Quote:
Originally Posted by Cirrus
It's very unfortunate that Denver's urbanist blogosphere is so balcanized. It's too bad DenverInfill, DenverUrbanism, and Denver Streetsblog aren't a single one-stop shop.
Anyway, all of them take guest posts. If you think they're missing a voice, write more for them. That's how the internet works: Whoever talks the most wins. You can complain, or you can do something to fix it. It's totally up to you.
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I look at it this way. Imagine how lonely the "urbanist blogosphere" must be south of the Mason-Dixon Line although I'd be tempted to give Charlotte a pass.
The DC metro area, NYC and other NE-ern cities, the Bay area, Portland and now Seattle are an urban paradise compared to cities in southern states. But when State Farm sets up regional farms of 2 million sq. ft. in Atlanta, Dallas/Richardson and Phoenix/Tempe it moves the economic needle. They did choose to be near rail transit in each location so there is some urban/transit energy even in the South.
But affordability and sprawl still rule the day down south. Airplanes, autos, defense, insurance, you name it and there's been a huge migration to southern states. Even laggard Arizona now seems to be racking up wins every other week. A NYC software company just chose Scottsdale over Portland, Denver and Austin for one primary reason: affordability.
At least in Colorado things seem to oscillate on either side of the middle line which is a good thing IMO.