TLDR: money. There isn’t a profit in making a pretty building when you can build a utilitarian one and still milk the poor bastards that have no other option but to leave there.
I like a lot of About Here videos. He does a good job of boiling down city policy and design issues without sounding condescending.
Strong Towns is good too. They got a new media guy about 10 months ago and he’s put out some great videos.
Wow, yet another way our bylaws are terrible. It’s starting to feel like it’s on purpose.
always has been 🧑🚀🔫
In North America, every bad design is a feature. 🤦♂️
Such as the terrible illusion of freedom that is car dependancy.
Even Europe has stopped producing those buildings. Each era comes with its own stylistics expressions. Amsterdam’s newer district is full of modern cubical buildings. Even if they look a bit better than the one’s shown in this meme, they belong to the same post modern movement.
Another thing to consider is that every other extra luxury that is purely a stylistic addition will be an extra expanse on the end buyer
Living in an area that is beautiful matters, and our urban landscapes are a big part of that. Trees, decorated facades, town squares, they may add some economic cost, but why is that the only cost that matters? What about the emotional cost of living in an ugly noisy jungle of concrete and glass?
Because other people’s right to have a roof over their heads and afford to buy a house out weights you presumed right to living in a Disney themed park.
That is a false dichotomy. Housing is expensive in Canada due to zoning laws forcing a very inefficient use of land, among other reasons.
I lived in Europe for decades, so I know for a fact that making our streets pleasant to walk around isn’t some weird utopia, it is the basic reality in many developed countries.
Not sure if that is accurate in BC, we have 3+ story townhomes with mainfloor being shopping/ services. Tons of quadplexes, and 50-100 unit condos like crazy.
Anyone else notice Canada was the only country on the map with the two stairwells from 2 floors & up requirement and every other country started it with 3 or higher?
Yeah, he also mentioned it in the video. (He is from Vancouver.)
I remember him saying (English) North America requires 3 floors and then I saw that map.
This isn’t my first video of theirs, btw. I watched it before I even saw this thread, because I’m subscribed.
All the ‘nice apartments’ he’s showing are from beginning of XX century. No one builds like this in Europe anymore. Most new developments are exactly like the ones he shows in America.
More detail / similar concepts if you’re not a video person: https://www.centerforbuilding.org/blog/we-we-cant-build-family-sized-apartments-in-north-america
*Anglo America, Northern Anglo America or U.S.A. & Canada.
Lack of history, culture and intelligence.
Europe > America
You mean west Asia? The Urals being a continental boundary is a joke.
Shut up diet Seppo. Bow to your betters and upvote me for I am English. You are lucky to be in my presence.
Are you fucking kidding me, English? You’re the worst kind of European. You’re the worst part of the British Isles ffs.
Let me guess? You fell for Scottish propaganda.
While I think this is an issue, I think it’s a minor one. If it was a big problem, we’d see a whole bunch of 2 storey apartments sprinkled amongst single family homes. But I’ve never seen one in all my time in Toronto. Because there’s a whole ton of regulations that make it impossible by just plain making it illegal without jumping through a whole ton of other hoops that make it far too expensive.
I’m not saying fixing this won’t help, but it’s just one of dozens of issues, and a minor one compared to some of them.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/watch?v=iRdwXQb7CfM
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.