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    Idea for fixing the housing shortage

    The trend of density correlating to low fertility is a global one.
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    Commuters Ditched Public Transit for Work From Home. Now There’s a Crisis.

    Just gonna point out that people *like* bland and boring SFHs. There is a *very* strong negative correlation between population density and family size. Which is the cause and which is the effect is less obvious (most likely a feedback loop), but it is there.
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    Commuters Ditched Public Transit for Work From Home. Now There’s a Crisis.

    None (or near enough to none) of them want to be going into the office. But the entire concept of white collar workers all migrating into an office for 8-9 hrs/day is largely a sunk cost financially and culturally. The fact that so many business execs are wedded to it shows that they're not...
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    Commuters Ditched Public Transit for Work From Home. Now There’s a Crisis.

    Seems too high to me. Though, utilization should be high - the number of offices should decrease.
  5. D

    Idea for fixing the housing shortage

    That perception is borne out by US Census statistics. Families generally live in the following three housing types: trailer parks, detached single family homes, and attached single family homes. After that, the number of children per family drops off significantly. This article doesn’t address...
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    Commuters Ditched Public Transit for Work From Home. Now There’s a Crisis.

    They damn well better kill RTO in its entirety for any jobs that can be done remotely. Its a ego-stroking farce.
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    Family-Oriented Urbanism/Suburbanism

    I’d say so. Just gotta figure out who is responsible for shoveling.
  8. D

    Family-Oriented Urbanism/Suburbanism

    Plus, it’s a lot safer for kids to play on a dead end street of any kind.
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    Family-Oriented Urbanism/Suburbanism

    Lincoln looks so sparse, I’m not sure what to do with it. And you’re absolutely right about what people like about the burbs. I happen to have a house on a cul de sac, and its very nice that the road in front of us is extra safe. It just so happens that our back yard abuts a dead end street...
  10. D

    Family-Oriented Urbanism/Suburbanism

    “Burning down the suburbs” really seems drastic. And while I enjoy a good grid, I don’t think its really essential. Lets look at it this way: restricting ourselves to, say, the 495 beltway, what is the worst suburb (in terms of layout) at the moment?
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    Family-Oriented Urbanism/Suburbanism

    Agreed 99%. The 1% is… in what world are adolescents hard to hate? I kid (a little But yes, I was looking at this through that same lens of avoiding the culture war. If there’s one thing I can’t stand about discussions about policy (particularly online), its the tendency that, if someone...
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    Family-Oriented Urbanism/Suburbanism

    I think the places to create less car-oriented environments are the satellite cities, rather than the suburbs. I think suburbs are going to remain car-centric, but that doesn’t mean they can’t be more walkable.
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    Family-Oriented Urbanism/Suburbanism

    I have to continue to push back on this. My proposal isn’t “how can we turn the suburbs into north Cambridge.” Like I said: 80% of what urbanists want. Let me put it this way: if the various suburbs just did that bare minimum I listed above of adding more sidewalks and redeveloping failing...
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    Family-Oriented Urbanism/Suburbanism

    I pretty much agree. I will say that, especially in the suburbs, you're not going to break the 'car is king' paradigm. I'd like to use the neighborhood I grew up in (in Chicopee, for reference). It was your typical suburban neighborhood, of the sort that was laid out in the interwar years and...
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    Family-Oriented Urbanism/Suburbanism

    I was reading the recent book “Family Unfriendly” by Tim Carney, about how much of society is oriented in such a way to make raising families more difficult than it needs to be. He spent some time discussing how suburbs that are too car-centric are particularly difficult, despite the suburbs...
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    Multi-Family Zoning Requirements for MBTA Communities

    Lets look at this from a different point of view: Hypothetically, its the 1950s. Sudbury farmers are opposed to the development of their town into a middle-class suburb and the way it will change their town. What is your opinion of their opposition?
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    Multi-Family Zoning Requirements for MBTA Communities

    No, you are viewing it solely through a regional lens, and dismissing more local concerns because you aren’t willing to view it through a more local lens. You mean those same founders that passed a state-wide mandatory church attendance law? Yeah, I don’t seem them being shocked by individual...
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    Multi-Family Zoning Requirements for MBTA Communities

    Yes, it is a stretch, in no small part because what possible carrots could be offered to combat miscegenation laws? Also, we need to acknowledge one of the key reason to use the stick over the carrot is because the two sides are wildly far apart. Another is that the side being stick-ed doesn’t...
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    Multi-Family Zoning Requirements for MBTA Communities

    Whoever said anything about patriotism? I’m talking about localism. I don’t know if you noticed, I’m not arguing against higher densities. I’m explaining why and how people oppose them. Meanwhile, your arguments show a greater interest in enforcing your desired outcome than in accomplishing it...

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