• @Waker
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    1 year ago

    I’m not American so I might not fully understand the repercussions of this. (houses being demolished and stuff)

    But I honestly prefer the current version. It seems to have more green spaces. The highways could be shit, but if it meant better public transportation them I’m all for it (buses for instance). Maybe kill a few lanes and get a train going there or something…

    I don’t know, the old layout seems very claustrophobic to me. The newer one seems to have more potential.

    Edit: Upon reviewing the picture again, I think the previous version had a lot of parks that seemed “claustrophobic” but it’s just because it’s a B&W picture… So maybe I’d change my mind and go with the older one.

    • @adrian783
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      171 year ago

      they demolished a medium density neighborhood for highways so suburbs can commute in and out of inner city. when you destroy neighborhoods and create “green space”, people don’t just stop existing. they either get pushed to the suburbs if they can afford it, or (most likely) the ghettos.

      and how does highway create public transit?

      highway is a mechanism to separate the undesired that cannot afford cars. kill a few lanes and build trains would mean “those people” can reach “our neighborhoods”.

    • @Filthmontane
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      91 year ago

      Back when they built highways, they used them to segregate neighborhoods. Also, the US has dog shit public transit. Buses are terrible and trains are barely existent. The entire country is built around automobiles.

      • @Waker
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        31 year ago

        Yeah, I sometimes complain about my country’s public transportation but you guys have it worse…

        • @Filthmontane
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          21 year ago

          I live in Florida, too. It’s the worst here.

        • @uis
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          21 year ago

          You have public transport only because you did complain

      • @grue
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        11 year ago

        Also, the US has dog shit public transit. Buses are terrible and trains are barely existent. The entire country is built around automobiles.

        Nope! The very area we’re looking at here used to have an extensive streetcar network:

        The notion that the US was built around automobiles is a goddamn scurrilous lie. It was built for walking and transit just like everywhere else, and then it was demolished for automobiles!

      • @Waker
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        11 year ago

        I haven’t checked the video yet (but I 100% will) but that’s absolutely how I feel too. I’m from Europe and the big cities are usually easily navigated without a car. Smaller cities maybe not so much BUT, you can still kindof easily walk to ride a bike somewhere.

        I’m always surprised when watching American movies that there’s not sidewalk if you leave the city centers. That’s is absolutely incomprehensible to me lol I can walk from my city to the next 3 or 4 neighboring cities all by walking and using the sidewalk.

        • @AngryCommieKender
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          1 year ago

          The scale is the issue. You won’t find many places in Europe where the next town over is over 100 miles (200 km) away. Get even 150 miles from the coasts in the US and you can easily find places where that is the case.

          • @Waker
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            31 year ago

            Indeed, but even within the city, I’ve seen places where the sidewalk just disappears.

            Distances are absolutely massive in the US though, yeah…

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            I don’t think that’s the case. My country is also big, cities are apart by hundreds of km. But our cities still are dense, there are (almost) no suburbs, and roads are not giants. In my city (2nd largest in the country) the largest roads have 6 lanes. There is only 1 street with 8 lanes. A lot of important busy streets have 4 lanes. Most streets have only 2 lanes.

            There are still sidewalks (many streets even have more sidewalk than road), there aren’t huge parking lots everywhere, public transportation is everywhere.

    • @grue
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      1 year ago

      But I honestly prefer the current version. It seems to have more green spaces.

      Those “green spaces” are worthless freeway medians that do nothing but attract homeless camps. Here’s a street view of some of it – complete with panhandlers and tents in the background – so you can see what I’m talking about.

      Edit: LOL, nothing like downvoting a local for telling you the truth.

      • @Waker
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        11 year ago

        ? I hadn’t even read your comment until now.

        I don’t mind your guy’s opinion at all, that was what I wanted to know when I left a comment. I even started by saying that I’m not even a local precisely because I wanted the locals opinions.

        You all went out of your way to downvote me though, I’m not even quite sure why.

        Also yeah, those underpasses look nasty af.

        • @grue
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          1 year ago

          Apologies; my edit was directed at someone else, then.

          Still, I think your comment earned its downvotes because suggesting the vast wasteland of parking lots and freeway medians has “potential” while calling the walkable, human-scale devlopment it replaced “claustrophobic” is… frankly, just objectively incorrect. I’m not sure you realize just how zoomed-out the view is, but for the record, those two prominent horizontal parallel roads (Memorial Dr and Fulton St) are about 1/4 mile (0.4km) apart. That means if you’re trying to, say, walk from your house at the southeast corner of the image to the State Capitol just off the top of it, the majority of your journey is along a 5-lane stroad overpass above a busy freeway. It’s among the least-pleasant pedestrian experiences one could imagine, short of not having a sidewalk at all.

          • @Waker
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            21 year ago

            Yeah I see what you mean. I had to go on street view to get it. I hadn’t even realised that it was an overpass lol. Thought it was just a road but even so, it would be a boring walk.

            With the old layout you’d have a more pleasant one through the neighbourhood and such.

            Also about my initial comment, even though the parks looked claustrophobic to me, I said it was likely the black and white colors messing it up for me, and yeah we’re zoomed out a lot. Also, parks are almost never claustrophobic anyways, I just meant how it looked from above I guess.

      • @ReluctantMuskrat
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        11 year ago

        The homeless don’t think those “green spaces” are worthless. Without them, where do you think they go? Just disappear??

        • @grue
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          -11 year ago

          You’re not actually suggesting we should accept people living on freeway medians instead of building proper housing for them, are you?

          • @ReluctantMuskrat
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            1 year ago

            No, quite the opposite. Your choice of words…

            that do nothing but attract homeless camps

            …comes across as disgusted, as if we can’t have the homeless out here visible. I’m all for helping them and have volunteered and donated accordingly, though I could do more.

            A green, shaded spot to camp is a lot better than many homeless have it I’m afraid. Better than a freeway underpass if I had to choose personally.

            • @grue
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              01 year ago

              Of course I don’t want to see homeless people there, because I don’t want there to be homeless people there. And you shouldn’t either! WTF is wrong with you, that you want people to be homeless?!

                • @grue
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                  1 year ago

                  You’re the one advocating for them to be relegated to fucking freeway medians, not me!

                  I wanted the city to not close the Peachtree & Pine homeless shelter so that we wouldn’t have this problem in the first place!

                  You should be fucking ashamed of yourself for dishonestly trying to shoot the messenger for the grievous sin of merely pointing out the goddamn problem!

                  • @ReluctantMuskrat
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                    01 year ago

                    Nothing I said suggests they should be relegated there. I do not believe they should be driven out when they have no place else to go. Too many places want to break up their camps without giving them any alternatives… making them miserable so they’ll go elsewhere. I’m all for providing shelters and raising taxes to do it. As I said, I’ve volunteered working with the homeless many times when I used to work in and live near a downtown area. I hope to do more in the future though at the moment live a long ways away from an urban area to do so.

    • @uis
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      21 year ago

      I’m not American so I will say that this is still terrible.

      If you want to live in green space, move to soviet-era district: