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Discussion on the future of commuting 20th May 2004
Commuting: the life sentence?
Museums & Galleries Month 2004: "Travel and the Art of Travelling" 20th May, 7pm Terrace Room, Museum of London Tickets: £8.00 (£6.00 concessions) The one aspect of the daily grind that is guaranteed to provoke an opinion is the commute to work. Congested roads, overcrowded trains, packed buses and sweaty tubes – it's been said that if travel broadens the mind, commuting shrinks it back. But if it's so bad why do so many of us continue to do it? Why has the simple act of getting to work become such a major cause for concern? Chair: Austin Williams, (Director, Transport Research Group; Technical Editor, Architects Journal) Dea Birkett, Guardian columnist David Young, Project Co-ordinator, SUSTRANS South-East Timandra Harkness, science writer Email: or phone 07957 534909 / 020 7505 6711 |
Discussion on the future of commuting 20th May 2004
Martin Earnshaw wrote:
Commuting: the life sentence? Museums & Galleries Month 2004: "Travel and the Art of Travelling" 20th May, 7pm Terrace Room, Museum of London Tickets: £8.00 (£6.00 concessions) The one aspect of the daily grind that is guaranteed to provoke an opinion is the commute to work. Congested roads, overcrowded trains, packed buses and sweaty tubes - it's been said that if travel broadens the mind, commuting shrinks it back. But if it's so bad why do so many of us continue to do it? Why has the simple act of getting to work become such a major cause for concern? The answer to all these questions coming under the heading of "Blindingly Obvious". |
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