I am wary of arguments that we need to do other difficult to do things like improving transit before we can build housing...
I’m not exactly sure if that’s what I mean or not. What I mean is that if you build housing with no infrastructure (like kindergartens or clinics or schools etc), maybe people won’t actually come to live there. You have to some way make sure to offer actually valuable essential goods and not bad ones.
I’m not exactly sure if that’s what I mean or not. What I mean is that if you build housing with no infrastructure (like kindergartens or clinics or schools etc), maybe people won’t actually come to live there. You have to some way make sure to offer actually valuable essential goods and not bad ones.
Yes, this is an interesting problem with new smart/planned cities! Probably not a problem with New York, San Francisco, and San Jose though