• Pennomi@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I can tell you that lack of regulation also causes problems. My kids school is only a half mile away through medium density housing, and they still can’t make it the whole way without walking in the road because the city won’t force people to make sidewalks.

    • bluGill@kbin.social
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      7 months ago

      You expect the city to build roads, so why the home owner to build sidewalks?

      • ScreamingFirehawk@feddit.uk
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        7 months ago

        Why would homeowners have to build sidewalks? Why don’t the housing developers do it? Thats how it works in the UK for new estates

        • OneOrTheOtherDontAskMe@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          He’s taking the piss. The hyperbole being “why won’t the homeowners take it upon themselves to pull their children up by their bootstraps and build sidewalks to the school” in the sense that America is a hellscape car centrism and over self reliance.

    • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      I think the real trick is knowing which regulations are written in blood and/or misery, and which ones are based on bullshit (like parking minimums).

      • bluGill@kbin.social
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        7 months ago

        Parking was written in the pain of not finding a parking spot. While not blood, the pain was and is real. We should be against parking minimums anyway because - stores have incentive to find the right amount of parking for customers without overpaying, and parking at all is bad for transit/density and so we want to encourage less parking to encourage transit. Parking regulations thus have other unwanted effects as well.

        • CanadaPlus@futurology.today
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          7 months ago

          I mean, that’s still kind of bullshit. Unless you want to go full USSR, you don’t mandate free stuff, because that distorts the shit out of the market, and you end up with things like cities designed around cars because the inefficiency of that is masked.

      • ThankYouVeryMuch@kbin.social
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        7 months ago

        Looking for a spot where I live takes me like 20min on average, not uncommon to be 45min-1h. Maybe minimum parking regulations aren’t complete bullshit

        • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          I understand your frustration. I’ve driven through some of the larger metros in the US and marvelled at how many cars vs how little parking there is. That said, this is an issue that’s easy to go deep on. There’s a lot of detail beyond “it’s hard to find a parking spot”, and it gets into how car dependency is fucking up our cities. I can go into that if you want, but suffice it to say that adding more parking is about as poor a solution as “just one more lane, bro” is to traffic.

          • ThankYouVeryMuch@kbin.social
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            7 months ago

            That doesn’t seem very likely, I already live in a big, dense city where everybody except the very rich live crammed in apartment buildings like sardines. We already have metro, buses, trams, municipal renting bikes, lots of kilometers of bike lane (mostly crap tho). It’s all this Lemmy’s wet dream, but traffic is still hell

            • CanadaPlus@futurology.today
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              7 months ago

              That’s cool. Most people don’t even need to use cars then, so it would be a smooth transition. (I’m guessing you do deliveries or need wheelchair access or something, based on the fact you know we’ll dunk on you if having to deal with parking was optional all along)

              • ThankYouVeryMuch@kbin.social
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                6 months ago

                I’m not disabled, parking wouldn’t be a problem if I were, there’s lots of disabled parking spots, they set one at the person’s home and at the workplace if needed and then some randomly (not random, there are rules, like a spot every x shops, restaurants, bars…or something, don’t know very well how it works).

                That’s another for the list of nice things my city have, but they doesn’t solve the problem, they too get saturated just like the streets and roads, we all want to get to places at the same time. There are free spots in my neighborhood when I pick my car in the morning, we go and then come back at the same time to drive around trying to park putting our fumes into the air.

                The problem is the same for cars and public transportation. We need to have enough buses, trains, trams, rails and roads, people to operate them for the rush hour, and then what afterwards? And for cars is the same. Even my car, and I put an insane number of km and hours on the poor thing, is just parked, unused 92% of the time, same for the work van (a bit more use but still at 91%, so not delivery). Think of American school buses, it was really a sight for these European eyes to see one of those massive parking lot full of buses, they take the roads for two short periods five times a week and then back to the lot. There’s no obvious solution to this, if you ask me I would say we do too many things, we should slow down the doing things, specially working (it’s gonna be a chore to convince bosses and landlords tho).

                You could say it’s optional, I could commute (I posted some details in another comment) by metro-train-bus but that would be like five hours and a half round trip on a good day, or I could find another job closer to home, or another place closer to work. I just chose the option that makes my life less miserable, we all do.

                Doing things miserable for drivers is not the best way imho to take cars out of the road, and planing ahead for future use is usually good practice even if it means you have to build more parking lots and lanes, yes I know ‘booo lanes’, planing public transit, PROPER bike lanes, pedestrian streets etc must be imperative as well. You would not say that by setting those disabled spots you are inciting them to take the car instead of the pretty accesible public transportation, because going to/back from work in those packed to the brim trains/buses can be hell even for an abled body person like me I’ve done it for many years, I can’t imaging doing it in a wheelchair or waiting for another crammed bus or two because the chair spots are all occupied, out of the worst hours though can be a nice bus ride no matter what, wheelchair or not, or blind or whatever but accessibility goes down pretty fast when the conditions worsen.

                So I would not say it’s exactly optional for most people, or that there’s as much as a transition yet definitely not gonna go smoothly, and you can’t just through more trolleys at the problem (sorry) it has to go on many fronts, from wfh, working fewer hours, maybe banning suvs in city’s (everywhere?)… but well planned parking can also take cars out of the road, they are literally parked.

                Sorry for the wall of text I just got carried away

                • CanadaPlus@futurology.today
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                  6 months ago

                  That’s fine. I appreciate the effort, honestly.

                  You do live awfully far from work, based on your other comment. Doubly so if you’re in (probably western) Europe; that could be two entirely different regions of a country. Most of the drivers will not be going that far.

                  If you happen to be a farmer or otherwise need to commute to or from somewhere unpopulated, you’re in the “or something” in my comment, and other drivers need to get off the road (I’ll address the question of if less cars is really better a bit later). If you’re going from one populated area to another, it kind of seems like there should be an express bus, but I guess I don’t know what exact time you go to work or what other constraints the service has to deal with.

                  I’m not disabled, parking wouldn’t be a problem if I were, there’s lots of disabled parking spots, they set one at the person’s home and at the workplace if needed and then some randomly (not random, there are rules, like a spot every x shops, restaurants, bars…or something, don’t know very well how it works).

                  Oh shit, I forgot about that. My bad.

                  The problem is the same for cars and public transportation. We need to have enough buses, trains, trams, rails and roads, people to operate them for the rush hour, and then what afterwards? And for cars is the same.

                  Yeah, they are the same in many ways, but one’s much denser than the other. That’s just an incremental improvement for sure, but it’s something.

                  There is always misery when you need to get through a crowd. Having your own car can be convenient, especially if your movements are unusual, but then you need more space to store it in that other 90% of time you mentioned. We’re left with the question of which unrelated thing is better, and for the most part we’ve decided to solve those kinds of problems with a free market. In my country, and America, it is not a free market, but free parking has been mandated from unrelated businesses for decades.

                  I haven’t spent enough time abroad to really understand the pain of public transit, but I do understand the pain of everything being a highway or parking lot. Maybe “the grass is always greener on the other side”, but I suspect our situation really is suboptimal - even before you consider the hidden costs of emissions that have been there all along. Everywhere is flat, grey, dangerous and empty. I guess my point is, I don’t know why parking is such a nightmare for you, but I’ll need more than your word for it to be convinced Lemmy is wrong, and just the fact busses also have idle time isn’t enough.

        • KISSmyOS@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Ride a bicycle, then.
          If it’s true that you have to calculate a 1h buffer (+delays from traffic) any time you drive somewhere, then you’re faster on a bicycle for all distances shorter than 20 miles.

          • ThankYouVeryMuch@kbin.social
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            7 months ago

            Fucking lol there it is. I was talking specifically about my commute to work, which would be 100-120km (depending on the route) round-trip, that would be cycling 500-600km a week, and my work is already pretty demanding physically, I don’t sit at a desk and do fuck-all all day. Also this is by highways when bicycles aren’t permitted, the ride would be even longer. I bring with myself my work backpack with some tools, protection equipment, lunch… not huge but not small or light by any means.

            Riding a bicycle is not an option for me, I’ve considered a motorbike but decided it’s too dangerous to ride that much, which is another con for bikes. I know that the danger of riding a bike is mostly due to share the road with cars, trucks, vans… not because of the bikes themselves but the danger is mostly for the rider and I don’t wanna put myself at that risk

            Edit: also the parking time is only when I come back home, there’s plenty of parking space at my job

    • Pxtl
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      7 months ago

      Outcome of too much zoning regulation is tent cities.

      Outcome of zero zoning regulation is Kowloon Walled City.

      I’ll take Kowloon any day of the week.

        • Pxtl
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          7 months ago

          Over a tent city? Keep in mind I live in Canada. Tent city in Canadian winter might or might not be Hell, but it’s a good way to get there.

            • bluGill@kbin.social
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              7 months ago

              Where you live is a compromise. I want to have 100 square miles all my own, with my front door on Time’s square. (I’m using times square as a proxy for a desirable place to live, but since I’ve never been there I don’t know if that is actually where I’d want to live) That isn’t possible, but it is what I want. Sometimes I want to live on Broadway so those famous shows are easy to get to. Sometimes I want to live where I can safely shoot a gun off my back deck. When I feel like seeing people I want to live where there are a lot of people, when I feel like being alone I want to be far from civilization - yet I still want electric service. Everyone has forms of the above. suburbs are one compromise answer.

              • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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                7 months ago

                That’s the neat part: I don’t really ever want to be around people. Yes, theaters and museums and clubs are nice, but there’s still too goddamn many people and it stops being appealing when I realize I’ve got to deal with a bunch of psychotic apes.

                I’ll drag the solar panels out to the boonies myself if want electricity. I just do not want to be around people. If they’re half as awful as I am they’re not worth it.

                • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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                  7 months ago

                  I was going to reply with my usual pro city stuff but then I recognized your name and realized we’d already had the whole conversation. So, uh, hello again. Hope you’re making progress on your mountain home dreams.

      • CanadaPlus@futurology.today
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        7 months ago

        Kowloon city was crazy dense because it was a tiny tract of disputed land in an otherwise regulated urban area. An ancient city is actually a much more typical example, and yeah, I choose that. I’ll just get some noseplugs, avoid the most flammable areas, and wash my hands a lot.

        And, funny enough, tent cities are super against zoning and other regulation. Homeless people are supposed to leave at all times, wherever they happen to be, while being complained about.

    • bluGill@kbin.social
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      7 months ago

      Sure, but that least that city was pretty before it burned as the planner didn’t force every building to be white, yellow, or grey, with black shingles on the roof - they do require a “natural” brick facade half way up the front, but not the rest of the house. No other colors, no painting pictures on your walls. No energy efficient light color roofs.

      • CanadaPlus@futurology.today
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        7 months ago

        I mean, have you seen a picture from a third world slum? No planning probably means more colours, but I’m not sure wires running all over the place is your cup of tea.

  • KISSmyOS@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Fire_of_Rome

    After six days, the fire was brought under control, but before the damage could be assessed, the fire reignited and burned for another three days. In the aftermath of the fire, 71% of Rome had been destroyed.
    it is commonly agreed by historians now that Rome was so tightly packed a fire was inevitable.