LizzieMaine
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vintage68 said:What about cars? I find transportation costs to be very high, one reason being that one needs to drive everywhere these days. Communities just are not as small as they once were.
I went without a car for 12 years in San Francisco and loved it. When I lived outside Denver in Boulder however I just couldn't run all my errands walking, I had to drive since everything is so spread out. Same goes for Reno where I've temporarily relocated. No one walks here or takes public transportation since it's so bad.
The postwar infrastructure -- meaning most of suburbia -- was built entirely on the expectation that gasoline would always be cheap. When gasoline ceases to be cheap, those communities cease to be viable. It might not happen tomorrow or next year, but it's going to happen. Hence the "new urbanism," which is basically just the old pedestrian/public transportation oriented village/neighborhood life under a fancy new name.
Somewhere tonight, Robert Moses is being poked really hard by a laughing devil with a very sharp, sizzling hot poker.