^ EDIT: this guy gets it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by iheartthed
My point is that it is possible to create neighborhoods where driving to buy groceries is not the norm.
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No one is denying that it's possible, we're just pushing back against the notion that such a future is remotely realistic, at scale, for a city like Milwaukee in any of our lifetimes.
Brooklyn scale density (40 - 50K ppsm across dozens of contiguous sq. miles) is simply setting the bar too high for a city who's core 50 sq. miles currently averages about 8,500 ppsm.
A far more realistic goal for the cream city would be to target an "urban Chicago" average density of ~20,000 ppsm across a broad area.
At that density, most large supermarkets will still have parking.
Quote:
Originally Posted by iheartthed
Personally, I don't get why anyone would want to live in a dense area and still have to drive for all of their regular errands.
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You seem not to grasp how middle ground urbanism (such as my neighborhood of Lincoln Square) functions.
It's not that you have to drive everywhere for regular errands, it's more that ownership of a car is not terribly onerous/expensive, such that you can drive to some things if you want to, and also walk/bike/transit to lots of other things as well.
It's a both/and kind of world that would likely be foreign to many urban core NYers, though probably familiar to folks in outter queens, or wherever in New York people live where they can both walk/transit to stuff, and also own a car (that they might not use on a daily basis).
Example from my world, there are two grocery stores within easy walking distance of our home (an Aldi's and local independent that focuses on "real" food (produce, butcher, deli, bakery, etc.). Both have small parking lots. I still walk to them the vast majority of the time because it's simply easier than getting in the car and dealing with their small ass parking lots (that are often at full capacity). However, if the weather sucks, or I know I'm getting a bunch of heavy shit (milk, juice, water, other liquids), I will infrequently drive and utilize their parking lots.
both/and.
Most of the urbanism found in the second tier US cities outside of NYC functions like middle ground urbanism outside of a few rarified pockets of very high density. NYC is the only place in the country where you have very high density at scale across 100+ sq. miles of land.
As I said earlier in the tread: NYC is a
CRAZY outlier.