• @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    171 year ago

    In my experience as an electrical engineer, this kind of thinking, 99% non-maximum and 1% maximum, is how electrical infrastructure is built too. Conductors and transformers and other equipment are sized to the historical max + a safety factor so that the electrical system will work even on the rainiest of rainy days. It has to do with reliability and resilience.

    But parking lots don’t need to be super reliable or resilient… Bridges and buildings definitely, but roads and lots literally just cover land. You don’t have the same risk as your do with structures or the grid. Most get repaved every few years anyways.

    • credit crazy
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      71 year ago

      Not to mention how with store fronts you don’t even really need pavement gravel when used gets the job done and it lets rain water drain away through it and when the place goes bankrupt the lot slowly becomes a park back in my home state of Vermont there’s a lot of places that have simple dirt parking lots

    • @afraid_of_zombies
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      71 year ago

      In my experience as an electrical engineer I size things like that and everyone fucking argues with me. I even have a document for it that basically says

      “Please sign that you have been informed that what you are doing will cause a fire and you were informed of that fact by email”

      And then announce that I am not proceeding until the document is signed. So far no one has taken me up on it.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      31 year ago

      Yep. And the lower density that more parking creates means our cities are an empty wasteland of endless paving.