When working on site I've never had as little as a 26 minute commute. Best I've has was 35 to 40 minutes. Favourite was one site I could cycle to mainly on a canal towpath about 10 miles each way. Made me much fitter.
>I think the average commute in the U.S. is 26 minutes:
>
>
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/Traffic/story?id=485098&page=1>
>According to the Census Bureau, NY's commute is the longest on average:
>
http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/american_community_survey_acs/001695.html>
>I'd like to see a comparison with other cities in the rest of the world too.
>
>>>>What's the frequency of buses in your area? Apart from NYC, I still haven't seen a schedule which would keep them going more often than one per hour - maybe two at rush hour.
>>>
>>>I think they're pretty frequent in other big cities, too. Depends on the route. Here's the schedule for a bus that runs the down one of Philadelphia's major streets:
>>>
>>>
http://www.septa.com/service/sched/c_wk.html>>>
>>>Less than 10 minutes apart at rush hour, up to about 15 in off hours.
>>
>>Well, much better than Orlando - it took me 90 minutes and three buses to get from Maitland to the airport, with a lot of planning, had to print several pages of the schedule (and then skipped a line when jumping from page to page, so I was late for the flight - but the good guy there got me into another flight and I eventually got home 15 minutes earlier than planned :).
>>
>>It would be interesting to know the statistics across the cities of the world, how many miles traveled per capita per diem, how many lines, or something like that.