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by reaperducer 2913 days ago
Think per-unit density, not per-geographic division.

On average, houses in Sweden and closer together. Apartments are smaller than the U.S.

Perhaps instead of "last mile," the term should be "last meter."

1 comments

Sure, Swedish cities are a little less sprawly than American cities of the same size (I have no data on this but my general experience is that both apartments and houses a slightly larger in Sweden but a bigger part of the housing stock is in apartments), but I still don't think the geographical explanation holds especially in densely populated regions like the Bay Area. I think it has more to do a lack of interest from US politicians.
The Bay Area isn’t densely populated. San Jose to San Francisco is mostly single family homes in suburban neighborhoods. Even the “dense” parts don’t hold a candle to East Coast cities.