100 Years Evolution Of Traffic 1910s - 2010s Link
The oil crisis of 1973 changed traffic forever. The era of the "land yacht" died, replaced by compact, fuel-efficient imports. The national speed limit was dropped to 55 mph to save fuel. For the first time, drivers realized that the road wasn't an infinite resource. 1980s: The Digital Dashboard
The 60s brought a split in identity: the raw power of versus a growing concern for life and limb. In 1968, the federal government finally mandated seat belts. Traffic was now a heavy, high-speed reality, prompting the first serious look at how to survive a crash. 1970s: The Reality Check 100 years Evolution of Traffic 1910s - 2010s
The smartphone changed the interior of the car forever. Traffic was no longer a mystery; apps like Waze and Google Maps allowed drivers to see the "red lines" of congestion in real-time and reroute. Hybrid cars, led by the Prius, made "green driving" a mainstream status symbol. 2010s: The Electric Rebirth The oil crisis of 1973 changed traffic forever
Traffic became an organized dance. The first three-color traffic lights appeared, and the concept of "jaywalking" was invented to keep people off the new domain of the car. Paved roads began to snake across the countryside, and the gas station became a permanent fixture of the American landscape. 1930s: Streamlining Through the Dust For the first time, drivers realized that the