• @[email protected]
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    1813 hours ago

    My own property is being extensively reworked to produce a majority of our vegetables. We have already put about 185m² 2,000ft²) under direct cultivation in the back yard, and intend to wrap that garden around the entire property to the full 400m² (4.300ft²) available.

    In the end, I don’t expect to have a single blade of grass on the property. It’ll all be flowers, fruiting trees and canes and bushes, and vegetables. All done in a modified Ruth Stout method, with a variation of flat-ground Hügelkultur thrown in.

    Let’s just say that Bylaw is already pissed off with me, and I’m not even halfway done yet.

  • @[email protected]
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    3118 hours ago
    1. As a kid I would play street hockey with my friends although nowadays I don’t see kids outside much. Sometimes kids are unlikely and live in an area with no other kids their age around.

    2. Yes. Lobbying by oil and car companies

    3. see above.

    4. See above.

    5. See above.

    • @[email protected]
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      1213 hours ago

      A lot of it also has to do with racism, and these days, people don’t even know why zoning ordinances are the way they are. They can’t defend them. They just assume that it’s what people want and there must be some good reason for the zoning being the way it is (spoiler alert: nope, actually). This is one of the ripest, and probably lowest-hanging fruits in terms of achieving QOL improvements in North America.

  • @[email protected]
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    14 hours ago

    tbf I do know many suburban families that grow a lot in their backyard, although I’m sure there are places with more strict rules around that.

    otherwise very valid questions.

    • @Valmond
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      124 hours ago

      Land of freedom:

      Can I grow potato in my own garden?

      -No.

      • mstrk
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        32 hours ago

        Is this true? You can’t grow vegetables in your backyard? Why tho? If true it sounds dumb to me.

        • @[email protected]
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          251 minutes ago

          A lot of houses are subject to a Home Owners Association (HOA). They often can make ridiculous rules, including kicking you out of your own home for violating whatever rules they made. They can tell you how your garden looks like, which color your house is allowed to have, can fine you for parking on the road…

          The rules are usually designed around keeping up the “value” of the neighborhood by forbidding any sort of individuality in how your garden and house looks from the outside. Sterile and boring is what investors want, to evaluate a neighborhood with a high price.

          These kind of organizations make sense for apartment buildings, where you need to organize the upkeep of the overall building, but for suburbs they seem to be mostly an investor too and then a tool for whoever wants to keep themselves busy, terrorizing their neighbors.

  • @[email protected]
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    2621 hours ago

    Since I found out about the neighborhood association, I’ve been rather suspicious of this land of the free.

  • شاهد على إبادة
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    3424 hours ago

    I moved to a suburb in a country with unbearable heat yet because of how the suburbs are designed, I still walk more than when I did in the US. Everything from barbershops and grocery stores, to pharmacies and bakeries are within a 10 minute walk. Though I usually wait until night fall to do so.

    • @[email protected]
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      1119 hours ago

      Sounds like the Philippines. Hell, sounds like just about every other sane place on the planet.

    • @aidan
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      417 hours ago

      I didn’t know heat until I went to Kuwait in summer

  • @chiliedogg
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    401 day ago

    The front and back yards are there to increase pervious cover. That’s it.

    I work in municipal development and have worked in dense areas, suburbs, and now work in an enclave for the ultra-rich (average new house is about 7 million dollars in the city where I work). Every single developer wants to level all the trees and build as much on the lot as possible with zero pervious cover anywhere, and they don’t give the smallest fuck about flooding the downhill neighbors.

      • @chiliedogg
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        1022 hours ago

        It’s never, ever maintained properly and the inlets or “permeable” pavement gets plugged up and effectively gets turned into 100% IC almost every installation. My last city’s engineering team went from encouraging it to recommending it be banned when they saw what happens when it isn’t maintained.

        • @potpotato
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          219 hours ago

          There’s some pervious asphalt at my office that has over 10 years of fines in it and infiltrates <1”/hr. If you hit it with a vacuum it quickly clears to >50”/hr.

  • ZeroOne
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    1724 hours ago

    I am interested in the replies

  • @SandmanXC
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    1 day ago

    As a non driving eastern European, living a few months in a Colorado suburb was literally one of the most depressing times of my life.

    • @[email protected]
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      I drive but i wasn’t going to stay working in Texas long enough to justify the costs of buying my own car and transferring my license there, but same situation.

      I was in Houston which has some buses and decided to use them. To do a 10-15 ish km ride, it took over 2 hours because there was just one bus that way and it stopped in every street corner. An uber took the same route in about 20 minutes.

      I really disliked the way Texas looked, too much sprawl, cheap falling apart houses and whole blocks of abandoned houses and businesses. Definitely not enough trees. Also how it’s organized, but the people were fairly nice. Like 60% of the time.

      There’s a lot of racism but i already was expecting that. I thought the racism would be whites vs everyone else, but honestly I’ve witnessed and experienced racism there from every race, towards everyone else. People also treat you better when they think you’re their own race, so being Mediterranean i had random acts of kindness from Arabs, Latinos and white people who thought i was from their respective race. I also met some Brazilian people who hated Europeans for some reason and were not shy to show it.

        • @[email protected]
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          116 minutes ago

          In Houston? Only in the center and even then, have you ever seen Texans drive ? They have a total disregard for any speed limits, despise cyclists and will pull a gun on you if they feel slighly uncomfortable with the road situation. I barely felt safe walking on the sidewalks.

  • @Snowclone
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    1211 day ago

    The answer to all questions is racism. We don’t have public transportation because it became illegal to forbid African Americans access, we don’t have public parks and services, because you can no longer have ‘‘whites only’’ signs up, we don’t have stores in these areas because you can’t stop immigrants from owning stores that whites see as ‘beneath them’ to work in, farming your own yard is trashy, because slaves were only allowed to farm food for themselves in small plots right next to the shacks they were allowed to sleep in, and why do we have remote single housing areas you can only access with cars that are over priced? To get away from the black people they could no longer red line to prevent living near them, and to create school districts non whites couldn’t be zoned for as they were priced out of the districts, and then they adjusted school funding so it was based on land value effectively creating whites only schools with high funding. As the white racist mom in the 70s who was upset about bussing said ‘‘if you let your kids grow up around theirs, eventually they’ll all start to mix’’

    • Cyrus Draegur
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      431 day ago

      America spent so long cutting off its own nose to spite its face that it’s no wonder it believes today that its shit doesn’t stink.

      For fucks sake why can’t there be a place that’s basically identical to america EXCEPT without the racism, homophobia, transphobia, and fascism. What the fuck is humanity doing, god damn.

      • @Snowclone
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        415 hours ago

        Spain looks pretty good. Their sociological statistics at least paint a good picture, and many parts of Spain have been multi ethnic for centuries, and they are open to immigration.

        • Cyrus Draegur
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          61 day ago

          So many mixed feelings.

          It’s less of an option for me and my ilk because of language barrier. But Americans’ inability to speak the various languages of Europe are a personal failing on the part of basically all Americans; our “education” system made us dependent, and our arrogance made us unwilling to accept both that we are stupid and that it is incumbent upon us to fix our own stupidity.

          And now that I can’t afford groceries, medical care, AND utility bills at the same time, I neither have the time to learn a new language nor the mental space to do so.

          Maybe it’s for the best that Americans can’t just casually flee to Europe. Europe is already struggling to suppress a resurgence of fascism even WITHOUT a massive influx of braindead center-right neoliberal mouth-breathers from Jesusland.

          • @joel_feila
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            91 day ago

            Well the lack of second language is not just a usa. In other mostly English as a first language countries you have the lowest rates of bilingualism

        • @Snowclone
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          415 hours ago

          Yeah, but like Australia and NZ, they REALLY don’t want immigrants.

    • @joel_feila
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      131 day ago

      I grew in a town with lots of parks. Yes the smallest and shitest used to be black only. Basically just look for park in lower area. And we started building suburbs with redlines on day one the raciam didn’t need to wait for redlines to go away. The school district thing. That’s a bit more region based. Up North they mosrohad mono ethnic neighborhoods so they was less need to make seperate racial schools. The south although they had redlines and other housings policy creating black and white neighborhoods they also just went fully into making blackand white only schools.

    • Kilgore Trout
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      211 day ago

      Of course, racism is the source of every problem.

      Let’s forget the power that oil conglomerates and the automotive industry have on the government.

  • @[email protected]
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    261 day ago

    The more resources you waste publicly, the better. It indicates that you can afford it and brag about it.

    Think about jewelry, expensive purses, sneakers, flashy cars, unused lawns, Halloween/Christmas/whatever decorations, etc.

  • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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    471 day ago

    Can’t grow anything but grass because they stripped off all the topsoil from the land that used to be a farm.

    If you want a garden you need to buy soil

    • @[email protected]
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      edit: looks like I’m wrong.

      Do people in this thread really think the developer took the topsoil and sold it to someone else?

      Bitch, please. Topsoil isn’t valuable enough to strip and truck somewhere. The tiny layer we humans can grow food in is just that thin in a large part of North America.

      Deal with it.

      • @Seleni
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        261 day ago

        They do though. They rip it all up and sell it off when they’re doing construction.

        Source: used to work in commercial landscaping. Which on new jobsites involves bringing in new soil to replace the soil that’s gone.

        That being said, there are places in the US where there isn’t much topsoil to begin with, it’s true.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 day ago

          Yeah but they don’t cart it off as part of some nefarious scheme to deprive home owners of the ability to grow their own produce.

          Construction regulations dictate requirements for hardness and consistency. They test these metrics before construction can begin. The regulations have these requirements so peoples houses don’t… you know… fall over?

          If you just bulldoze whatever and make the ground flat it’s going to be full of organic material that will decay and slump over time.

          They have to remove that top soil, and of course it has some value so it can be sold rather than dumped.

          • @AnUnusualRelic
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            116 minutes ago

            Well, you’re not supposed to just plop houses on the ground, you should dig foundations on a stable substrate, and then build the house. It might require a bit more work of course.

          • @[email protected]
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            324 hours ago

            Euuuh when you build a house fondation yes. But we’re talking about the garden next to it, right?

      • @[email protected]
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        131 day ago

        jokes on you, here in the south the top soil is old swap and sometimes actual farm top soil, it is indeed bagged and sold off sometimes

    • @[email protected]
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      51 day ago

      Grass (the trimmed always green lawn type) is more demanding than many other crops. If the grass is growing there, then the topsoil is good enough for some other things too. Also the topsoil is something you can develop, especially on such small scale as personal garden. Make compost, grow less demanding plants first nad your soil will get better. You can grow things on sand mixed with a bit of compost.

    • em2
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      111 day ago

      Exactly. When I resodded our front lawn I kept finding building materials. I guess it’s common for construction workers to bury the trash when building a house rather than dispose of it correctly.

      • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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        121 day ago

        Every time I dig on my land I get two maybe three inches of topsoil and then the hardest goddamn clay I’ve ever encountered

        • Maeve
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          61 day ago

          Unfortunately you may need someone with a disc harrow or tiller to help the first time. It’s not preferred but I’ve no other ideas. Maybe Solar Punk does?

          • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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            41 day ago

            Which I would totally do if I had more than a 1/4 acre, most of which is taken up with a house and other structures. Getting a tractor and harrow out here for an 800 sq ft garden doesn’t make sense. I’ll probably do raised beds this year.

            I can’t wait until I can move back to the country. The suburbs are the absolute worst.

            • @[email protected]
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              210 hours ago

              Straw bale gardening sounds nifty, too. I’d try it if the previous owners of my place hadn’t already put in a couple of raised beds.

            • @[email protected]
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              91 day ago

              Alternate take, fix your 1/4 acre the natural way if you’re gonna be there a while.

              Start a compost pile.

              Aerate, plant clover, spread compost every year, plant a native tree or two and native plants underneath.

              No need to till, just slowly amend.

              • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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                -120 hours ago

                I’m not planning on being here in four years so it doesn’t make sense to do anything that would make the house look “weird” and make it harder to sell.

                • @[email protected]
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                  320 hours ago

                  it doesn’t make sense to do anything that would make the house look “weird” and make it harder to sell.

                  My guy you’re complaining about a problem you’re part of the cause of then.

                  Trees are weird? A healthy lawn is weird?

                  Why complain if you have the environment you want 🤷

            • Maeve
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              31 day ago

              I mean paying someone to borrow their/ till may be less expensive? That said, I like raised bed too. Easier to manage. Right now I’m looking at permaculture but not sure if I’m cut out for it.

    • sp3ctr4l
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      1 day ago

      Even if you have soil, in a whole lot of cities/municipalities/counties… there are zoning restrictions on growing certain amounts and kinds of plants/vegetables.

      And HOAs. They all have their own restrictions as well.

      Wanna collect rainwater?

      Regulations on that too.

      Wanna start a compost bin?

      Well your neighbor can complain it smells bad in the summer. Might attract dangerous critters.

      Hell, probably just laying down a sufficient amount of top soil might be enough to get a visit from an HOA rep or a county zoning wonk.

      • @dkc
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        14 hours ago

        I’m not denying this happens in some places, but it’s not universal. I live in the suburbs and grow veggies during the summer. The state I live in has “right to garden” laws that prevent a lot of HOA restrictions. My city also has a rain barrel program to encourage their use and offers discounts on barrels.

        • @[email protected]
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          Im Germany, there might be similar regulations for collecting rain water or having a compost depending on your commune.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 day ago

        Bad smells are a reasonable point though.

        Imissions of all kind (noise, smell) should be regulated. If you put a compost bin at the edge of your property, your neighbor should have a right to demand its removal.

    • @[email protected]
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      123 hours ago

      I figured they took the soil from digging the foundation and spread it around the yard in order to grade it and that’s why the street is lower than the yard.

      • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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        223 hours ago

        They do, but after they strip most of the good stuff off the top. Which kind of makes sense because it’s gonna be ruined by the construction. Top soil is only about 5-10 inches deep in most places and pretty compressible so any foundation is going to be deeper.

        The real crime is plowing up farmland for tract housing.

    • Maeve
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      51 day ago

      Compost helps, storage is the issue. I’m ok with it open but not okay with the timber rattlers, cotton mouths and copperheads different scavengers would attract.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 day ago

        raised beds, kinda silly like a fridge in a heated house in a snow storm kinda way but they do work

      • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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        41 day ago

        Compost helps but you need at least a year to get good compost and you need way more than an individual household can supply.

        • @angrystego
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          31 day ago

          Once you start growing plants, you’ll have much more compostable material than just the kitchen waste. You can also compost grass and tree leaves.

        • Maeve
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          11 day ago

          Yes, I’ve been discussing it with a neighbor. Storage is the current challenge. We need an old freezer with the coils gutted (snakes love coils, anyone with a boa or python for any length of time and a sofa can tell you!) or something. We’re looking.

          • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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            51 day ago

            snakes love coils, anyone with a boa or python for any length of time and a sofa can tell you!

            That’s actually adorable (when it’s not wild/poisonous) and reminds me of how Odo’s quarters had interesting objects he liked to take the form of

  • @[email protected]
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    221 day ago

    Out where I live there are whole neighborhoods built and owned by rental companies. Rows of duplexes, blocks of single family residences built through the 70s and 80s. All rentals for decades, with some houses being sold off variously. And even then many of the buyers in the last 20 odd years were landlords themselves.

    The guy I bought my house off of still owned 150 some houses in his direct name in my county, not counting what his business owned or his partners and associates owned directly in their network.

    Tenants don’t exactly have a whole lot of choices of what they can do on the property, and many can only stay a year or so. It isn’t like they invest in the land: so grass.

  • @someguy3
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    241 day ago

    So we can mow the grass silly.

  • @[email protected]
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    61 day ago

    I can see that this is going to be an unpopular opinion but the answer is… most people don’t actually want to live in commie row houses with a bar downstairs.

    I live in suburban Australia. We don’t have HoA’s and the police don’t shoot people, but other than that I imagine that it’s comparable to suburban US.

    We have a front and a back yard because it’s nice to have some room. My kids play in my back yard. We also have about 10m2 of raised planter boxes to grow vegetables. Lots of people also have a shed where you can store hobby equipment like bikes, trailers, camping gear, woodworking, et cetera. Some people have pool tables, sofas, beer fridge, et cetera.

    There are some sensible rules about what you can do in your front or back yard but they’re for everyone’s benefit. For example you can’t erect a BFO wall along your front yard, because if everyone does it then the neighbourhood would feel oppressive. There’s also some varieties of trees you can’t plant because it upsets the neighbours when it inevitably falls over on them in 100 years time.

    You can’t have shops in a residential street because most people don’t actually want that. In most suburbs there are shops, bars, and restaurants a few minutes down the road. Far enough away that I’m not bothered by them but close enough that it’s convenient.

    In Australia you can choose whether you want to live in a busy city in an apartment with shops up your ass, or in the suburbs, or on a rural property with no towns within 100km. Most people live in the suburbs this guy is questioning, because it’s a nice balance of cost, serenity, and convenience.

    • @[email protected]
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      612 hours ago

      So here’s the thing:

      The housing that people want is the housing they can afford. Sure, I’d love to live in a 20,000 sqft mansion up in the Pacific Northwest rainforest with a built in pool and free-range dino nuggies dispensers, but I can’t afford that, so I live in what I can afford. Problem is, our zoning doesn’t permit really anything except unaffordable, bland tracts of McMansions that force you to drive to everything. If you can’t afford that, then, oh well, get bulldozered, idiot.

      I want to make living in my city affordable; if all my kids can afford is a $400 studio with no car, then that should be an option.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 hours ago

        That’s absolutely fine, and obviously a worthy objective.

        My comment is really just pointing out that the “bafflement and hilarity” from the screen capped post isn’t really baffling nor hilarious.

        A surburban lifestyle is nice and that’s why people want to live there and that’s why it’s expensive. You can make fun of people who want that, and you can make a case that alternatives are better in a multitude of ways, but it’s a bit silly to suggest to people happily living in the burbs that a row house would be more comfortable.

        • @[email protected]
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          15 hours ago

          To your last sentence, I can address it directly:

          We live in one of those soulless, godless cookie cutters suburbs. We had a Russian exchange student from St. Petersburg for a year. He grew up in and still lives in a commie block. In complete fairness, he said it was close, but that he preferred the commie block to the suburbs (largely because it was just so damn convenient to do grocery shopping on the ground floor and catch the light rail just outside if he wanted to go anywhere else).

          • @[email protected]
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            12 hours ago

            I don’t really follow I’m sorry.

            Are you suggesting, on the basis of the opinion of one Russian kid who expressed a preference for living where he grew up, that I’m mistaken regarding my own preferences?

            Sorry mate that’s a little bit nutty.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 hours ago

      I believe housing choice is a good thing. The problem is that suburbia almost always takes away housing choice for everyone else.

      1. Suburbia is not cost viable.

      Notice how suburbs are almost always built around cities and almost never on their own. There is a reason for this; they are heavily subsidized by the city and its infrastructure - eventually killing off the city due to extreme maintenance costs and uncooperative tax base (NIMBYs). This is a parasitic relationship, fullstop.

      1. Suburbia is not recyclable.

      It is extremely difficult to reuse suburban infrastructure for non-suburban purposes. This effectively eliminates scarce land until a patron spends 10x removing what it costs to install (not happening). This is why suburbs are often just abandoned instead of repurposed (see any rust-belt suburb).

      1. Space should not come at the cost of the future.

      To navigate suburbia (only viable by car) is to put massive strain on the human body and environment. We were built to walk. If you do not, you will become fat and die (see America). Cars pollute the air to no end, and “third places” can never truly be established - killing communities.

      Wanting space is fine, but people should find a way to do it sustainably without harming themselves and everyone around them.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 hours ago

        I don’t really follow you regarding cost viability.

        I live in a small city of about 70,000. We don’t really have a dense CBH. There are small blocks of apartments here or there but not really in a business district.

        99% of the population here lives in detached houses in a suburban setting.

        It seems kind of nonsensical to me to suggest that suburbs kill off cities due to extreme maintenance costs.

        I know people who work in the city’s finance department. The taxes people in suburbia pay to the municipality pay for the maintenance and services they receive. If there were a deficit from suburban parasites the city would’ve become insolvent long ago.

    • @Tencho
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      110 hours ago

      I would really enjoy a house i could afford.

    • @grepe
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      718 hours ago

      most people don’t actually want to live in commie row houses with a bar downstairs.

      of course! these types of building were an imperfect answer to a problem of how to make enough living space for many people fast enough and cheaply enough. the apartment blocks went a long way from prefabricated panel blocks in a concrete jungle to the point i absolutely loved living in my modern block apartment in the city center in a quite spot between two parks, 10min walk from a train station and a shopping center, with a terrace, garden, playground and childcare across the street and within 15min from any shop, restaurant, pub, doctor or anything else i ever needed.

      You can’t have shops in a residential street because most people don’t actually want that.

      what? i mean, i can believe you can be conditioned to not wanting it. just like many americans think unions are bad or any other crazy shit like that… but generally no. anyone who ever lived in a place where they can run down the street to buy milk when they run out or just walk sane distance to a pub will disagree with you.

      • @[email protected]
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        -110 hours ago

        It’s kind of an odd take to suggest that people who have a different perspective to yours have been “conditioned” into thinking that way.

        In Australia the “corner store” type set up where you could walk a few minutes down the road to buy milk and a paper was more or less defunct by the early 00’s. It’s just not a viable business model.

        I spent my 20s working in bars and restaurants and I did drink far too much at that time. I always lived a short walk away from wherever I was working. IDK why exactly but I’m just not interested any more. I haven’t been trying to abstain but I’m pretty sure I haven’t had a beer or any other sort of alcohol since December 2022. I can assure you that I couldn’t care less about being a “sane distance” from a pub.

        • @grepe
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          110 hours ago

          i do believe you honestly mean the things you wrote. and maybe many other people believe that too… but if a person born in soviet russia would say that the decadent west is the root of all evil would you consider it as simply their perspective and someone who suggest otherwise as “having an odd take” for not accepting it? there are perspectives and there is reality.

          • @[email protected]
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            17 hours ago

            i do believe you honestly mean the things you wrote. and maybe many other people believe that too… but it’s just plain arrogant and maybe even delusional to assume everyone other than you has been conditioned to think contrary to reality.

    • @[email protected]
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      2623 hours ago

      To me as a European who lives in a medium-sized city the US-style suburb model sounds very claustrophobic. The suburbs aren’t walkable, you can’t cycle anywhere either. The only way to get around is by car. Commercial areas are the same, shops are separated by streets and large parking lots, if you want to visit another shop you have to go by car.

      It’s like each house or store is a little island and you can only island-hop using your car. Once you get out of your car, you’re stuck on yet another island. It’s like one of those older computer games from when they didn’t have the tech to stream large open worlds yet, just a bunch of small areas and a loading screen (car) in between.

      • @captainlezbian
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        1023 hours ago

        As an American, having lived where I can bike to the store I don’t want to go back

      • @[email protected]
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        320 hours ago

        You are describing exactly why fast travel is bad in video games too. Convenience isn’t the blessing everyone thinks it to be.

      • @dkc
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        322 hours ago

        I’m assuming there are suburbs that have these problems, but I think that’s a city planning problem.

        I live in a suburb and enjoy it a lot. It’s very walkable and people bike around the neighborhood all the time. We have a walking/biking path that connects to a larger trail that goes for a miles.

        I don’t have access to everything within walking distance, but I have access to a lot within a 10 minute walk.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 hours ago

          I live in a suburb and enjoy it a lot. It’s very walkable and people bike around the neighborhood all the time. We have a walking/biking path that connects to a larger trail that goes for a miles.

          But have you got anything to walk/bike to?

          A bike trail for sports is nice and all, but is it not just a larger island? What if you wanted to go to the supermarket, can you do that by bike/walking or do you run into obstacles like e.g. a highway that you can’t safely cross?

          Say you wanted to cycle or walk to the other side of the country (assuming you have the time), could you do that? How far can you go without a car?

          • @dkc
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            218 hours ago

            Yeah, I had another reply in this post where I talk about it. My subdivision is next to a commercial area so I can walk within 10 minutes to a grocery store, pharmacy, restaurants, fast food, gym, dry cleaners, banks, and to a bus stop for public transit.

      • @[email protected]
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        -123 hours ago

        IDK I we have what you’re calling “US style suburbs” but none of that is true here. I’m an avid cyclist, with several bikes, one of which is a cargo bike. Dedicated bike infrastructure could be better but its hyperbole to suggest you’re “stuck on an island”.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 hours ago

          Trying seriously to bike anywhere on my city’s painted bike lanes is taking your life in your hands. I’m on the city bicycle commission and when we tried to pressure the city engineers to put in some flexible bollards to keep drivers out of the bike lane, they complained that they get broken all the time and they’re hard to keep up on. Someone else on the commission beat me to the punch and said “if those bollards get broken too often, imagine what it’s like to be a cyclist on that lane”.

          • @[email protected]
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            17 hours ago

            Yeah. Look, I’ve got to be honest with you, this is a huge problem in regional Western Australia also.

            If you ride every day then one or two times a week you’re going to encounter some asshole driver who genuinely believes that you shouldn’t be on the road and at times these interactions are dangerous and upsetting.

            I spend a lot of time pondering people’s attitude to riders. My supposition is that it’s a combination of a bunch of things, but a large part of it is simply that people would prefer not to be reminded of the fact that they are sedentary and don’t exercise.

            Personally, I think this is a problem with people, lifestyles, and culture, rather than a problem inherent to suburbia. It’s worth pointing out that these are the people you need to convince that walkable cities are superior. I think our micromobility brethren, on escooters and so on, will help us by putting more “sedentary” type people into the bike lane.

            • @[email protected]
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              15 hours ago

              I’d argue that the sedentary…uh…ness(?) is inherent to the car-dependent suburban lifestyle. The way our suburbs are, you’ve got to REALLY want to use a bike, like you’re either making a statement or too broke to do anything else, to choose to bike anywhere. It’s just too dangerous and inconvenient to be practical. There’s no reason to walk or bike anywhere in walking or biking distance, and plenty of reasons not to (many of them to do with the urban design and zoning codes). People living in walkable and bikeable cities don’t walk and bike because they want to, they walk and bike because it’s more practical than driving.

        • @[email protected]
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          323 hours ago

          he’s not wrong the burbs I grew up in the 90s sure I could bike to the store but my current neighborhood has all the stores on a stroad, before kids I still weaved in and out of traffic with a bike or euc but now with kids I would never risk their lives vs these massive lifted pickups it just takes one drunk maga voter to knock into your hippie bike to end it all

    • @[email protected]
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      221 day ago

      Suburbs are not feasible, cost wise, from a municipal standpoint. They’ve been heavily subsidized by the denser parts of the municipality, and surprisingly by the rural parts too.

      The cost of maintaining infrastructure in a fit state of repair (water main, sanitary sewer and treatment plants, roads, bridges, storm sewer, curbs, sidewalk, street lighting) for these semi-spread out houses is the same as maintaining it in denser areas without the benefits of the higher tax income.

      Additionally, the spread out housing, at least here, has overtaken lower lying wetlands, filled in creeks, and increased water flow down the water courses that do remain, causing erosion, sedimentation, and killing off the aquatic wildlife. Ontario has just started to require Low-Impact Development, standards that require constructing artificial wetlands, soak away pits, raingardens, green roofs, or similar measures to reduce water flow off site and encourage aquifer refilling. These all cost extra money above and beyond what the cost of repair has been up to now.

      I work as a consultant designing infrastructure repair and rehabilitation for municipalities, and have seen the cost of these projects. For most of them, it’s the equivalent of their property tax for ~40yrs, and typically has a lifespan of 50-75yrs on the high end.

      Suburbs are being subsidized through grants provided by our Federal or Provincial government, which is funded through other taxes.

      • @[email protected]
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        123 hours ago

        Ok great.

        That sounds like pretty standard /c/fuckcars stuff you could post in any thread.

        The post I’m replying to didn’t say anything about cost, I’m just explaining why people like to live in suburbs.

        • @[email protected]
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          522 hours ago

          My point is the “cost” you’re describing as a nice balance has been artificially deflated. Property taxes need to be ~doubled for those areas (in my province) in order to properly account for those costs.

          Also this thread was initially posted in c/196, which is where I came across it.

    • @Maalus
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      91 day ago

      It’s not a “nice balance” it is literally the opposite of that.

        • @Maalus
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          141 day ago

          Yeah just as most Americans think their suburbs are the shit. Until they live in an actual walkable city and it turns out you don’t need a car to survive.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 day ago

            I only just noticed this is posted in /c/fuckcars

            Anyhoo. I guess it depends how you define a walkable city. There’s plenty of places in Australia where you really don’t need to own a car, and can walk to everything you need or use public transport.

            Still, most Australians choose to live in the suburbs for all the reasons I mentioned.

            • @Maalus
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              41 day ago

              A walkable city means you have everything you need to thrive within a 5 - 10 min walk. Not just “survive” - i.e a grocery store or whatever. Gyms, restaurants, local establishments, work, etc. Public transport gets you to the next region like that, and is necessary mostly to go somewhere because someone else you want to meet lives further away.

              • @[email protected]
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                -121 hours ago

                Is it ok if people just think differently? Is it ok that maybe some people want to live in the city and some want to live in the suburbs? Do we have to attack every way of life with every flaw that it presents? Is it ok if we just live?

                (Not at you Maalus)

                • @Hawke
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                  319 hours ago

                  I mean honestly …when one of those “ different thoughts” is massively contributing to making earth uninhabitable for human complex life?

                  No, that’s not okay.

    • @[email protected]
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      322 hours ago

      For what it is worth, those suburbs you are describing are decaying in America. Those bars and shops just a few minutes down the road closed a couple generations ago. Many are empty lots or were razed for additional road lanes or gas stations. (In my city: another shooting range for police.) There aren’t even sidewalks outside the neighborhood where I live, and this is in an area developed in the 1980s ‘shining house on a hill’ era of America.

      Most people live in the suburbs this guy is questioning, because it’s a nice balance of cost, serenity, and convenience.

      The cost is blown out of the water, but for serenity and convenience goes: the conveniences are decaying and so the serenity is about all you can hope to get for the cost. More than anything though the spiraling cost destroys that balance. Most renting folks I know can’t afford the shops or restaurants anyway because of housing costs. American suburbs are increasingly isolated.

    • I Cast Fist
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      223 hours ago

      I can totally understand not wanting a bar or tavern nearby. In Brazil, those always have excessive loud music and if you live nearby, you won’t sleep. Drunkards are the least of the problems, surprisingly.

      • Natanox
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        721 hours ago

        German here, we solved that with some good ol’ regulations.

    • @redisdead
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      01 day ago

      I lived in a commie block for 10 years and I’d shoot myself before I have to return in one.

      People who claim it’s the future have never enjoyed the displeasure of living in one. They can fuck right off.

      • @[email protected]
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        824 hours ago

        You do know it’s not only commie block or American suburb right? You can have denser, row housing, you could have better zoning. You hey privacy and and land, but you get isolation and most of your nation are mentally handicapped people from too much excess and misinformation in their life

        • @redisdead
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          -824 hours ago

          Row houses are nice if you want to listen to your neighbors’ 2am conversations and music.

          GTFO with your human storage units.

          • Natanox
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            620 hours ago

            You must’ve lived in some really badly built stuff (not surprised, US buildings are usually on the worse side of construction quality).

            I’m living in a modern German apartment building with about 24 parties. The only thing I hear are when the children in adjacent apartments go full blast at it, screaming like they’re tortured (probably having to eat their cauliflower). Other than that I only heard my neighbor once, apparently having the sex of their lives (it was super quiet in the middle of the night). I chuckled and went back to sleep.

            The walls between row houses should be even thicker if build properly, you shouldn’t really hear anything except extremely loud bass. And depending on the quality there even are building techniques to muffle those (I think by leaving some air gap inside the wall).

          • @[email protected]
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            23 hours ago

            Sloppy U.S. construction is your issue, not density. Walls can be built to be sound proof.

          • شاهد على إبادة
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            624 hours ago

            Houses in the US have thin walls. Nothing prevents something slightly denser without it being row houses, and something mixed use without it having loud and obnoxious night life.

            • antbricks
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              522 hours ago

              US row house owner here: Air-gapped, sound-insulating walls DO exist here. I never hear my neighbors or their kids. My only regret is having a car when I moved here. It just sits there rusting since I can walk and bike everywhere, including to work. Should have sold it 10 years ago.

      • @someguy3
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        323 hours ago

        Not sure about the details of a commie block, but apartments are fine.