armpitsOFmight
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- Oct 10, 2009
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fsshhhaah....AguaTown can think about smart growth as much as it likes but it's a pipe dream for this crappy suburban town.
I like the development but not the loss of the ROW. That is Watertown just being lazy and short sighted.
Can't claim to know much about these developments, but looking at the pictures, the one thing that really annoys me is the fact that they didn't put the electrical underground. This topic has been brought up in threads about Malden and the like, and given that the distances to downtown Boston are somewhat similar, deserves at least a mention. These towns need to stipulate the relocation of electrical to underground as part of the permitting process for these types of developements.
Cortes -- go get a quote for digging up the neighborhood to bury the wires [telephone and electrical distribution]
and then come along some few decades later to dig up the neighborhood again to install coaxial cable for two or three companies and still later come along a put local fiber optics in the ground
Poles with wires and cables and fibers may be ugly -- but they are economically justified in all but the highest density districts -- and of course -- you still do need poles even in the most urban of all areas for the lights and now cameras and gunshot detection microphones and air samplers and of course Wifi -- so that means more digging as those services are installed
By the way -- one good hit by a loaded semi and all the engineering design seems to be irrelevant
Cortes -- go get a quote for digging up the neighborhood to bury the wires [telephone and electrical distribution]
and then come along some few decades later to dig up the neighborhood again to install coaxial cable for two or three companies and still later come along a put local fiber optics in the ground
We've had technology for a long time that doesn't require you to dig every time you want to add wires. At the beginning of this century, I watched fiber optic regularly being run in my parents' neighborhood by people popping a couple covers and spooling it through. No digging up the roads or sidewalks, no repaving the next day. (Why so much fiber optic installation? Well, it was Northern Virginia, which had a combination of government and private companies constantly running their own fiber in the late 90's and early 00's.)
Where's the transit? This isn't smart growth, it's denser suburbia.