• @[email protected]
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    110 months ago

    How do those people feed themselves? How do they move around? How far away is the average person’s house from the workplace, or the market, or the hospital? In the end is the average energy consumption per person smaller? The existence of mega cities requires a lot of land elsewhere to sustain those people with the added transportation costs. There is not much to gain from gathering too many humans in one place for the sake of it.

    • @[email protected]
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      110 months ago

      Dense cities are way more efficient than living spread out on the countryside.
      Infrastructure cost is lower per person, because higher density means less km of pipes, wires, roads etc. per person. Mass transit is also more efficient in both monetary and resource cost than cars, but it is only viable with the density of a city.

      How far away is the average person’s house from the workplace, or the market, or the hospital?

      I live 3 min by foot from the grocery store. Medium/high rise buildings and mixed zoning make that possible. Idk if you are thinking of American style suburbia, which is indeed very inefficient.

      mega cities requires a lot of land elsewhere to sustain those people with the added transportation costs

      The farmland needed should be the same either way, but centralising stuff usually makes it more efficient. For example a cities grain needs can be met with a single freight train, which should use less energy than the same amount of grain transported in many small trucks to smaller towns

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      110 months ago

      Dense cities are way more efficient than living spread out on the countryside.
      Infrastructure cost is lower per person, because higher density means less km of pipes, wires, roads etc. per person. Mass transit is also more efficient in both monetary and resource cost than cars, but it is only viable with the density of a city.

      How far away is the average person’s house from the workplace, or the market, or the hospital?

      I live 3 min by foot from the grocery store. Medium/high rise buildings and mixed zoning make that possible. Idk if you are thinking of American style suburbia, which is indeed very inefficient.

      mega cities requires a lot of land elsewhere to sustain those people with the added transportation costs

      The farmland needed should be the same either way, but centralising stuff usually makes it more efficient. For example a cities grain needs can be met with a single freight train, which should use less energy than the same amount of grain transported in many small trucks to smaller towns

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      110 months ago

      Dense cities are way more efficient than living spread out on the countryside.
      Infrastructure cost is lower per person, because higher density means less km of pipes, wires, roads etc. per person. Mass transit is also more efficient in both monetary and resource cost than cars, but it is only viable with the density of a city.

      How far away is the average person’s house from the workplace, or the market, or the hospital?

      I live 3 min by foot from the grocery store. Medium/high rise buildings and mixed zoning make that possible. Idk if you are thinking of American style suburbia, which is indeed very inefficient.

      mega cities requires a lot of land elsewhere to sustain those people with the added transportation costs

      The farmland needed should be the same either way, but centralising stuff usually makes it more efficient. For example a cities grain needs can be met with a single freight train, which should use less energy than the same amount of grain transported in many small trucks to smaller towns

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      110 months ago

      Dense cities are way more efficient than living spread out on the countryside.
      Infrastructure cost is lower per person, because higher density means less km of pipes, wires, roads etc. per person. Mass transit is also more efficient in both monetary and resource cost than cars, but it is only viable with the density of a city.

      How far away is the average person’s house from the workplace, or the market, or the hospital?

      I live 3 min by foot from the grocery store. Medium/high rise buildings and mixed zoning make that possible. Idk if you are thinking of American style suburbia, which is indeed very inefficient.

      mega cities requires a lot of land elsewhere to sustain those people with the added transportation costs

      The farmland needed should be the same either way, but centralising stuff usually makes it more efficient. For example a cities grain needs can be met with a single freight train, which should use less energy than the same amount of grain transported in many small trucks to smaller towns

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      110 months ago

      Dense cities are way more efficient than living spread out on the countryside.
      Infrastructure cost is lower per person, because higher density means less km of pipes, wires, roads etc. per person. Mass transit is also more efficient in both monetary and resource cost than cars, but it is only viable with the density of a city.

      How far away is the average person’s house from the workplace, or the market, or the hospital?

      I live 3 min by foot from the grocery store. Medium/high rise buildings and mixed zoning make that possible. Idk if you are thinking of American style suburbia, which is indeed very inefficient.

      mega cities requires a lot of land elsewhere to sustain those people with the added transportation costs

      The farmland needed should be the same either way, but centralising stuff usually makes it more efficient. For example a cities grain needs can be met with a single freight train, which should use less energy than the same amount of grain transported in many small trucks to smaller towns