Posted Feb 14, 2022, 7:27 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: May 2017
Location: Chicago
Posts: 1,273
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It could ultimately make cities significantly better, because rural and suburban-minded people will no longer take up valuable urban housing while also trying to kill any progressive urban initiatives because of “parking” or “traffic”. Neighborhoods will no longer be exclusively residential (dead during the day) or exclusively commercial (dead at night) as office space gets converted to multi family and hotels.
Many millions of people truly enjoy living in a dense urban environment full of diversity of experience and people. Where someone needs to physically be for work is only one part of a life lived. It’s funny how obvious it is which members of this forum would assume everyone only reluctantly lives in cities..
Frankly, remote work makes city living more appealing, not less. I can’t imagine being in a big empty house in a sprawling quiet neighborhood day and night, with my only escape a 15 minute drive away to a Coopers Hawk or strip mall sushi joint.
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