free Streets are Amazing
car Lyrics


We have lyrics for these tracks by car:


Can't Hold Us I can't put out your fire, I know it's too…
Car Let's assume we're driving Driving a big blue car Where in t…
Cry Music keeps making me cry And I can't explain it…
Drive Who's gonna tell you when It's too late? Who's gonna tell yo…
Heaven 좀 쉬어 갈게요 너무 오랫동안 걸어왔네요 잠시면 돼요 숨 돌릴 그만큼만 그저 가볍게…
Intro Ice Cold Like Michael My Price Goin' Up Bet You Might Hit…
LITTLE BY LITTLE 그런 눈빛들 속에 어떤 마음인지 내게 보여줄수록 더욱 궁금해지네 나는 무너져가네 yeah eh 난 솔직하려…
Man Can you see the line where the water ends? Throws…
Mr. and Mrs *Mr Loh singing* As I can see the ocean breaking The ocean…
Mr. and Mrs. *Mr Loh singing* As I can see the ocean breaking The ocean…
My First Punk Song It's 24 to nothing and I'm at the intersection Waiting for…
San Francisco I came by through your city I came back for some…
The Road Have you seen them, have you seen them in my…
wash I can't stop looking at you You're in the corner of…



선인장 일곱시부터 자면 좀 나아질 거야 불타는 맘이 달래 달라네 이른 아침에 꾸벅 생각이 덜하면 괜찮아질 걸…


The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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Most interesting comments from YouTube:

@NotJustBikes

There's so much I wanted to say on this subject, but the original >10-minute version covered too much, so I cut it down to be an introduction to the most important points. I will definitely follow-up this video with more on the subject. If there's anything in particular you would like to know about autoluw or Dutch street design in general, please let me know in the comments.


The Frans Halbuurt, the Ferdinand Bolstraat, and De Pijp in general, have a very interesting history that's worth exploring. There were a lot of people who did a lot of fighting to make it the way it is today. The Frans Halbuurt removing street parking is a recent development, and there's actually an underground parking garage in the adjacent canal to house all of the residents' and visitors' vehicles (so it's not very scalable). More on this later!


The term autoluw is devilishly difficult to define in English; harder than you think. I cut all of the translation talk out of this video because it was just too much of a rabbit hole. "luw" literally means "sheltered from the wind" but it generally means something that is technically allowed but that you want to minimize as much as possible. If you have heart problems your doctor might say you should start an "alcoholluw" diet. You could say a "low-alcohol diet" in English, but that doesn't really get to the core of the issue: that you really should not have any alcohol at all, but if you feel you HAVE to, make it very minimal. Once you understand that, you'll understand what it means to be "autoluw."

Anyway, a great subject, with lots of interesting facets. I hope you enjoyed it!



@forestdweller5581

@@rimmertf Oh really? I pick up the bodies of the animal victims, do you?
I document the dead forest on my channel, do you?
And just telling me a very well known and ancient fact about changing forests does not help your point at all. Your mama is changing too, so is everything. Your own body is changing adapting to it's increasinly toxic environment...so what? Of coure forests are not the same as they used to be.
Which ancient forests would you like to compare to? 200 years ago or 2 million years ago?
I doubt your understanding of nature destruction now. Most life is dead already and as a researcher i am in that frontline.
Are you?
43% of all terrestrial habitat lost in Europe happens in my country. I study it every day.
So what do i know about it?
Probably a Hell of a lot more than you do....



@AudieHolland

Hey, all this greatness actually came from a spectular failure in city design and infrastructure.
Following World War 2, Nederland wanted to have highways like in the US of A, running all the way from one city center to the next city center.
Imagine: highways throughout the entire city!
All that needed to be done in the older cities: fill in a few of those useless old canals, demolish those old buildings near the city center and next thing, every major city would be a futuristic heaven with loads and loads of cars so nobody needed to walk anymore.

However, the Dutch came to the conclusion that Nederland was rather smaller than America. There just wasn't enough space.
In Utrecht, they managed to fill in most of the Catharijnesingel and had already built a small section of four-lane inner city highway heaven…
About 400 yards, I think.

By the time they wanted to continue filling in the Catharijnesingel, a majority of Utrechters had come to their senses and because of all the protests, the construction of the 400 yards four lane highway, was discontinued. For decades this tiny section of highway reminded the people of the follies of their predecessors.

Recently, I mean, in the last 10 or so years, they demolished the shortest highway in the world. The old Catharijnesingel has been restored to (some) of its former glory. And cars are becoming an endangered species in the city center. Who needs cars anyway in the Utrecht city center? It's all walkways, bikeways and one or two roads for the many buses that pass through.

Oeps, forgot: and of course the canals!



@Volcano4981

I wholeheartedly support this notion. I would never fathom visiting London only to be part of a sea of drivers, there's so much beauty to experience on foot, via public transport or active travel in general. In fact, the last time I did, I did absolutely everything on foot or occasionally via the Tube.

For an example from outside London, Sheffield has also converted a few streets into purely foot and cycle traffic areas in a similar way fairly recently (and even made sure the roadblocks had nice potted plants), mainly in the city centre and Kelham Island, and it's proving to be absolutely wonderful-looking as a resident myself. Drivers park elsewhere to enjoy the areas and pedestrians and cyclists are even safer, and I have reason to believe it helps with skating and possibly mobility scooters a lot too. It was originally a pandemic response, but the council love it so much that they kept them in place. Extension of tram tracks (used to cover almost the entire city), more bicycle lanes and more bus lanes would be icing on the cake and make services held up by needless car usage more efficient. Naturally, staunch motorists and petrolheaded business owners are whining like high hell about these prospects and make the same old claims that it will somehow 'kill businesses nearby', but if anything motorists don't even frequent the areas affected, only thoroughfare, or park off-street anyway and go. There's other problems that need addressing above motorists' entitled views.

It was already quite pedestrian friendly and there were vast swathes of pedestrian-only bits when I first moved but I look forward to even more car restrictions so your average Kyle couldn't just block everyone's way with his ugly polluter machine and motor vehicle use is restricted to only the essential drivers.

And one more I remembered - I heard a café in Liverpool, near the centre, are pushing for their on-street seating licence they got in similar circumstances to be extended because it has proven helpful to them since the pandemic began, but the council wasn't very forthcoming.

Me and one of my friends from Sheff are big fans of NJB btw!



All comments from YouTube:

@NotJustBikes

There's so much I wanted to say on this subject, but the original >10-minute version covered too much, so I cut it down to be an introduction to the most important points. I will definitely follow-up this video with more on the subject. If there's anything in particular you would like to know about autoluw or Dutch street design in general, please let me know in the comments.


The Frans Halbuurt, the Ferdinand Bolstraat, and De Pijp in general, have a very interesting history that's worth exploring. There were a lot of people who did a lot of fighting to make it the way it is today. The Frans Halbuurt removing street parking is a recent development, and there's actually an underground parking garage in the adjacent canal to house all of the residents' and visitors' vehicles (so it's not very scalable). More on this later!


The term autoluw is devilishly difficult to define in English; harder than you think. I cut all of the translation talk out of this video because it was just too much of a rabbit hole. "luw" literally means "sheltered from the wind" but it generally means something that is technically allowed but that you want to minimize as much as possible. If you have heart problems your doctor might say you should start an "alcoholluw" diet. You could say a "low-alcohol diet" in English, but that doesn't really get to the core of the issue: that you really should not have any alcohol at all, but if you feel you HAVE to, make it very minimal. Once you understand that, you'll understand what it means to be "autoluw."

Anyway, a great subject, with lots of interesting facets. I hope you enjoyed it!

@zephyrdrake1826

Luw mean lukewarm, when you say "luw water" that's lukewarm water. "luw" just means not all the way or "nearly" so the translation was quite accurate.

@jadu-entertainment9770

@@zephyrdrake1826 No, that is incorrect. You are confusing it with "lauw". Luwe is a shelter from the wind. Autoluwe essentially means shelter from cars.

@Jeroen_a

You forgot our 'fiets straat". i know there are more across the world. But we have variants in it.... like more widened bicycle paths with a small part of road in the middle, full bike paths with no visible road, etc all allow cars... but they are a guest in the street :) This is what is in the signs. " Biking street, cars are a guest" https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fietsstraat

@butsgalore

I think the dictionary has a second meaning to 'luw' and the combination explains it better:

lu·wen (luwde, is geluwd)
1 (van de wind) minder worden ->(the wind) has become less (so basically sheltered from the wind, or the wind has settled down, i.e. most of it is gone)

2 afnemen: de strijd is geluwd -> the battle has died down (it's not over completely, there may be a skirmish here or there, but most of it is gone)

So in my opinion autoluw would imply that by far most of the cars are gone. Sometimes you might see 1 car, but oftentimes you will not encounter any. If you do encounter a car it will probably travel at 'stapvoets' speed (historically walking speed of a horse, or max 15 km/h) so cars are way less dangerous and generally will follow behind bicycles. (though this is subject to road planning and speeds up to 30 km/h are sometimes also possible)

@Jessie91J

Do you, or anybody else, know if this is the same as the german Fußgängerzone (pedestrian zone)?

16 More Replies...

@williamhuang8309

I think foot traffic encourages people to shop local because when you're walking, you look around you. If you see an interesting shop, chances are, you'll pop in and have a look, and maybe buy something. If you're in a car, you concentrate on driving and might not see all the interesting things around you. Even if you did, you'd need to find somewhere to park, which is also annoying in urban centres, and would probably decrease the likelihood of you going into a local shop.

@ryanarmishaw3305

I can't tell you how many times I've driven past an interesting shop, at 50km/hr, and thought, " Well, maybe next time". Why not stop? Because it is already in my rear view mirror. Do I go back. Maybe 10% of the time or less. If I was walking or biking, it would be 80%+

@Cheesypockets

You also tend to have more market space. One thing I noted in this video interestingly were the stalls in the middle everything in one of the places. Just more economic opportunity overall.

@theregalproletariat

You're absolutely correct!

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