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In the Suburbs of Flatsville, Arkowa

Our field trip to the suburbs continues in our One Thousand Villages series of wildcat city planning.

Arkowa is a state in the American Midwest, where the legislature has graciously agreed to give our new Metropolitan Planning Authority control over an area of land to build a new city, off of a major highway.  According to the news this is somehow tied into a scandal involving a group of climate vigilantes holding thousands of tractors hostage using a backdoor in hacked Ukrainian tractor firmware, but the news hasn’t been very reliable lately, so such suspicions can be safely disregarded.

Here we have a suburban klick, broken into four quads of various densities.

With American development comes the American love of the automobile.  Many of our new residents are commuting to the neighboring city of Springfield for work, travelling along the highway, and there are limits to just how far we can stretch our city’s public transport infrastructure!  

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one thousand villages urban planning art the mitigated exhibition supervillain
Alright, one last one for the uh, morning.
I managed to resolve the traffic dilemma for my Quads in a way that is both simple and kind of hilarious, and which ends up fitting two conditions.
• Fuck through traffic.
• If you’re going somewhere within...

Alright, one last one for the uh, morning.

I managed to resolve the traffic dilemma for my Quads in a way that is both simple and kind of hilarious, and which ends up fitting two conditions.

  1. Fuck through traffic.
  2. If you’re going somewhere within your Klick (kilometer development of four ‘quads’ for those who haven’t read the other posts), you go on foot, bike, or at most a golf cart, unless you’re moving furniture in a van, in which case it’s worth it to drive all the way around.

Here’s how it works.

The klick has two one-way intake roads, east/west, of four lanes each. A single lane splits off from the intake for each quad, going straight into a parking lot. The other two lanes go to a roundabout. The klick also has two one-way outflow roads, which the roundabout leads to. Each quad has one lane from its parking lot to the outflow road. Through traffic east/west will always get directed north/south, and thus rarely has a reason to enter the klick.

This is overkill for the 300 resident quad above, but for a more developed quad the throughput would be astounding. With little through traffic, each quad has two dedicated exit lanes, with a very long turning lane to queue up in. If these exit onto a six lane road, the center two lanes out of four can turn in either direction.

one thousand villages urban planning
Thinking about @xhxhxhx‘s comments about efficiency of surburban layout for later development, and also road size. In terms of compactness, this lot is reasonably efficient, with a population of around 260-520. Something tells me it doesn’t have...

Thinking about @xhxhxhx‘s comments about efficiency of surburban layout for later development, and also road size.  In terms of compactness, this lot is reasonably efficient, with a population of around 260-520.  Something tells me it doesn’t have enough critical mass for a grocery store of its own, but with a second it could probably support a restaurant and small grocer.

The uniformity of the lot sizes should also make new construction easier.

What doesn’t feel right here is that even though there’s enough parking, it doesn’t feel like the quad could be emptied of cars easily enough each morning.

one thousand villages urban planning
mailadreapta
mitigatedchaos

One Thousand and One Villages

Follow-up to my post One Thousand Villages, separated out so Tumblr won’t harm my precious, precious PNGs, so let’s tag some people from the last one. @wirehead-wannabe @mailadreapta @bambamramfan Let’s also tag @xhxhxhx in case he finds it interesting or discovers some glaring flaw or something.

We’ll borrow Mailadreapta’s word here and refer to the new model as a Quad - it’s a 250m x 250m area as part of a larger 1km x 1km pattern.  I decided to revisit the subject and get a better sense of the scale and proportions, and in doing so, I realized that 1km x 1km is just too big for a single unit (and also too big to start with as an experiment if someone were to attempt this).  We’ll call the collection of four quads a Klick.

In the above images, green is residential, blue is mixed-use/commercial, yellow is light industrial, white is civic buildings, and orange is public transit.

Noting some feedback from @mailadreapta

I think the biggest problem is employment: there’s just no way you can ensure that everyone works in their own quad, so most people will still need to leave in order to work. I assume that a high-speed thoroughfare lie along the boundaries of the square (with transit) to accommodate this.

For a similar reason, I would put the commercial and civic buildings (except for the school) among the edge: these are these are places that will be visited often by people from other villages, so keep them away from the residential center.

This is, in fact, exactly the plan.  Although I did have the civic center in the middle last time.

Now then, now that that’s out of the way, let’s do some uncredentialed urban planning!

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mailadreapta

we segment off an inner residential ring using a wall of 5-10m in height

That is way too high, taller than most houses, and living with that sort of thing hanging over me would make me feel like I lived in a prison. A 2-3 meter fence should be sufficient for most purposes, and much cheaper; if the crime problems caused by people from other quads is significant enough that you actually need a 5m wall, then I don’t know what to tell you.

You don’t specifically mention schools, so I’ll throw one thing out there: every quad absolutely should have its own K-12 school, possibly more than one depending on density. Crossing quad boundaries to attend school should be a rare exception. You might have quads within the same klick that share a high school or some amenities (especially large space-eating things like football fields), but again it’s important that the school feels like it belongs to the quad, and each quad should have its own “school district” or something similar.

I don’t think you should have any through traffic in the quad. Access to parking should be the only roads in the place.

Quads should have names, so that residents can say “I live in Fairview” or whatever, and nearby people know what that means.

mitigatedchaos

That is way too high, taller than most houses, and living with that sort of thing hanging over me would make me feel like I lived in a prison. A 2-3 meter fence should be sufficient for most purposes, and much cheaper; if the crime problems caused by people from other quads is significant enough that you actually need a 5m wall, then I don’t know what to tell you.

Well, 3m is probably enough.  If it’s only 2m then tall people with actual upper body strength can climb over it.  Mostly though I originally made it that height for noise suppression.  If that isn’t an issue at 3m then 3m is fine.

You don’t specifically mention schools, so I’ll throw one thing out there: every quad absolutely should have its own K-12 school, possibly more than one depending on density. Crossing quad boundaries to attend school should be a rare exception. You might have quads within the same klick that share a high school or some amenities (especially large space-eating things like football fields), but again it’s important that the school feels like it belongs to the quad, and each quad should have its own “school district” or something similar.

At the 500 density it isn’t dense enough (because we don’t know how many children there will be), but once it gets high enough that’s feasible.  I was thinking of an internal school mostly in the sense that the young children can safely walk to the school unsupervised and play outside in the park.  I imagined the civic building in the lower right middle of the klick as a high school for the surrounding quads.

You also seem to have something else in mind with this.  School as a method of increasing community cohesion?

I admit, if I were building one of these as an ideological group rather than because I’d convinced the city or a developer to do it, I’d definitely want my quad to have its own school.

I don’t think you should have any through traffic in the quad. Access to parking should be the only roads in the place.

Maybe.  Aside from maneuverability for exiting the quad in the morning, and going 5kph on the pedstreets to move furniture, because I hate moving furniture, I wanted faster access for emergency service vehicles.

Quads should have names, so that residents can say “I live in Fairview” or whatever, and nearby people know what that means.

Absolutely.  It’s a branding thing.


And now for some @xhxhxhx​ comments.

I worry you’re a bit between two stools on the traffic thing – if you plug these into an existing North American urban environment, your grid will be overwhelmed by the traffic – you’d need to emphasize the park-and-ride bits, and break from your higher-level grid to accommodate the American need for more-hierarchical traffic patterns, and loop in some freeways – or your suburb will depend on whatever mass-transit network the urban area happens to have, which might not be great

If we’re building a new quad by itself, we should ideally place it right next to a light rail station, or some place we can convince the government to install a light rail station.

But yes, the grid would need to break at higher and higher levels for even thicker thoroughfares, particularly in America where the mass transit is anemic.  I’d recommend building many of the roads outside the quads with medians with trees and buffers of lawns, both of which can be bulldozed later if necessary as density increases.  (Our sample klick edge roads are six lanes, but I was going to reserve the outer lane for either parking or trams.)

A lot depends on who is building the quad and why.  If it’s a corporation building housing for a facility in China, they can just install a bus route and let the rest of the commuters sort themselves out.  If it’s an American city that gets a Singaporean-style Housing and Development Board, they can buy up land at the edge of the city’s light rail network and develop several kilometers at once, then extend the light rail network to meet it.  If it’s an American private land developer, they could hire a bus to travel to the public transport network but they’ll also need to install a lot more parking and build near a sufficiently large road.  

but if you build these grids outside a metro, I think it’ll end up as a strange and perhaps-inefficient bedroom community – relative to replacement-level suburban plans, which have, you know, garages and lawns and cul-de-sacs – and with traffic problems comparable to those on your metro grid

This is actually something for future consideration, which is, can these be built at low density in such a way that they can and do scale up to higher densities?  And I think the answer is yes, which may be the subject of a future blog post.

Anyhow, there’s a reason the outer edge is mixed use and not purely commercial-zoned, so I don’t think it would be too much less efficient.

It would also be possible to convert an area of a city without a lot of demolition if you have a long-term-thinking administration.  You’d build the wall and the parking areas, convert over some of the streets, add a park or queue one for the first building to be vacated, then rezone the outer perimeter and wait for commercial development.

I think mailadreapta highlights the real problem, which is the coordination problem – it’d be difficult to draw both residential tenants and employers at the same time, I think, without the state capacity and influence that American suburbs don’t really have – and it’s difficult to build grids that rely on transit infrastructure that most American metros just don’t have

Part of the outside being mixed use in this case is that I’m only assuming that shops will be the outer commercial layer at first, rather than offices, and thus that some of the rest will be filled in with more residential units that are later flipped as development increases.  While this doesn’t reduce the daily workday commuting, it does reduce some shopping commuting.

I’m also enough of a liberal that this sort of detailed land use planning makes me uneasy

Fair enough.  But that in itself involves unsolved coordination problems.  Fortunately, if the quad plan doesn’t work out, it isn’t particularly destructive and you can just knock the wall over and refurbish the civic center as shops, offices, or apartments.

anyways, the thing that really creeps me out is that this all feels like social housing, complete with overbearing, overpowered social workers – in an ideal world, everyone will have enough money to avoid social workers and cops, but I certainly hope that I will have enough money to avoid social workers and cops

As Scott pointed out in comparing homicide rates while investigating gun crime, America has an astonishing level of crime.  This approach isn’t really needed in places like the town where I grew up, which was full of self-selected professionals and had a population of only a couple tens of thousands.  Likewise, that town didn’t need a school voucher program to maintain the quality of its schools, because all the parents there would punish their children if they were disruptive enough to be an issue, or else at least raised them such that they didn’t attack the teachers in the middle of class.  

However, for the cities, I am willing to go to almost Singaporean lengths to get the situation under control.  The terrible situations in some of our cities are not only costing the nation some of its potential, but also all those people living there having to suffer through the crime, the failed city services, and so on.  If it becomes possible to simultaneously lower crime and police brutality, there are costs I’m willing to pay.

Or, to put it another way, hinted at by your very paragraph - rich people can already afford functional communities.  How can we bring functional communities, safe, happy, and healthy communities, to the poor?  The dominant thought seems to be that it’s just a matter of wealth transfer, or “reducing discrimination,” but I think there are structural issues and cultural issues that need to be resolved for all that spending to have the desired effect.

If it helps for context, the original reason I pondered this was in the design of a fictional Pseudo-East Asian Police State that I use as a sort of a storage place for my ideas.  (Though there, like in many of its other aspects, the future is rooted in the past and they’d built walled villages for environmental reasons for millennia.)

Source: mitigatedchaos urban planning one thousand villages

One Thousand and One Villages

Follow-up to my post One Thousand Villages, separated out so Tumblr won’t harm my precious, precious PNGs, so let’s tag some people from the last one. @wirehead-wannabe @mailadreapta @bambamramfan Let’s also tag @xhxhxhx in case he finds it interesting or discovers some glaring flaw or something.

We’ll borrow Mailadreapta’s word here and refer to the new model as a Quad - it’s a 500m x 500m area as part of a larger 1km x 1km pattern.  I decided to revisit the subject and get a better sense of the scale and proportions, and in doing so, I realized that 1km x 1km is just too big for a single unit (and also too big to start with as an experiment if someone were to attempt this).  We’ll call the collection of four quads a Klick.

In the above images, green is residential, blue is mixed-use/commercial, yellow is light industrial, white is civic buildings, and orange is public transit.

Noting some feedback from @mailadreapta

I think the biggest problem is employment: there’s just no way you can ensure that everyone works in their own quad, so most people will still need to leave in order to work. I assume that a high-speed thoroughfare lie along the boundaries of the square (with transit) to accommodate this.

For a similar reason, I would put the commercial and civic buildings (except for the school) among the edge: these are these are places that will be visited often by people from other villages, so keep them away from the residential center.

This is, in fact, roughly the plan.  Although I did have the civic center in the middle last time.

Now then, now that that’s out of the way, let’s do some uncredentialed urban planning!

EDIT: Got a couple of numbers wrong.  That’s what I get for being so desperate to post this at 5AM in the morning.

Keep reading

politics flagpost art the mitigated exhibition urban planning effortpost one thousand villages
One Thousand Villages@wirehead-wannabe I recall you talking about wanting a college-campus-like environment with activities and whatnot as a living area, but outside of a college campus.
@mailadreapta I recall you talking about the difficulty of...

One Thousand Villages

@wirehead-wannabe I recall you talking about wanting a college-campus-like environment with activities and whatnot as a living area, but outside of a college campus.

@mailadreapta I recall you talking about the difficulty of getting people to go for medium-density housing.

And I guess @bambamramfan I think I’ve mentioned a similar idea already.  (Though it was a low-trust mechanism, I’m of the opinion that high trust is an equilibrium state which can be achieved through various mechanisms.)

There is an idea I’ve been kicking around for a while, which is to borrow an idea from computer science for resolving the challenges of urban areas by recursively reducing the size of problems until they can be adequately resolved.  Thus, the city is reduced to a bunch of villages/towns.

The above render is for a rough sketch design that spans one kilometer and houses a population of around 5,000 or more, assuming an apartment is about 100 sqm (based on the size of an average apartment in the US).  After reviewing it, I can’t help but think it should perhaps be about ¼ the size, but ah well.  Grey is civic buildings, light green is residential, light blue is commercial, and light brown is footpaths.

  • Mixed use development has a lot of advantages, including reductions in commuting, but for various reasons people don’t like it.
  • People seem to find themselves feeling less connected to, and less trusting of, others.
  • Crime continues to be a problem for many cities.
  • Childhood obesity is on the increase, and children most likely need to get outside more.
  • Police violence is a problem in many cities.
  • Greenery is important for human psychological health.
  • High levels of traffic congestion.

My proposal, then, is to create a smaller community within the city with several key elements:

  • Semi-permeable membrane - Outer wall reduces noise.  Security and level of surveillance can be adjusted according to local crime levels.  As crime rises, all visitors can be tracked, or access can even be limited.
  • Quick access to public transportation (orange areas) - the average human walks at 5kph, and is therefore never more than about 700m and ~10 minutes from a public transport stop.
  • Quick access to local shops - reduce unnecessary transport usage and make goods available easily to the locals, also it’s directly next to the transit stop.
  • Community Center - Common facilities for exercise, social clubs, social events, and so on are near the center.  All residents own a share of the Community Development Board (or something) which hires personnel to clean up the neighborhood, maintain the facilities, and puts on community social events on the regular.  This is very local, direct political involvement with a high share of control per person.  
  • Community Support Officers (CSOs) - (I only recently discovered UK has something with the same name.)  Trained not only in police work, but also emergency medical care, fire suppression, and social work.  Part of the idea here is that CSOs will engage almost entirely in foot patrols when not doing other support work.  They will know who is an actual threat, vs who is mentally ill, possibly be able to deflect bad paths before they become permanent, and pick up on crimes using high-context detective work.  The people of the block will be real people to them and they will see their consequences as they happen.
  • Low-velocity roads - Borrowed from Barcelona, encourages and enhances walking, discourages car use, but still lets cargo move in and out.  Safer for children.  
  • Ample foot/bicycle paths, ample green space for exercise, sports, and letting children outside to play.

Probably this needs to be revised a lot more, starting with a reduction to 500m.

I think something like this might have the potential to lower crime and police violence, while reducing the opposition to medium-density living and increasing psychological and physical health.  

But you know, I’m not an expert.  There’s probably something terribly wrong with this.

urban planning politics art the mitigated exhibition flagpost one thousand villages
argumate
commissarchrisman

The hotspot for ‘ghost’ houses — those left empty to appreciate in value — is in the affluent borough of Kensington & Chelsea in London, where 1,399 houses sit empty. The number represents an 8.5% rise on 2015 and a 22.7% rise between 2006 and 2016.

Why on Earth are any people from Grenfell still sleeping in sports halls after the disaster? London and Kensington especially is chock full of empty luxury apartments being sat on by speculators. These must be opened up immediately.

the-darkest-of-souls

Unless they’re owned by the gov you can’t just take people’s bloody property even if it’s empty that’s why

ace-pervert

thats fucked up

notyourmoderate

The problem in essence is that property owners would rather leave their property empty than to accept less than market value for rent. The question is not “no rent”, it’s “less rent”. Virtually anyone you find sleeping rough on the streets is going to have *some* degree of walking-around money, hardly anyone has literally *no* money. But, the owners of housing don’t want that money, they want market value. They believe that a better offer will come along, and if they accept a low offer they will miss their opportunity for the high offer. It’s a failing of people’s payoff-to-probability calculation.

And also it’s a failing of core concepts of how contemporary capitalism is executed. Not to go too deep into it, the crux is this: If they accept a low offer, their property is worth less. If a fork is sold for five dollars, it is worth five dollars. If a fork is sold for five cents, it is worth five cents. So marking down the rent on a property depreciates the property, marking it up appreciates the property. Because value is determined by common belief rather than any concrete consistencies, sellers try to fix the value of property high and buyers try to negotiate value low. So if one party wants to raise their profit, and one party wants to not sleep on a bench, they have similar ability to set the price but wildly disproportionate levels of need. It’s a conundrum, and there’s virtually no way to feasibly and achievably solve that problem.

argumate

set a reasonable level of land tax, then holding on to an empty house in an expensive area costs you money, encouraging you to rent it out or sell it.

mitigatedchaos

Alternatively, allow them to actually build more housing units.  Japan isn’t seeing similar massive price spikes in its cities that are undergoing population growth.  Send a guy over there and copy whatever it is they’re doing.

Source: commissarchrisman urban planning the invisible fist
mailadreapta
tanadrin

Not a huge fan of the writing style, but this article makes a solid underlying point: whatever the other incentives for building high-rise residential buildings, they’re terrible if you care about the social health of your city. I’m sympathetic to motives like decreasing housing prices in general, but if the tradeoff is between inexpensive housing and annihilating the social fabric, I’m not sure you’ve actually made any improvements to the situation. We’ve known more-or-less how to build healthy cities for decades now, thanks to the work of people like Jane Jacobs; that that Le Corbusier shit still seems to exert a powerful influence over urban planning should be a civilizational embarrassment.

tanadrin

@jadagul replied to your post:

   I suspect most of the action is less in building high-rises–though I like high-rises–and more in moving single-family deatched homes into three- and four-story residential complexes.  Which are exactly the sort of thing that happened in the areas Jacobs celebrated.  I’m not sure even high-rises are anti-Jacobsian if you still have plenty of ground-level retail etc.

Yeah, that last point is part of it; it’s not the density, it’s that isolating neighborhoods or regions of a city to be purely residential or purely commercial makes them either commuter neighborhoods where everyone spends their time bottled up in their personal living space bubble, or sterile wastelands where nobody can just wander down to a cafe for breakfast on a Sunday morning if they feel like it (or, for a less furiously bourgeoise example, you don’t have to spend an hour going to and from work every day).

And the thing is, on some level, developers must know this is a terrible way to design cities: think of how many shopping malls in America are designed to imitate the mixed character of a major thoroughfare of a small town or a cozy European neighborhood: it’s like they see the benches and the wrought-iron lamposts and think they can, in cargo-cult fashion, summon the necessary spirit to make this a desirable place to pass the time, but they’re not actually investigating what makes a street pedestrian-friendly. The clearest memory I have of this is a street in I think Sydney, which tried to do inviting shopfronts and cafes with outdoor seating and all that, but was otherwise surrounded by blank flat walls, and was devoid of any other visible human life besides me and the person walking next to me.

I think I am far from alone in thinking that a neighborhood where I can walk downstairs to the shop, buy some stamps, then post a letter, all over such a short distance I question whether it’s really worth it to even put on shoes, is far more pleasant a place to exist than one where I trade that for a half-acre of lawn and slightly less traffic noise. You could build a futuristic arcology-style high rise like that, that packed together a lot of different types of residential and commercial spaces, but it seems like zoning laws and practical considerations mostly prevent that in reality.

I am almost as anti single-family homes as I am high rises; urban sprawl is as ruinous to a healthy, livable city as artificially separating residential and commercial areas, and insisting every house be an island surrounded by its sea of grass sort of necessitates that kind of segregation anyway. The really crazy thing is that it feels like the U.S. has only been living this way from, like, the end of World War 2 or so, so it’s not like we’ve irreversibly committed our civilization to this path. At the very least, not actively punishing that kind of mixed development would be a start.

jadagul

Huh, so I associate “no high-rises” with “no mixed-use”. As you point out they’re obviously separable. But the sort of zoning regulations that bar the one often also bar the other.

Whether or not most people would, in practice, enjoy mixed-use development, a lot of people are very vociferously opposed to it. Which is part of why it’s illegal in most places.

mailadreapta

Who are these mixed-used haters, seriously? This is an honest question; the advantages of medium-density mixed-used development are praised in literally every media source I see and by 100% of my peer group, so I have a very hazy notion of who opposes it and what their real or supposed motivations are.

jadagul

People who want to make sure no one is on the streets outside their house ever.

Like, the reason a lot of people dislike mixed use housing is pretty much exactly the same Jacobsian reason it’s a good idea. There’s always people on the street and things happening. People who want not-that find it unpleasant.

mailadreapta

Okay, this gives me at least a vague idea of the reference group: people who are aesthetically pleased by the suburban notion of vast regions of Just Houses.

People are allowed to have that preference; but why are they allowed to oppose the existence of mixed-use even if they don’t have to live there?

mitigatedchaos

And could they be bought off by an alternate strategy?

Source: tanadrin urban planning policy
wirehead-wannabe
wirehead-wannabe

I really wish we could just somehow make neighborhoods be more like college campuses, but unfortunately that whole model is built on people all working (or schooling or whatever) in the same place and more or less committing to not moving for four years. (It could also be relying on people not having kids, but if anything I would expect the college campus model to be better at having local daycare services and safe, stimulating places for kids to play, so I don’t think that’s it.

jadagul

Which aspects are you thinking about that college campuses have and dense urban environments don’t?

wirehead-wannabe

A lot more “third spaces” that function well as such, better sense of community/higher trust, green space that actually functions well as green space. Room and board + campus maintenance + activity fees combined seem to be far more modest than the cost of living in an urban area (maybe because it avoids the problems that come with having to pay for a safe neighborhood in a positional-goods type of way by being strongly selected for IQ + consciousnessness? Idk).

furioustimemachinebarbarian

A lot of this is just describing, like, suburbs and small towns.  Nothing stops you from continuing to live in a college town after you finish college, and there are lots of small towns with a similar “feel.” 

wirehead-wannabe

This, I think, is where @jadagul’s point about colleges being selected for people like me becomes relevant. Plus small towns tend to lack the classes and guest speakers and general traits of academia that make it stimulating. But yes, “small Minnesota town filled with rationalists that has good access to infrastructure, jobs, etc” would be more or less ideal.

mitigatedchaos

I sympathize with you and have considered urban planning from this angle, constructing medium-density communities-within-communities.  Just put me in charge of the country as Technocratic Dictator Central Director of the North American Union and I’ll get it sorted.

I’m a good person, and there is little reason to worry about how this might be involved in plans to build an unstoppable super-nation.  Plus, I assure you the prediction markets for the National Delegation will have my back on this matter.

north american union policy urban planning I am retrocausally responsible for Milton Keynes
argumate
shuffling-blogs

What if a (new) city kept all land as municipal property, but auctioned n-year ground leases. Furthermore, bids could have conditions on them, such as public availability of amenities like bathrooms, amount of commercial storefront space available, etc. Other parties, such as neighbouring leaseholders or residents, could contribute to bids that provided benefits to them, and avoid contributing to bids that were harmful, to help internalize those sorts of externalities. 

To ensure compensation for improvements on the land, on lease expiry, run two sets of auctions, one with all bids conditional on demolishing the existing improvements, and the other without that restriction. The demolition-conditional amount goes to the city, and the difference between that and the most successful bid that doesn’t condition on demolition goes to the previous leaseholder.

I haven’t checked this for exploits, like, at all, and my intuition says there probably are some. Also, allowing conditional bids would end up being complex and combinatorial; I’m not volunteering to write the software for that sort of auction system. But it seems like it’s potentially neat. 

argumate

centralised zoning by a non-state entity that owns all the land; and I heard a sound as of a million Libertarians screeching

mitigatedchaos

Daily reminder that in the highly capitalist and efficient city-state of Singapore, over 80% of residents live in housing leased from the state.

Source: its-okae-carly-rae urban planning singapore