Quizzes & Puzzles20 mins ago
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Hi Folks can anyone please help? In America when they talk about somewhere being a block or several blocks away. How far do they actualy mean? Is the equivalent to a street over here? Hope you guys/gals can help Thanx
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As others have indicated, American cities often have their streets laid out on a grid-like pattern. A 'block' is the distance from one street intersection to the next.
However the size of a block isn't fixed. For example, someone posting on this forum states that their city has about 8 blocks per mile (i.e. one 'block' equals about 220 yards). Another contributor suggests that a more usual layout is 12 blocks per mile (i.e. one 'block' equals roughly 150 yards):
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20 071126230823AAzBgMZ
Taking a rough average, it seems that a 'block' is equal to around two minutes walking. (I wish I'd have known that, a few years ago, when an American couple asked me for directions in London. I told them exactly which way they needed to go but I was completely stumped when they asked "So how many blocks is that?").
Chris
However the size of a block isn't fixed. For example, someone posting on this forum states that their city has about 8 blocks per mile (i.e. one 'block' equals about 220 yards). Another contributor suggests that a more usual layout is 12 blocks per mile (i.e. one 'block' equals roughly 150 yards):
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20 071126230823AAzBgMZ
Taking a rough average, it seems that a 'block' is equal to around two minutes walking. (I wish I'd have known that, a few years ago, when an American couple asked me for directions in London. I told them exactly which way they needed to go but I was completely stumped when they asked "So how many blocks is that?").
Chris
Again i have to take issue with the comment "A 'block' is the distance from one street intersection to the next." Suppose you are walking on the pavement, and take a left without crossing any roads. Up ahead, the pavement on the left of the road carries on unbroken, dissapearing into the distance. On your right however, the pavement breaks at a right turn. By both your meanings then does the block end at the intersection on your right?
In the US, where I'm currently sitting, a block is indeed the distance from one street intersection to the next. So, in your example, if a street intersects from the right but does not continue on (i.e. it dead-ends on the street you're walking on), we'd still refer to that distance as a block. So, if you're standing at an intersection and someone says walk two blocks north, you'd go past the first cross-street and stop at the next.
In Chicago, where I grew up, streets were laid out 8 blocks to the mile as Chris suggests above.
In Chicago, where I grew up, streets were laid out 8 blocks to the mile as Chris suggests above.