Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
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- Bryant Building
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
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Last edited by pash on Tue Feb 14, 2017 11:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- FangKC
- City Hall
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
Blame the Banks for All Those Boring Chain Stores Ruining Your City
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/ ... -your-city
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/ ... -your-city
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- Strip mall
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
This may not belong here, it's just too cool not to post...
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/trave ... per-yemen/
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/trave ... per-yemen/
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- Bryant Building
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
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Last edited by pash on Sat May 06, 2017 8:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Ambassador
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
Very Interesting. Gotta love the British spelling of "Sprint Centre"
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- Bryant Building
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
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Last edited by pash on Fri May 19, 2017 8:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- FangKC
- City Hall
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
Marriott hotels turn to prefab for more efficient construction
https://www.curbed.com/2017/5/15/156383 ... nstruction
https://www.curbed.com/2017/5/15/156383 ... nstruction
- grovester
- Oak Tower
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- Bryant Building
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
Apropos that the first image is of supposedly-beautiful Vancouver’s monotonous glass wall waterfront.
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- Ambassador
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- FangKC
- City Hall
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
Why America’s New Apartment Buildings All Look the Same
https://www.bloomberg.com/businessweekThese buildings are in almost every U.S. city. They range from three to seven stories tall and can stretch for blocks. They’re usually full of rental apartments, but they can also house college dorms, condominiums, hotels, or assisted-living facilities. Close to city centers, they tend toward a blocky, often colorful modernism; out in the suburbs, their architecture is more likely to feature peaked roofs and historical motifs. Their outer walls are covered with fiber cement, metal, stucco, or bricks.
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- FangKC
- City Hall
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
A Remedy for Urban Dullness
How can you build a great place? Expand the number of people who own it.
How can you build a great place? Expand the number of people who own it.
https://www.governing.com/columns/trans ... -city.html...
I focused on the East Village in Manhattan and, for contrast, the bustling older resort strip in Virginia Beach, Va., where I grew up. When you zoom in on a digital map of either of those places, you see a finely grained pattern of land ownership. Each block has thin slivers of individually owned buildings. They look like stacks of tiles viewed from the side.
Now look at some dull places like Battery Park City or the new Town Center in Virginia Beach, which was created a decade ago out of some old parking lots and other scraps. Although both have nice street grids, what you see on the maps are large blobs of ownership, with just a few entities -- or even just a single one -- owning everything.
In the older, more interesting places, each property is its own universe. Sure, they must adhere to city rules of zoning and design. But each owner, whether individual or corporate, manages their property as they see fit, working to find the secret to livability or profitability, or just to attract an interesting tenant. When we delight in these places’ active street life and surprises, what we are really enjoying is a dance of human-scale capitalism. Great urban places have many owners. And I don’t mean this as a metaphor. I mean it literally.
Can government do anything about this? The new places typically are built through some sort of urban renewal process in which a city or development agency teams up with a single corporate entity. What if, instead, a government were to produce a master plan, do a lot of the infrastructure development itself, and then lease the property to hundreds of people or companies, who could then construct buildings and engage in their own dance of capitalism?
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- Hotel President
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
Americans Shouldn’t Have to Drive, but the Law Insists on It
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archi ... e-atlantic
"Houston is estimated to have 30 parking spaces for every resident."
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archi ... e-atlantic
"Houston is estimated to have 30 parking spaces for every resident."
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- Mark Twain Tower
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
If a spot is 10x20 that's 6000 square feet of parking per person.brewcrew1000 wrote: ↑Wed Jul 10, 2019 1:30 pm Americans Shouldn’t Have to Drive, but the Law Insists on It
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archi ... e-atlantic
"Houston is estimated to have 30 parking spaces for every resident."
If we assume that means the metro area of 7 million, since most parking would be in suburbs, that's 150 square miles of space for parking.
That metro is 10,060 square miles. so 1.4% of space is given up to parking.
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- Hotel President
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
I would assume Galvaston Bay and any bodies of water are included in that 10,000 square miles, wouldn't you have to subtract bodies of Water?
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- Mark Twain Tower
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
Good catch. 8930 sq miles of land.brewcrew1000 wrote: ↑Wed Jul 10, 2019 1:50 pm I would assume Galvaston Bay and any bodies of water are included in that 10,000 square miles, wouldn't you have to subtract bodies of Water?
So parking is 1.6% of land area.
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- Hotel President
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
That is also just the space, what about all the road and curb that is created to get to the parking space?flyingember wrote: ↑Wed Jul 10, 2019 3:17 pmGood catch. 8930 sq miles of land.brewcrew1000 wrote: ↑Wed Jul 10, 2019 1:50 pm I would assume Galvaston Bay and any bodies of water are included in that 10,000 square miles, wouldn't you have to subtract bodies of Water?
So parking is 1.6% of land area.
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- Hotel President
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
I think your numbers are off. I got 1500 sq miles of parking spaces which is 16% of the land area
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- Ambassador
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Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
But a lot of that is probably structured.
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- Hotel President
- Posts: 3153
- Joined: Fri Feb 11, 2011 10:10 am
- Location: Broadway/Gilham according to google maps
Re: Urbanism, architecture, transit, strawmen, etc.
I would assume about 2-3% of that 16% is structured and it's mainly in the downtown area, medical center area, and around the galleria