Think about SUVs. When I had kids, I had two minivans. Yes, they weren't cool, but they got better mpgs than any SUV of similar capacity, and had sliding doors to boot. But, people want "cool", something that is a quasi-truck cool, but really is a poor excuse for a minivan. Unless you tow, a minivan is far better than an SUV, and cheaper to boot.
Europe is more practical in part because they are less wealthy in the main, so you see almost no SUVs and pickup trucks. They have smaller minivans and work vans, usually with Diesel engines and manual gear boxes.
Well, the SUV craze isn't what it used to be. These days, people buy "crossovers", which are basically minivans without the sliding doors and "soccer mom" vibe. Most/many are on car chassis instead of truck chassis, FWD, and at least not horrible for gas mileage.
I also think that Europe have smaller vehicles because EVERYTHING is much more compact. Walking around Rome/Florence/Paris over the last few weeks, I can't imagine driving my Ford Flex around there. Even worse to try to find a parking spot anywhere.
I would say that I was already aware that manual transmissions were the norm in Europe, but I was surprised how far it extended. In Rome they only have Uber Black (no UberX) so we once got picked up by a luxury Mercedes van, and of course it had a manual. Pretty much everything I saw there was a manual.
Europe is practical for a lot of reasons. They walk a lot and the train system is fantastic. I saw a lot of cars by familiar makers that I've never seen here. Yes, they were smaller.
Not a whole lot of bottled water over there either, except for American tourists, in my observation. I did notice a lot of people had their own bottles that they could fill and carry. I did find Italy to be very dry, so wherever we went to eat or get a caffeine boost, we always asked for water.
I wonder how it is outside the cities, though? I mean, in downtown Chicago/New York people also walk a lot and use public transit, but once you get outside the metro area it becomes MUCH harder to do so because population density falls off quickly.
I would agree about all the makes and models of cars, though. It was funny actually trying to get an Uber and it tells me the car coming to pick me up is a Seat, or a Renault, or a Peugeot. I had no idea what the heck I was even looking for!
Agreed on the water, except that I actually saw quite a lot of bottled water at the restaurants. It seemed normal there to
buy a bottle of water for the table (even still water, not the sparkling).
Water must be precious in Italy, in fact, because it seems impossible to get more than 3 oz of coffee at a time!
