Good morning from Glacier Bay

So anyway, this is a big part of why, despite its flaws, I play cities skylines 2, not 1.

It was actually really pleasant to sit here and watch traffic go by for a few minutes while I set up that picture. I tried to record video, but my computer wasn't having it.

You may recall that I threatened you with maps earlier, and I was fully serious about that. Here's how you could get around.

For the curious, the photo above was taken from the red circle, facing south. This is the oldest part of the city

And with that, good night

It sounds like the way cims insist on walking really extreme distances might be a bug? It does seem like people will walk much too far. I had thought that maybe I had somehow discouraged car ownership? But without providing adequate alternatives? I'm _pretty_ sure that some cims will decide not to own a car if they don't have to.

But maybe it's not my fault? Β―\_(ツ)_/Β―
https://hachyderm.io/@jenniferplusplus/116200157349759406

Well, it is now June of 2028 in Glacier Bay. I've spent most of my last several game sessions doing beautification around the city, so the map-visible changes are pretty small. But as part of that, I did fill in zoning in areas where I think the land values can now justify more extensive grading. It turns out that just letting the simulation run while you're planting trees is a great way to build up a budget surplus. Who knew!?

And, more substantially, I built a cargo port in the south east corner of the city! Very exciting stuff. I'll bombard you with pictures later, after work.

I did a lot of that to leave the city in a stable position so I can move south across the bay to a _new_ project!

This as-yet unnamed town is going to be a tourist destination. Now that the harbor is open for business, some enterprising developers are bringing in a passenger port and attracting resorts and cruise lines. The plan is to build out an entertainment district all down the waterfront, with a small urban center at the top of the valley that's mostly housing for the workers and city services.

It's a little hard to see because I just sketched it out with dirt roads. But the basic idea is there, if you zoom in

I don't normally play with the day/night cycle on, but I feel like I'm missing a few light sources. Specifically, I feel like I'm missing vehicle headlights. Anyway, it is October 2028 in Aspen Cove, and it now has a proper skyline
That photo was taken facing almost due south from the corner of the port, which sadly doesn't render on the map. But you can kind of tell where it should be, because it's where the seaway ends.

ALSO, taking that photo is how I discovered that the battery backup built into the solar power plant does *nothing*

So, I take back all the nice things I said upthread, this game is trash /s

BTW, I got GPU Screen Recorder, so you can watch the ferris wheel go around

Mastodon didn't like the video, so here it is elsewhere
https://flic.kr/p/2s28SBJ

aspen_cove_202810

Flickr

Well, by almost every measure, the newly developed city of Aspen (I renamed it, just Aspen, no cove) has been a huge success.The streets are lively, the shops are busy, and the attractions are attracting.

There's just one problem: None of these people got here by boat. Which means they all drove here 😱

What is a girl to do?

Obviously, draw and redraw the lines on the one road coming into town, over and over.

Also obviously, that did not work. Meanwhile, traffic is backing up on the highways halfway around the entire map. So, I imagine some other governments step in.

First, Glacier Bay, which is run by responsible adults, not property developers/real estate speculators/gamblers, starts operating a ferry line to try to relieve driving demand. It immediately hits like 400% capacity. So, they switch to running 2 lines, with as many boats as they can put in the water. I didn't think to get a screenshot at the time, but for a while the line for that ferry stop went out to the street, down the sidewalk, and across the crosswalk.

But, even with all that traffic off the roads, it still barely made a dent in the traffic jams.

So, next, I imagine the state steps in. Probably, the DOT and emergency management sue the government of Aspen, cuz this shit's hazardous.

I think they come to an agreement to do 3 things:

1. Aspen will establish a 2nd road corridor from the highway to the waterfront.
2. The state will build interchange access at another point on the highway, for safety as much as for capacity.
3. Aspen will operate a real local transit system, to reduce demand on the roads as much as possible. None of this starter city nonsense about "taxis are transit, right?"

The result:

this game is great

I got distracted by an ambulance that was stuck in traffic, so I had to stop and fix some interchanges. That means I mostly didn't get anything built today; just moved some roads around.

I might go through my process for that tomorrow

So yesterday, instead of building much of anything, I fixed a bunch of terrible traffic. I don't have a save from before I started, but I do have one from a couple of days ago. So, these are not exactly as things were, but it's pretty close.

First, was this intersection on the east side of glacier bay, near/connecting to the cargo port. The port wasn't actually functioning at this point, due to a mod that I had to remove. But once it did function, traffic here was *devastatingly* bad.

I had it set up like this because I wanted to give the port direct access to the highway. But, it turns out that almost none of the truck traffic was headed for the highway. It was basically all turning right and heading into the industrial area up the hill. A fact you can ascertain thanks to the road inspector tools. So, one build out of a proper interchange later, and all now all the highway traffic is diffusing into the city, while all the port traffic gets direct access to the industrial area. The only real complicating factor in all of this is that this cliff is fully 30 meters tall. And that is most of the reason I hadn't built a real intersection before. I don't normally like these T interchanges because having the ramps cross over each other means you have to build much higher than is necessary. In this case, that height was happening no matter what. Compared to a trumpet interchange, which is my go-to for 3-way merges, this lets most of the sloping happen parallel to the highway. That minimizes how much it imposes on land I want to use for the port.

@jenniferplusplus For a moment I thought I had grossly misunderstood what you do for a living. πŸ˜‚

@tankgrrl I mean, that's fair lol. You are the 2nd person today who had to double check on that πŸ˜‚

tbh, I'm not mad about it