• perestroika@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    Well, one bad thing is that existing cities would need to be re-designed. It will take resources and decades of time. If we are patient, there is nothing bad there.

    A potentially bad side effect: if planners take the easiest route and make the city ultra-dense and ultra-high, we get a vulnerable city that doesn’t function if something is wrong with the infrastructure. People are, after all, known for taking easy routes (which may later prove hard for others).

    Myself, I live in the countryside and don’t like top-down planning at all, so I can’t comment more. To me, the experience is typically: “can I build a road here? - no you can’t”, “can I make a thermal store? no you can’t”, I’m sure they will eventually tell me I’m producing solar energy the wrong way too… I know that things are different in cities because the threshold to disturbing others is tiny, but I don’t think about it much - it is not for me.

    • occhineri@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      I live in a 200k city and atm, city officials love to talk about density, claiming it was synonymous to sustainability. So currently, every available square meter is immediately dumped in concrete 30m2/p appartment building. The whole city is literally under construction but yet, traffic is not changing and even getting worse through all the construction. It’s outrageous

    • FartsWithAnAccent@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      IDK that it necessarily has to be that restricted, I live in a city where most things are pretty close enough to a 15 minute walk and it’s just a small city that’s largely suburban. Maybe on the outskirts of town it’s more like a 30 minute walk, but that’s still pretty reasonable.