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by c0nfused
849 days ago
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As city dweller, I really would like less parking in my city. Turns out surface parking is a better $/sqft than garages once you count maintenance. This means that the core part of the city where density is greatest is ringed by a 2-5 block wide wasteland of surface lots. Its not great. Especially now that work from home is a thing and the divide between people who live here and people who drive here to work is obvious because the suburb people aren't here any more but their parking spaces still are |
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The US has never had a high level civic planning process or ability. Housing ends up built where-ever, and it's often cheapest to go built it in places with less regulation. Like wild frontiers in not even states. Or in areas outside of city limits as a tax dodge. There also aren't formal processes for renewing areas; instead informally they're allowed to decay and crime rise, and eventually reach a point where it becomes 'economically viable' for building something new.
Those lots exist because there's still enough whatever is desired in the city you live in, probably too much retail and office space. Probably not enough apartment / condo / housing space, but none of those investors want to admit their market was over-valued and de-value the present investments so they'll happily keep supply low and rents high.