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  #46  
Old 08-29-2021, 03:47 PM
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Originally Posted by MikeD View Post
+1 I hope I never have to go back to living in an apartment. Wouldn't want to live in a densely populated, big city either, like NYC.
That place is a nightmare
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  #47  
Old 08-29-2021, 03:51 PM
.RJ .RJ is offline
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Originally Posted by bicycletricycle View Post
High density life is low quality life.
Is it? I have a quiet neighborhood, nice neighbors, a great bike shop 2 miles away and if we ever go back to work my office is 2 miles the other way. I've got group rides nearby 4 or 5 days a week, I can walk or ride to the grocery store or post office, amazon same or next day delivery for most things. Hospital with good health care network 3 miles another direction. And so on down the list.
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  #48  
Old 08-29-2021, 03:51 PM
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I understand that this thread was started as a discussion on density, but density is just one factor in living satisfaction, and "living space" is not a synonym for density.
It is an interesting discussion, but i think "living satisfaction", at least in north america is directly tied to cash flow. people and families who earn a decent living, significantly above the poverty line have a lot more flexibility in where they can live and have significantly more discretionary "leisure time" to do things they like to do. people who earn a marginal "paycheck to paycheck" amount of money are much more tied to the infrastructure associated with their jobs and are much more likely to feel "stuck" in a place they dont really enjoy living but need to in order to survive.

seems to me all the other stuff is fluff and personal preference. mostly people live in the best place they can afford to live based on their individual cash flow.
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  #49  
Old 08-29-2021, 03:56 PM
XXtwindad XXtwindad is offline
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Originally Posted by AngryScientist;297808[B
5]i think the pandemic has changed a lot of people's minds, even hard core NYC'ers about living in the city. not only does communicable disease spread like wildfire in densely populated urban centers that share crowded transportation systems and public spaces, but when you need to confine yourself for whatever reason to your home, a little space is golden. [/B]

I also do not buy the higher density equals higher taxes which translates to better public services like schools. in theory that works, but in practice, as i am witnessing, it fails miserably.
The statistics don’t bear that out. Among the states with the highest COVID rates (per every 100,000 residents), only one would be considered “densely populated”: Florida. Public policy has much more to do with health than density.

https://www.statista.com/statistics/...cans-by-state/
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  #50  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:01 PM
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Originally Posted by XXtwindad View Post
The statistics don’t bear that out. Among the states with the highest COVID rates (per every 100,000 residents), only one would be considered “densely populated”: Florida. Public policy has much more to do with health than density.

https://www.statista.com/statistics/...cans-by-state/
when it comes to NY, state data is worthless. what happens in the Bronx and what happens in a deep upstate small town may as well be two different countries.
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  #51  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:04 PM
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Originally Posted by bicycletricycle View Post
That place is a nightmare
I agree, but to each their own. One of my daughters lives there and loves it. All I felt was noise, crowds, and pollution. I saw a playground that was completely paved. Not just the basketball courts, but also the monkey bars, swings, etc.
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  #52  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:05 PM
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I am glad you like your home

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Originally Posted by .RJ View Post
Is it? I have a quiet neighborhood, nice neighbors, a great bike shop 2 miles away and if we ever go back to work my office is 2 miles the other way. I've got group rides nearby 4 or 5 days a week, I can walk or ride to the grocery store or post office, amazon same or next day delivery for most things. Hospital with good health care network 3 miles another direction. And so on down the list.
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  #53  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:08 PM
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bicycletricycle bicycletricycle is offline
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I agree, but to each their own. One of my daughters lives there and loves it. All I felt was noise, crowds, and pollution. I saw a playground that was completely paved. Not just the basketball courts, but also the monkey bars, swings, etc.
I ain’t trying to make decisions for other people, I’m glad cities exist for city people.
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  #54  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:11 PM
.RJ .RJ is offline
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Originally Posted by bicycletricycle View Post
I am glad you like your home
I do and I get that its not for everyone there's a lot of appeal to having some space and clean air - but not everyone wants to have long travel times just to afford housing and this is the problem we're in. I would have a hard time living in a filing cabinet (apartment building) at this point in my life but I dont think that has to define "density" either.
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  #55  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:13 PM
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Originally Posted by bicycletricycle View Post
I’m glad cities exist for city people.
Amen. I can't imagine living in a city....or a suburb for that matter.

For brick and mortar breed filth and crime,
With a pulse of evil that throbs and beats;
And men are whithered before their prime
By the curse paved in with the lanes and streets.

And lungs are poisoned and shoulders bowed,
In the smothering reek of mill and mine;
And death stalks in on the struggling crowd—
But he shuns the shadow of the oak and pine.


Nessmuk (George Washington Sears), 1884
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  #56  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:34 PM
verticaldoug verticaldoug is offline
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Originally Posted by choke View Post
Amen. I can't imagine living in a city....or a suburb for that matter.

For brick and mortar breed filth and crime,
With a pulse of evil that throbs and beats;
And men are whithered before their prime
By the curse paved in with the lanes and streets.

And lungs are poisoned and shoulders bowed,
In the smothering reek of mill and mine;
And death stalks in on the struggling crowd—
But he shuns the shadow of the oak and pine.


Nessmuk (George Washington Sears), 1884
It's funny to quote the 1880's. The lovely pastoral life you enjoy now is not the life the rural communities enjoyed back then. I think the country squalor was just as bad for average folk as city squalor. That's why many moved to the city. You should review what living on a croft was like in Britian back in the day. Or be a sharecropper in southern US after the war. Or why there was mass migration from the countryside in China to modern Chinese Cities. It wasn't forced. It was to escape poverty. Your romance is misquided.

It sucks to be poor no matter where you are.
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  #57  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:39 PM
jds108 jds108 is offline
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Originally Posted by XXtwindad View Post
That type of thinking has yielded catastrophic results.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...ange-nightmare
Except that article's premise has nothing to back up the author's opinion. It's also entirely possible that CA's forest fires are mostly due to poor or nonexistent forestry management. I'd say they're cleary due to the combination of draught and mismanagement, neither of which have anything to do with population density.
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  #58  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:45 PM
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Mike V Mike V is offline
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Originally Posted by .RJ View Post
Is it? I have a quiet neighborhood, nice neighbors, a great bike shop 2 miles away and if we ever go back to work my office is 2 miles the other way. I've got group rides nearby 4 or 5 days a week, I can walk or ride to the grocery store or post office, amazon same or next day delivery for most things. Hospital with good health care network 3 miles another direction. And so on down the list.

Where is this utopia you speak of?
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  #59  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:46 PM
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Originally Posted by verticaldoug View Post
It's funny to quote the 1880's. ....

It sucks to be poor no matter where you are.
This is what I was thinking....NYC, London, really any big city of the 1880s was pretty miserable....not that I was there mind you....
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  #60  
Old 08-29-2021, 04:49 PM
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tctyres tctyres is offline
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Originally Posted by jds108 View Post
Except that article's premise has nothing to back up the author's opinion. It's also entirely possible that CA's forest fires are mostly due to poor or nonexistent forestry management. I'd say they're cleary due to the combination of draught and mismanagement, neither of which have anything to do with population density.
Forest fires are a combination of mismanagement but more importantly drought caused by climate change. The Camp Fire of 2018, one of the two most costly in CA history, was caused by PG&E equipment that the company had failed to improve. PG&E was found responsible but only paid out a tiny fraction of the cost. (https://www.npr.org/2020/06/16/87900...rted-that-fire)

The losses in dollar amounts are caused by population densification at the forest along rural, suburban, and urban interfaces. In fact, I was on a call two weeks ago where one of California's leading insurers said that California is basically uninsurable with respect to fire. That person was talking about homes, mainly, but also other structures. Paradise will not be rebuilt without additional safety measures in place.

Last edited by tctyres; 08-29-2021 at 04:54 PM.
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