| Founder here. Great to see the excitement people have for Culdesac and for Culdesac Tempe. Our vision is to build the first car-free city in the US, starting with the first car-free neighborhood built from scratch in the US. Join our waitlist at culdesac.com. We open next year! If you want to visit in the meantime, drop me a note. Hiring-wise, we're hiring in Tempe or remote. Our top hiring prio is to lead product design.
https://www.culdesac.com/jobs Here's our insta, which has lots of construction updates
https://www.instagram.com/liveculdesac Here's our tik tok
https://www.tiktok.com/@liveculdesac Here's our twitter
https://www.twitter.com/culdesac Here's my twitter where I also talk a lot about ebikes
https://www.twitter.com/ryanmjohnson Here's our intro article
https://medium.com/culdesac/introducing-culdesac-3fbfe7c4219... Here's a longer piece on us
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/31/business/culdesac-tempe-p... |
Couple of thoughts; first, it’s kinda weird for you to introduce yourself as a ‘founder’ - I’ve been around developers and real estate all my life, and I’ve never heard anyone use that term to describe what they do. Makes me wonder if you see this as more of a housing subscription service than a community?
Which leads to my second thought - what’s the thought process behind this being a rental-only thing? Are there any accommodations for families? Your website doesn’t appear to address kids or families of more than 2 people at all. Without ownership and family support, this really feels like a place nobody will be invested in making their home.
Third, how do you plan to deal with the inherent monopolies you’re building to avoid a ‘company town’ situation? For example, if residents are not allowed cars and are mostly stuck with your handpicked grocery store and restaurants, what will keep those establishments from just slacking off on service and overcharging?
Thanks for stopping by!