| > There is plenty of vacant unincorporated land that a group of people could get together and build whatever city they might want. This is just a big network affect failure. A bunch of zealots starting a cult in the desert isn't a city, and fails quickly every time. > there is no blanket "striking the root" answer here I didn't invent this. This is how the whole world worked, in general, 100 years ago. Japan already went back to this 30 years ago, and it absolutely worked. > denser buildings now mean more traffic But less need for cars when you can walk to where you are going. Also, public transit becomes a viable option at higher densities. > existing properties lose access to sunlight Exactly the NIMBY attitude that supposes you get to say what other people do with their property. This is what makes homes unaffordable, neighborhoods unwalkable, our working days full of commute time, the atmosphere full of CO2 and soot, and consolidates all sorts of commerce from the small and local into the national and international mega-corps. Great tradeoff! |
What do you mean "just" ? The whole point is that the difficulty of social scaling is the network effects.
> I didn't invent this. This is how the whole world worked, in general, 100 years ago.
Sorry, you cannot reverse the arrow of time. From the little I understand the Japanese model is close to what I proposed about buying up land and creating a new urban area from scratch. So as I said, that is actually legally still on the table in the US. The problem is it seems to be off the table culturally (development companies in the US are building suburban tract houses instead of train stations and sky scrapers).
> But less need for cars when you can walk to where you are going
Yes, as I said, it's a tradeoff. I didn't explore all the facets. You're free to make these arguments. In fact, I encourage you to in general! I'm in a more ruralish area now and at this point in my life probably won't ever move back, but I used to live in a good sized walkable/bikeable city and I really enjoyed it (but for the economic treadmill).
> Exactly the NIMBY attitude that supposes you get to say what other people do with their property
Here we've gotten to the heart of the matter where so called right-libertarianism falls apart [0]. We're not talking about property (the buildings), but rather real estate (a land area relative to other people's real estate). That distinction exists for an important reason - because physical proximity means that your actions on your real estate does affect your neighbors, regardless of how much you want to ignore it. The retort of living next to a chemical plant is cliche, but for a good reason.
The null hypothesis base case is to move somewhere less dense so you don't affect your neighbors as much (which is precisely why the American conception of freedom encourages the sprawl it has!), not somehow having high population density without any conflict-resolving regulations. Scaling population density inherently requires social technology, not merely the rejection of social technology. If you're concerned about freedom in the urban context, you should be looking for freedom-preserving social technologies.
[0] just for context here I am libertarian, but have come to see right libertarianism as pathologically specious.