute” doesn’t apply.

8.    Population growth has a bigger impact on commuting distances and times in smaller cities than large ones.

9.    People accept a longer commute to live in a lifestyle area and close to the beach.

10. In recent years very few workers have changed the way they get to work.  Most travel by car.

Some suggestions

There are some things that I think might be worth considering that might improve the current state of play.

These include:

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