It looks like it has a drain which is pretty rare
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Avant / Après la nouvelle piste cyclable de 900 mètres réalisée en 2023 à Biarritz, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, pour rejoindre le lac Marion, piste qui ici prend la moitié d'une bretelle. Le budget annoncé fut de 270 000 euros.
I have found TGVs very expensive coming from the UK, like €100+ fares on 2 hour journeys when booking 4 months in advance. Which is maybe understandable when some of the trains are sold out that far ahead. But also they should run more than a few trains let day.
I have no idea what microtonal is but I like it when the nose starts swinging
It's the same thing isn't it? If they hadn't shut the nukes then the renewables and imports would have substituted the coal first.
Carlisle Eaten by Monsters (Stand G) On Devonshire Street, near opposite Pizza Express
The best bus stop name nationwide is this one imho
I don't know why they do it though. I have never not got back my entire deposit by just saying "it's wear and tear, go away please"
It's should come in a wide mouthed glass jar like mayo. They are the same consistency, why not the same vessel?
Its just those horrible chunky framed plastic windows that are disallowed right? Metal, wood, plastic doesn't matter.
How is an AI generated nurse going to help?
Modern pickups aren't practical vehicles, the beds are too high off the ground to lift heavy things to, the load is uncovered and insecure, and the bed is often too short for common materials. A van or dropside is much more practical. The only advantage of pickups tends to be their towing capacity.
The rack tram and a funicular to a cemetery are cool (for nerds)
To clarify what is being talked about. A dropside Ford Transit is a European model, they aren't pickups and I don't think they are even sold in America.
You can get to the Balkans in under 24h from England on the train. Lunch in Paris, tea in Stuttgart, breakfast in Zagreb.
Why is it crazy to debunk? Rascists are lying about it so the truth is being told.
I've never driven a car and do those things all the time in the UK
They are increasing common. There are at least 3 in my town
Those the professions in the UK mostly use dropside trucks, not American luxury pickups
The path from Wantage to Harwell was done in this "self binding" gravel. It was lethal for well over a year and is still horrible to cycle on.
"Exceptional hardship" is a joke. If driving is that essential to you, then take your responsibilities more seriously and don't drive illegally. If you can't manage to do that, then there's buses, bikes and taxis at your disposal.
And re the data, I think a lot of those sorts of answers come from people being unable to visualise an alternative to the status quo. They can't really imagine that cycling could ever be pleasant and convenient. They don't see cycling as being "for them".
If these were apartments there would be
- Less overlooking
- More units
- More spacious units as less area is wasted on circulation
- 100% accessible units because they could justify elevators
- A nicer groundscape by hiding parking a single garage rather than individual garages
It has all of the downsides of dense living without any of the upsides
I understand mixed traffic if it will be the only route, or the old route is bad (swiss base tunnels) but not where the existing route is usable
Maybe it's SNCF planning for when they have finally eliminated every non-TGV service
If it's wrong I'm sure it'll get tested in the courts
Britain and England are different entities, you are erasing the Welsh, Scots by conflating them, very disappointing. The sun never set on the Empire but it does on England every day.
A sign pole with signs on it from top to bottom indicating give way, no left turn, except cycles and camera
Of course you can limit it, they use the standard no left turn signage used all over the country.
Yet one is about to be built on my commuting route in Didcot 😢
The second trailer especially ruined it a bit for me. It showed what the alien looked like and how it behaved.