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fishmech posted:The cores are already packed with traffic, and have been for decades. Particularly in cities like Brussels and London. London inner core is a perfect example of a good urban core. Tiny streets, plenty of one way systems, many 1-2 lane streets and almost completely devoid of a grid system makes it a nightmare to drive, which is a good thing. Compare and contrast to many American cities which use wider streets, with more room for cars and a complete adherence to a grid like system. fishmech posted:They've been building a ton more highways and motorways all across Europe, especially because of the ongoing growth of truck-based shipping, due to lack of suitable freight railroad options (unlike the United States) and there are certainly a ton more parking lots built in the outlying areas. Which is fine. Again, if suburbia wants to drive around in suburbia, be my guest. But trying to accommodate them going to the core via car is the problem. Edit: Also inter-city goods transportation is a whole separate subject from commuting. White Rock fucked around with this message at 12:37 on Jun 28, 2017 |
# ? Jun 28, 2017 12:34 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 02:21 |
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fishmech posted:You are giving way too much credit to European and Asian cities for being well designed and not sprawl, because tons of them are poorly designed and sprawl like crazy. Prague is way bigger of a clusterfuck than most American cities, but it at least has a good tram/metro system that makes sense. Americans have no excuse for their urban areas.
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# ? Jun 28, 2017 12:46 |
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call to action posted:But the minute an area gets great, reliable transit, it's going to be turned in to luxury live/work condos. Look at places near the subway, or BART, or light rail in different cities and you'll find better transit pushes property values way up and poor people out. Denver, again, is terrible about this - the W light rail line turned a bunch of working class neighborhoods into upper middle class ones. I'd suspect this effect is not as pronounced in areas with widespread public transport. In areas where it is scare it will be valuable. The solution here is to keep on building it until it doesn't have a massive effect on property prices (and charge the surrounding areas so the government can claw back some of the profits gotten by the landowners (then spend it on more PT))
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 13:52 |
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Tehdas posted:I'd suspect this effect is not as pronounced in areas with widespread public transport. In areas where it is scare it will be valuable. I'd be interested in seeing a map of either rents or property prices in a city with a large, established public transit network, like London, Madrid, Moscow, NYC, etc. My personal feeling is that proximity to a subway station still commands a significant premium, but that the radius of that effect is smaller. What I mean is that you'd still expect flats right next to a metro station, as well as commercial rents, would be quite high, but places 1km or more away would basically return to the mean -- whereas in a city with limited public transportation, the radius of that effect could be 2-3km much more easily. I admit this is just my personal feeling and I haven't bothered to try backing it up with data.
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 15:08 |
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Tehdas posted:I'd suspect this effect is not as pronounced in areas with widespread public transport. In areas where it is scare it will be valuable. That sounds like a great idea, but I wonder how many people will want to continue paying for transit buildout once it's no longer benefitting them.
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 15:08 |
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fishmech posted:A train derailment that ended without anyone needing serious medical treatment. It really, truly, wasn't a big deal. We get far more deadly car incidents on daily commutes, that ain't stopping people from driving. I meant that comment as more of a general indicator of the long-term decline of the NJ/NY transit system, with the derailment being just the latest data point. Obviously it's still a massive system and moves tons of people, but if the current trajectory continues it could have a really deleterious effect on the city. Not to mention if there's another storm and this time it knocks out the Hudson tunnels for good.
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 15:11 |
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call to action posted:That sounds like a great idea, but I wonder how many people will want to continue paying for transit buildout once it's no longer benefitting them.
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 15:29 |
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Mozi posted:I meant that comment as more of a general indicator of the long-term decline of the NJ/NY transit system, with the derailment being just the latest data point. Obviously it's still a massive system and moves tons of people, but if the current trajectory continues it could have a really deleterious effect on the city. Not to mention if there's another storm and this time it knocks out the Hudson tunnels for good. Millenials are KILLING the NYC metro!! https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/06/28/nyregion/subway-delays-overcrowding.html
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 15:51 |
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call to action posted:That sounds like a great idea, but I wonder how many people will want to continue paying for transit buildout once it's no longer benefitting them. We live in a society where we understand that a burden shared is a burden lessened. Or at least, we should understand that.
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 15:51 |
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Cicero posted:I mean even if good transit comes by your house, when it gets extended elsewhere that means more places you can go. This also speaks to a zoning problem. If you're building large amounts of residential with few businesses, and then hooking it up to transit, that's not helping anyone except the people who live there. If you ensure transit-focused development has a good mixture of retail space, office space, professional buildings, restaurants, bars, etc., then all of a sudden that good transit system can take people already living on a transit line to a new place they might want to go. A large problem with how transit is designed in Calgary is it's very much meant as a system to take people in and out of downtown. Essentially all of the bus lines and train lines go from a neighbourhood into the core, so it's difficult to use transit as a way of actually getting around the city from point to point.
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 16:05 |
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Cicero posted:I mean even if good transit comes by your house, when it gets extended elsewhere that means more places you can go. But eventually public transport will make its way to THE POORS and then they can take the train to your neighborhood with their booze and their weeds and steal your television. An actual argument that was made against the smart train in the North Bay
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 16:07 |
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Great Metal Jesus posted:But eventually public transport will make its way to THE POORS and then they can take the train to your neighborhood with their booze and their weeds and steal your television. Yeah, here too, while arguing against a bus rapid transit expansion. These people are so sheltered they've obviously never even tried bringing a large thing they've bought on the bus with them.
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 16:10 |
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PT6A posted:This also speaks to a zoning problem. If you're building large amounts of residential with few businesses, and then hooking it up to transit, that's not helping anyone except the people who live there.
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 16:13 |
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Cicero posted:I mean it can also alleviate pressure on roads and let others visit friends they may have in the area. But I agree with your wider point, better to zone to allow retail/commercial space near transit hubs outside the city core too. As I expanded on, another big problem is if you have a hub-and-spoke model, which I would think is reasonably common, even that's difficult unless you live downtown. It's minimum three "segments" some of which only run every 30 to 60 minutes. With two segments you can easily time a connection, but more than that and things start getting dicey. One thing I liked about Montreal was, apart from the metro system, a lot of the buses seemed to go up and down arterial roads instead of serving specific communities. That was a good system because it took advantage of the grid system, rather than a lovely hub-and-spoke model.
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# ? Jun 30, 2017 16:19 |
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Great Metal Jesus posted:But eventually public transport will make its way to THE POORS and then they can take the train to your neighborhood with their booze and their weeds and steal your television. This was the excuse used whenever a light rail system was tabled in Orlando in the 1990's. It got so bad that the fear of the 'other' (read: scareh blacks and latinos) was so bad that it jumped hosts and was part of the reason why they put the high speed rail idea between Atlanta, Tampa, O-town and Miami on permanent ice. As if poor people are going to be riding bullet trains from Metro Miami or ATL just to come gently caress with you in Winter Park. Speaking of Transit chat...I think NYC and environs is the right formula due to its age. All the train stations say in Lower Westchester, where I happen to reside...are all little mini cores that have mixed use, multi family and multi story units that radiate out from the train station. It's sort of neat that there's an old Bank of New York building at every single stop of the Harlem and New Haven Lines (haven't ridden the Hudson in ages and I think it's different). If we could do that and combine it with an idea like ReThink it would be a massive boon. Actually, here's the plan: http://www.rethinknyc.org/ It's amazing, the only problem is that it puts Grand Central in a sort of bind for various reasons (I'm not going to nerd out here).
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# ? Jul 1, 2017 00:43 |
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Yeah that used to be the main MO for transit, it wasn't a money pit to help poors get around, it was a method of getting rich off realestate. This is still pretty much the model in japan. Railway company buys up a huge chunk of land and builds a suburban train station in the middle and connects it to its metro rail system. They then personally develop the land around the station, a shopping centre, a hotel, apartments. it's not loving parking lots, they aren't doing any park and ride bullshit they're maximizing the valuable land immediately around the station to its fullest both to earn money off the leases/sales as well as make the population and transport patterns funnel into the station for ticket revenue as well. The US used to have a ton of this. Light rail lines servicing developments that spring into little nearly self-sufficient little communities centered around the station, street car suburbs, that sort of thing. The transit drove the land use patterns and was used as a tool of generating long term wealth and patterning transport around transit. Now though we wait for an area to sprawl out, then we spend a fortune building some lovely LRT system through while often allowing nimby's to keep the area low density and wasting all the most valuable land around the stations for parking lots.
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# ? Jul 1, 2017 01:12 |
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Let's maybe split off the urban planning chat into its own thread?blowfish posted:Did it involve insufficient amounts of capitalism? ...kinda? Inner Harbour worked because there was a really favorable environment for it(a very complex calculus there), really tuned in and well-coordinated muni government, a ton of commercial and industry interest (there's your capitalism), and related geographic players had an interest. Most places that think they "need" or could be "saved" by an equivalent project don't know what they're doing, or the very reasons they need it mean it can't work. Discendo Vox fucked around with this message at 01:36 on Jul 1, 2017 |
# ? Jul 1, 2017 01:28 |
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Baronjutter posted:Yeah that used to be the main MO for transit, it wasn't a money pit to help poors get around, it was a method of getting rich off realestate. This is still pretty much the model in japan. Railway company buys up a huge chunk of land and builds a suburban train station in the middle and connects it to its metro rail system. They then personally develop the land around the station, a shopping centre, a hotel, apartments. it's not loving parking lots, they aren't doing any park and ride bullshit they're maximizing the valuable land immediately around the station to its fullest both to earn money off the leases/sales as well as make the population and transport patterns funnel into the station for ticket revenue as well. Well you're hardly going to get all the land that's already been built on taken by the government to be sold to some railroad for barely anything, which is how that would have to work now that development already happened. Otherwise you're just building more sprawl to start on land that's just owned by a government entity or some farmers willing to sell out for cheap.
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# ? Jul 1, 2017 04:38 |
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Visiting Toronto got me interested in urban design and transit infrastructure, and having followed that city's development (as well as the suburban people yelling about a "war on cars" for any funding alternatives at all) for a decade now I'm willing to say go ahead and implement a gently caress CARS agenda. Transit inherently is going to carry around a disadvantage in that nobody willingly wants to be in intimate proximity of total strangers, as well as the stigma that the only people riding it are the people too poor to use cars. People just would rather be in personal pods that take them directly on their chosen route. So the answer to this is the raise the cost of driving in urban areas until you can't look down on people too poor to drive in the city because that faction also includes you.
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# ? Jul 3, 2017 04:03 |
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In Seattle, car registration renewals are like 4x bigger than usual suddenly because of a mass transit levy that recently passed. People are hooting and hollering about a war on cars but I say gently caress em let's build more rapid rail transit.
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# ? Jul 3, 2017 04:53 |
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A goddamn men.
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# ? Jul 3, 2017 05:50 |
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Great Metal Jesus posted:But eventually public transport will make its way to THE POORS and then they can take the train to your neighborhood with their booze and their weeds and steal your television. And elsewhere. If not explicitly. Some dude is deffo going to take the 2pm into the city carrying your flat screen and get away with it
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# ? Jul 3, 2017 13:17 |
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SHY NUDIST GRRL posted:And elsewhere. If not explicitly. Some dude is deffo going to take the 2pm into the city carrying your flat screen and get away with it That was the same argument made to kill light rail service from dfw airport / dart to cowboy stadium
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# ? Jul 4, 2017 00:09 |
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*Stares at $123.47 Sears Holding share price* Uh... that's one huge dead cat bounce...
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# ? Jul 4, 2017 01:17 |
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Horseshoe theory posted:*Stares at $123.47 Sears Holding share price* Why would it possibly be up that high? Can you explain what causes that?
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# ? Jul 4, 2017 01:26 |
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there's a bug in yahoo finance. many stocks are reporting as 123.47 EDIT: or somewhere upstream of yahoo finance
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# ? Jul 4, 2017 01:32 |
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FamDav posted:there's a bug in yahoo finance. many stocks are reporting as 123.47 Yeah it's some bigger thing. https://www.theverge.com/2017/7/3/15917950/nasdaq-nyse-stock-market-data-error
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# ? Jul 4, 2017 03:24 |
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WrenP-Complete posted:Yeah it's some bigger thing. the world economy will be destroyed by a fat-fingered computer janitor
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# ? Jul 4, 2017 08:12 |
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*Chucks True Religion onto the bankrupt chain cart*
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 01:03 |
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We have a new business model for failing retail: http://time.com/4846516/hobby-lobby-department-of-justice-iraq-artifacts-smuggle/ Just smuggle stolen culture artifacts as tile samples! And then...uh, well, I don't know what Phase 2 of this Master Plan is.
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 01:20 |
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glowing-fish posted:We have a new business model for failing retail: Well I mean does anyone see them funding a $500 million MUSEUM OF BIBLE off of the profit margins of running a hobby based retail store and go 'oh yeah that's legit'
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 01:38 |
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Uncle Jam posted:Well I mean does anyone see them funding a $500 million MUSEUM OF BIBLE off of the profit margins of running a hobby based retail store and go 'oh yeah that's legit' I thought it was a meth lab front, to be honest.
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 01:41 |
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Uncle Jam posted:Well I mean does anyone see them funding a $500 million MUSEUM OF BIBLE off of the profit margins of running a hobby based retail store and go 'oh yeah that's legit' They don't sell much hobby stuff tbh most of their profit comes from home decor stuff of which they charge an arm and a leg for. They're actually quite profitable. And the owners are crazy Christians who don't allow barcode scanners to be used because they're the mark of the devil or some such nonsense
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 03:09 |
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Researching the (shamefully true) story of Hobby Lobby's barcode hatred, I foundthis story about the magical $90 throw pillows that live in clearance sections of Hobby Lobbies across the country.
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 03:18 |
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Raldikuk posted:They don't sell much hobby stuff tbh most of their profit comes from home decor stuff of which they charge an arm and a leg for. They're actually quite profitable. And the owners are crazy Christians who don't allow barcode scanners to be used because they're the mark of the devil or some such nonsense These days they like to claim "oh it would cost too much to change to barcodes now" but everyone can see that's blatantly false.
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 03:55 |
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DC Murderverse posted:Researching the (shamefully true) story of Hobby Lobby's barcode hatred, I foundthis story about the magical $90 throw pillows that live in clearance sections of Hobby Lobbies across the country. Stores have been doing shenanigans like that for as long as stores have existed, really. As terrible as Hobby Lobby is that isn't unique to them. There are entire chains of stores that do things like sell their jeans at cost but put them aaaaaaaall the way in the back so you have to walk past literally everything else to get there. That or "EVERYTHING MUST GO!!!! UP TO 90% OFF!!!!!" but they only have one thing that was 90% off and they just happened to not have it in stock and oh you'll get an average of 5% off on everything else in the store and we just happened to raise all our prices the day before the sale went on. It's all just a total amazing coincidence!!!
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 03:58 |
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People, the RETAILERS have been LYING to us ALL ALONG.
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 04:38 |
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QVC, The Home Shopping Network, and Infusion Brands (Makers of "As Seen on TV" products) are all merging under a buyout deal from QVC. You can buy your slapchop, overpriced jewelry, and authentic japanese katanas all in one place for another couple of years before this new company goes bankrupt.
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 18:45 |
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Why the gently caress is there a bible museum in the USA anyway? Makes no loving sense.
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 19:25 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 02:21 |
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I heard an ad on the radio for Amazon warehouse jobs in Sumner, WA so I headed over to the website to check it out. Some highlights: quote:Amazon lets customers order whatever they need, whenever they need. Flexibility is key, associates should be open to extra hours, time off, and a rapid pace. quote:Temperature in our warehouses may vary between 60 and 90 degrees, and will occasionally exceed 90 degrees. quote:Flex, not just your muscles - you are willing and able to work all shifts
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# ? Jul 6, 2017 19:33 |