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PostOct 13, 2022#976

^"I was into X before X was cool. Now X is cool and I've lost interest."

I wish I had a dime for every time I expressed that same sentiment about a band, artist, etc.. I've never heard it applied it to an internet personality before, which I guess shows I'm officially old and out of touch. I must be losing my edge. Yep, there it went.

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PostOct 13, 2022#977

chriss752 wrote:
Oct 13, 2022
^I get that the guy is optimistic on rebuilding urban cities in a beautiful way, but I can't get over the fact that he sounds very robotic or repetitive. I followed him when he had far fewer followers than he has now and back then, it was much more authentic.

We can definitely discuss ways to improve our urban fabric and rebuild what was lost in a meaningful way and I agree with Coby on that, but I wish he went back to being authentic like the buildings, designs, usages and vibrancy he pushes.
He’s doing a thing where he posts one good new urban build a day for a year I think. Hence the repetition of principles.

PostOct 13, 2022#978


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PostJan 22, 2023#979

America the bland
Which City Are You In? As Housing Starts to Look the Same, It’s Hard to Tell
https://archive.is/nlDKp

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PostFeb 01, 2023#980

A great podcast episode on car brain.

https://thewaroncars.org/2023/01/31/car ... an-walker/

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PostFeb 02, 2023#981

American taxpayer money rebuilt a lot of Germany. Dresden for example. Rebuilt as an almost exactly replica as prior to being bombed out. Will the billions allocated for St. Louis look the same?

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PostFeb 02, 2023#982

^ we did strip Germany for parts tho, literally. 

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PostFeb 03, 2023#983

leeharveyawesome wrote:
Feb 02, 2023
American taxpayer money rebuilt a lot of Germany. Dresden for example. Rebuilt as an almost exactly replica as prior to being bombed out. Will the billions allocated for St. Louis look the same?
I think this is probably wrong, Dresden was in East Germany which did not participate in the Marshall Plan.

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PostFeb 03, 2023#984

leeharveyawesome wrote:
Feb 02, 2023
American taxpayer money rebuilt a lot of Germany. Dresden for example. Rebuilt as an almost exactly replica as prior to being bombed out. Will the billions allocated for St. Louis look the same?
Yeah nah, the Marshall Plan actually didn't do a whole lot for Germany. Most of the money went to other European countries, such as the UK and France. Germany rebuilt largely by itself.

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PostFeb 03, 2023#985

Maybe Dresden didn't get direct money. $13B was a lot of cash in the late 1940s.

Regardless, American taxpayer money has propped up a lot of stuff around the globe for a long time.

If Dresden rebuilt itself then it's a sad statement on other places.

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PostFeb 04, 2023#986


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PostFeb 10, 2023#987

Expedition! St. Louis: The City Fights Back

I saw this video on Youtube a few days ago. It is a documentary from 1960 on the successes of urban renewal, the ongoing Mill Creek Valley "Redevelopment", and the push to "surgically" remove other areas of the city such as Kosciusko.

What's interesting to me is that they also note concerns of a falling city population, which by 1960 was in its first decade. It seems like they were thinking the spread of the slums made people leave the city so they tried to get rid of the slums altogether. 

Here's two things I'm theorizing in my head: The slums were simply moved to other areas of the city in a vertical form and the expressways' impact on population dynamics. For instance, much of the Mill Creek population was moved to Pruitt-Igoe and Cochran Gardens. At least Mill Creek was a neighborhood with a street network. These projects were walled off, isolated fortresses of stacked low income residents. Quickly they began to fail and the neighboring communities didn't want to live near these "projects" which were dropped on them. in 1960, the Interregional, or I-44 from Gravois to Washington was complete and I believe the Mark Twain, or I-70, was nearing or already completed. This made the suburbs of north county, as seen by city dwellers as open prairie countryside, much more affordable and convenient to live in.

I think it was more than the "spread" of slums that caused the mass population exodus of the city since 1950. I think the city's efforts of removing neighborhoods and putting the people in apartment towers dropped on other neighborhoods accentuated the population exodus. And on top of that, the new expressways, notably the Mark Twain that shoots off into north county, sucked more of the population out of the city.

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PostFeb 18, 2023#988


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PostFeb 18, 2023#989


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PostFeb 18, 2023#990

I just don't buy that we will be successfully upgrading our infrastructure for automated vehicles anytime soon. America can't even maintain the infrastructure from the 20th century, much less the 21st century. 

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PostFeb 19, 2023#991

^Agreed. It seems a poor idea to create signals that apply differently to human drivers and autopilots. It also jams up the color space further, which already has some issues for folks with color blindness. And it would require a human driver to know which cars are AVs and which aren't. Good luck with that. I'd sooner implement position lights for traffic signals than a fourth color. And whatever colors you use, the rules need to be pretty simple and universal.

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PostFeb 21, 2023#992

I'm waiting for Tesla to design cars that don't run people over before I get excited about automated vehicles.

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PostFeb 21, 2023#993

^Why would they do that? Then you might choose not to buy one of them and walk instead.

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PostFeb 21, 2023#994


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PostMar 13, 2023#995


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PostMar 16, 2023#996

Looking at urban population shifts from 2019 to 2021
St Louis #21
https://www.newgeography.com/content/007395-census-2021-estimates-increased-dispersion

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PostMar 16, 2023#997

hebeters wrote:
Mar 16, 2023
Looking at urban population shifts from 2019 to 2021
St Louis #21
https://www.newgeography.com/content/007395-census-2021-estimates-increased-dispersion
I'm not try to paper over St. Louis' problems but I'm not concerned about population estimates. Over the years they've just been so inaccurate that I take them with a grain of salt. Haven't ever gotten over how the census projected St. Louis City as gaining population throughout the 2000s just for the 2010 Census to show another 30k+ decline. 

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PostMar 24, 2023#998

https://www.youtube.com/embed/sayw3TOhykg


Not a lot new here but in the vein of John Oliver if you are so inclined. 

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PostApr 01, 2023#999

Another shameless plug for one of my architectural heroes, Hugh Ferriss. Greatest Illustrator Ever.

"How a St. Louis Architectural Illustrator's Work Shaped Many Well-Known Fantasy Worlds"

  https://news.stlpublicradio.org/culture ... asy-worlds


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PostApr 10, 2023#1000

Governing - Zoning Changes Have Small Impact on Housing Supply

https://www.governing.com/community/zon ... lity-study

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