Saw this video shared on /r/NotJustBikes:
The hilarious thing about the video is that he has no clue where the airports are/were in Hong Kong and Houston.
Hong Kong originally had an airport in the city center, Kai Tak, which was famous for being very difficult to land at, requiring a 47 degree turn at low altitude immediately before landing. The video maker doesn’t appear to be aware of its existence or he would have bragged about how convenient it was.
They’ve since built a new airport, Chek Lap Kok, on landfill in the outskirts of the city, and according to Google, it is faster to drive than take transit to it, and it is just as far from central HK as George Bush airport is from downtown Houston (a fact the video maker points out).
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He also points out that the driving times are similar between the two cities, but he doesn’t mention that the transit times are also similar.
There’s another major issue with his analysis; Houston doesn’t have only one airport. It also has a downtown airport, but unlike Kai Tak, Hobby Airport still exists.
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So it takes a Houstonian 15 minutes to drive to the airport from downtown, and it takes Hong Konger 47 minutes to get to the airport via transit, which is proof that Hong Kong is superior?
For completeness, Kai Tak is around the same time away from central Hong Kong as Hobby Airport is from downtown Houston:
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Looks like things are pretty similar even in cities thousands of miles apart designed in completely different ways.
The issues in the video are only an issue if you hate cars and taxis. I wouldn’t care as much about these people if they weren’t trying to tax and regulate everything that doesn’t conform to their urbanist vision out of existence.