|
Fasdar posted:If you like sprawl, check out Phoenix or Colorado Springs. Colorado Springs somehow managed to be 100% suburbs due to the large military presence in the area, with almost no high density residencies and a footprint the size of cities many, many times its population. Yeah, I've seen those because I spend way too much time looking at satellite images. Phoenix is insane, for a lack of a better term. The south west of the US is especially interesting because it's mostly desert but then you have sprawling suburbs everywhere. It attracts and repulses me at the same time, like a train wreck. I would consider those the real architectural failures.
|
# ? Aug 14, 2015 01:41 |
|
|
# ? Jun 7, 2024 15:08 |
|
just poppin in dis thread to say we already have a china.jpg thread ty & god bless
|
# ? Aug 14, 2015 02:19 |
|
Default Settings posted:I don't think I'm the only European who gets creeped out by aerial photography of US cities. I think European cities look stupid in aerial photographs, the streets make no sense! All the beauty is at ground level. Cities aren't supposed to be "natural," they're man-made. If you want American cities with unplanned street grids, you can always check out downtown Boston or Arlington, VA.
|
# ? Aug 15, 2015 20:43 |
|
ddddddffdfddddfddf posted:I live in Phoenix. Downtown is like 3 blocks. I live in Mesa, which is a suburb of Phoenix that is so vast that it is its own city. Same goes for Gilbert, and Queen Creek, and the rest of Maricopa. Its all suburbs all the time.
|
# ? Aug 15, 2015 20:54 |
|
Yad Rock posted:I think European cities look stupid in aerial photographs, the streets make no sense! All the beauty is at ground level. Try Bryn Mawr, PA. More 5+ way intersections than there are normal 3 or 4 way ones, in a packed urban setting. Some of the buildings tucked into the acute corners are just ridiculous (like our old doctor's office, which was less than a foot wide for more than 5 horizontal feet at one corner). gently caress ever driving through that town again.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 06:15 |
|
Splizwarf posted:Try Bryn Mawr, PA. More 5+ way intersections than there are normal 3 or 4 way ones, in a packed urban setting. Some of the buildings tucked into the acute corners are just ridiculous (like our old doctor's office, which was less than a foot wide for more than 5 horizontal feet at one corner). gently caress ever driving through that town again. Maybe I'm looking at the wrong photos but it doesn't look very packed to me. The main road is even a wide two-lane road. When I think of "packed" I think of any of the old city centers in any European city or in Japan/China/Korea etc..
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 08:11 |
|
Fasdar posted:If you like sprawl, check out Phoenix or Colorado Springs. Colorado Springs somehow managed to be 100% suburbs due to the large military presence in the area, with almost no high density residencies and a footprint the size of cities many, many times its population. I lived in a town outside of Colorado Springs from 1977 to 1980. Across the street from my house they were just starting to build a new development. Behind that area was 13,000 acres of undeveloped land. Now it is housing tract after housing tract. I used to ride my dirt bike where there is now nothing but Suburbistan.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 08:38 |
|
saucerman posted:Yeah, I've seen those because I spend way too much time looking at satellite images. Phoenix is insane, for a lack of a better term. The south west of the US is especially interesting because it's mostly desert but then you have sprawling suburbs everywhere. It attracts and repulses me at the same time, like a train wreck. I would consider those the real architectural failures. I'd say that was more town planning than architectural failure, not that there aren't plenty of architectural failures too.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 08:45 |
|
I don't know if I'd call it a failure, because it's one of the most popular housing modes in the world. European cities 100 years ago had a LOT of negative aspects but they're still considered a successful form, mainly because they were cleaned up and modernized without sacrificing the architecture. I'm sure if America manages to adopt electric cars while retrofitting suburbia a bit you can have all the good parts of the suburbs without too many negatives.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 09:58 |
|
Roy posted:I don't know if I'd call it a failure, because it's one of the most popular housing modes in the world. Popular doesn't mean it cannot be a failure. How would replacing one type of car with another car change anything? The way I see it the problem is the car dependency, not the type of fuel it uses (although that is an issue, too, of course). And what does retrofitting suburbia mean?
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 10:43 |
|
Well, if the cars are electric that opens up the possibility of powering them using green energy, and you minimize local pollution. Retrofitting means turning old strip-malls and such into small-town centres, increasing density, increasing walkability and adding public transport so that you get less car dependence, and an environment that at least opens up the possibility of not having to drive everywhere.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 11:12 |
|
Roy posted:Well, if the cars are electric that opens up the possibility of powering them using green energy, and you minimize local pollution. That's going to take a lot of work, considering how widespread the suburbs are, and I am not sure that is realistic.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 11:41 |
|
If your case is that it's not a failure because you can fix it by changing every aspect, then I think a reappraisal is in order.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 12:49 |
|
GotLag posted:If your case is that it's not a failure because you can fix it by changing every aspect, then I think a reappraisal is in order. To be fair, the failures of 1890 are today's gentrified hip neighborhoods. Suburbs have good and bad aspects just like everything else.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 13:21 |
|
It is rather phenomenal that it would cost me close to a million dollars to move into a neighborhood my grandparents tried very hard to get out of.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 13:37 |
|
genesplicer posted:I lived in a town outside of Colorado Springs from 1977 to 1980. Across the street from my house they were just starting to build a new development. Behind that area was 13,000 acres of undeveloped land. Now it is housing tract after housing tract. I used to ride my dirt bike where there is now nothing but Suburbistan. I moved to one of the fastest-expanding exurbs in Canada about 12 years ago. When we got there the nearest major intersection had no traffic lights and was surrounded by farmer's fields. Now it's 6 paved lanes wide in every direction and is bracketed by highrise apartments and a megamall. poo poo is ridiculous
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 14:21 |
|
I don't have much experience but I really do feel like all american suburbs need is decent cheap fast train runs into the city.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 14:26 |
|
MikeJF posted:I don't have much experience but I really do feel like all american suburbs need is decent cheap fast train runs into the city. We've got trains, but the problem is that it's still a suburb. So people have to actually drive to the train station, which in my case has its 1000+ car lot filled to capacity for the day no later than 7 AM, and it cost me ~$18 round-trip per day when I was doing a daily commute to the city proper before considering gas to actually get to the train station in the first place, and b/c its strictly a commuter train that has to share the tracks with commercial trains it only runs for periods in the morning and afternoon, and only one way each time. its basically the bare minimum necessary to enable daily commuters and let the exurb fill its purpose as an exurb but it isnt remotely adequate to actually connect the exurbs to the city in a healthy or useful way for anything beyond 9-5 trips
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 14:34 |
|
Ambrose Burnside posted:We've got trains, but the problem is that it's still a suburb. So people have to actually drive to the train station, which in my case has its 1000+ car lot filled to capacity for the day no later than 7 AM, and it cost me ~$18 round-trip per day when I was doing a daily commute to the city proper before considering gas to actually get to the train station in the first place, and b/c its strictly a commuter train that has to share the tracks with commercial trains it only runs for periods in the morning and afternoon, and only one way each time. its basically the bare minimum necessary to enable daily commuters and let the exurb fill its purpose as an exurb but it isnt remotely adequate to actually connect the exurbs to the city in a healthy or useful way for anything beyond 9-5 trips Yeah, I was imagining lines that actually splayed out into the suburb itself, gave more of the suburb reasonable connectivity so you could just head down to the train station and hop on. Or possibly something like 'run a train through the suburb with regular stops, then perpendicular shuttle busses or light rail'. You know, an actually thought out train network rather than 'gently caress it, slap a line down'.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 14:55 |
|
Roy posted:Well, if the cars are electric that opens up the possibility of powering them using green energy, and you minimize local pollution. That'd be a neat trick considering a) how large the US actually is and b) Americans really like their space. As an example, when I was shopping for a house about 5 years ago, I wouldn't even consider any place with less than 1/3 acre of land.
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 18:27 |
|
I want to get off Mr. Eisenhower's wild ride
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 19:21 |
|
drat NIGGA posted:I want to get off Mr. Eisenhower's wild ride The Persistence of Concrete
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 19:38 |
|
drat NIGGA posted:I want to get off Mr. Eisenhower's wild ride As egregious a photoshop as any other
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 20:01 |
|
drat NIGGA posted:I want to get off Mr. Eisenhower's wild ride Just imagine, all those people could fit into one single bus if they used public transport
|
# ? Aug 16, 2015 20:22 |
Roy posted:Just imagine, all those people could fit into one single bus if they used public transport big bus
|
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 00:50 |
|
I read this whole thread and i learned, if not to love architecture, to better hate bad architecture
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 01:15 |
|
Roy posted:Well, if the cars are electric that opens up the possibility of powering them using green energy, and you minimize local pollution. Coincidentally, I stumbled upon this article today: http://www.voxeu.org/article/measuring-environmental-benefits-electric-vehicles (No idea how reliable their analysis is, though)
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 01:26 |
|
drat NIGGA posted:I want to get off Mr. Eisenhower's wild ride Imagine if the government proposed a high speed train line that loving wide. DC would burn to the ground.
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 01:35 |
|
Roy posted:Just imagine, all those people could fit into one single bus if they used public transport Nah, they can afford cars
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 03:30 |
|
saucerman posted:Coincidentally, I stumbled upon this article today: Makes some good points. By changing to electric cars you have half the job done though even if the electricity grid is dirty. Seems like a logical first step, so long as it's done in conjunction with cleaning up the grid.
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 10:02 |
|
AutoArgus posted:As egregious a photoshop as any other That looks plausible enough to me, even if the tele compression exaggerates the bumps and curves?
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 13:03 |
|
drat NIGGA posted:I want to get off Mr. Eisenhower's wild ride HAhaahhaah lol America
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 13:56 |
drat NIGGA posted:I want to get off Mr. Eisenhower's wild ride Ah, Houston. Who needs proper public transit when you can build a 15 lane freeway flanked by expressways, that still gets completely backed up with traffic?
|
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 16:50 |
|
drat NIGGA posted:I want to get off Mr. Eisenhower's wild ride
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 17:08 |
|
drat NIGGA posted:I want to get off Mr. Eisenhower's wild ride how the hell do you drive in that thing
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 18:23 |
|
Just to show it isn't just americans that can gently caress up suburbs: a fun story about a london suburb being built without transport, shops, or anything other than houses link
a pipe smoking dog fucked around with this message at 18:45 on Aug 17, 2015 |
# ? Aug 17, 2015 18:30 |
|
ulvir posted:how the hell do you drive in that thing Seriously, if you accidentally get into the middle lane is there even a way to get out again, or are you like just forever trapped forced to drive the Huston highway till the heat death of the universe.
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 18:34 |
|
AutoArgus posted:As egregious a photoshop as any other Look how dumb you are https://www.google.com/maps/@29.7844367,-95.4647707,104a,20y,270h,83.19t/data=!3m1!1e3
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 18:34 |
|
dr_rat posted:Seriously, if you accidentally get into the middle lane is there even a way to get out again, or are you like just forever trapped forced to drive the Huston highway till the heat death of the universe. yeah, looks like an express lane or HOV lane and they open up every so often to merge back into regular traffic and sometimes have their own exits plus that's not even that bad. spaghetti junction in atlanta is way more confusing and can be terrifying when there are huge trucks and nobody's letting you merge into traffic
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 18:52 |
|
|
# ? Jun 7, 2024 15:08 |
|
Genuine question. Where is the "hip" part of Houston? Is there any?
|
# ? Aug 17, 2015 19:05 |