Here because of the Not Just Bikes channel. Love the talk.
@DaCaldwell2 жыл бұрын
Same!
@Oldschool_Gamer_3 жыл бұрын
This guy + notjustbikes = next American golden age
@stevenm89703 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately you'll need some serious change. America is incapable of charge when corporations run the government
@mlembrant3 жыл бұрын
I got here from Notjustbikes ^.^
@kdvinson56383 жыл бұрын
Mother Earth says we Are going to do this. Now! with or without you. Reality Asserts Itself
@CC.R0Y3 жыл бұрын
We can only hope
@attentioncestpaslegal78472 жыл бұрын
Notice that notjustbikes is not living in America.
@Aeyekay03 жыл бұрын
"our cities should not be worried about forcing people to walk a block or two, they should be worried about not being worthy of a one or two block walk" 37:00. This 100%
@ncard00 Жыл бұрын
720p video quality!? Come on Google, 4K60fps really is the minimum standard for KZbin in 2023...
@uniworkhorse3 жыл бұрын
Praying for the YT algorithm to promote this talk to everyone out there - super insightful!
@michaeljfoley12 жыл бұрын
That's my hope as well. This is a crucial message that everyone needs to hear. But I doubt they will. I think our fate has already been sealed, and a collapse is already locked in. At least those of us who have listened to Charles Marohn and others like him, will have a better understanding of what is actually going on, when it all goes down.
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
@@michaeljfoley1 still time to leave....
@boneless93112 жыл бұрын
@@michaeljfoley1 you’re right in some sense, there is no solution to this anymore, just favorable outcomes. However if chuck is trying his hardest to change things we can too
@skenzyme814 жыл бұрын
Please, America. Listen to this man. 🙏
@emiliofernandez71172 жыл бұрын
never! I wanna be a fatty
@acommentator692 жыл бұрын
He is an elitist
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
@@acommentator69 how do you figure that lol.
@acommentator692 жыл бұрын
@@baronvonlimbourgh1716 he lives in a large house himself, then produces to bash them. Walk the walk, don't just talk the talk.
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
@@acommentator69 ahh yes, you didn't watch the presentation did you?
@kevinhawkshaw87843 жыл бұрын
i wish i could like this a million times over. not only are his ideas incredibly powerful and hit home on so many levels for anyone who has the experience of North American urban living, but he's also an absolutely terrific speaker. he makes you want to run through a wall for him.
@Account.for.Comment3 жыл бұрын
The ideas are pretty much basic. The problem is North America is new, many "cities" are only little towns with booming populations resulted because the cost of living or producing is higher in the cities. Most North Americans are settlers than reachers. With low cost of living, large houses, many don' t want the city with all it offered and do not cared that the suburbs are a nothing than a soulless mirage that bring more maintenance costs, more depression and a handicap. They pick the area, fall to fantasy given by companoes, andhated that someone else criticize their choice. What the speaker did is simply to bring it out to the surface, the harder part is to convince it to the non-convert.
@ibfreely89523 жыл бұрын
I like how he's talking money, economics and taxes. Maybe it will make people understand that this lifestyle cannot persist.
@michaeljfoley12 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, guys like Charles Marohn never seem to get enough of an audience, to reach anything more than a tiny fraction of the population. At least those of us who do hear the message, will have some idea of what's happening when the collapse gets truly acute.
@cameroncrocheron27112 жыл бұрын
@@michaeljfoley1 o e
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
@@michaeljfoley1 only city planners need to hear it. And just need torefuse to keep building unsustainable.
@boneless93112 жыл бұрын
@@baronvonlimbourgh1716 no, all of us need to hear it. We all need to be collaborators in building our productive places
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
@@boneless9311 you can't reach everyone, so focus first on city planners
@redmoon7142 жыл бұрын
The strong towns movement is what the United States needs.
@michaeljfoley13 жыл бұрын
This is great, I have been following guys with a similar message to this for years (namely Andres Duany and James Howard Kunstler), and I'm very happy to now be discovering Charles Marohn, who delivers this all-important information and message with great eloquence. Millions of people should be viewing this video, not just 10k. Jeez!
@OwenRULESSS4 жыл бұрын
Stop subsidizing parking!!!! End minimum parking requirements!!!!
@telocities4 жыл бұрын
Reminds me of a story my Dad told me about a new building to be built on hiking trail on a island, I think off coast of california, that had a requirement for parking lot even though it could not be reached by car.
@SkashTheKitsune3 жыл бұрын
@@telocities America, for American cars... oh you were expecting America for Americans? no... they came down the list in recent years... they are now below your vehicle, keep those engines running
@Masterrunescapeer3 жыл бұрын
Kind of completely disagree with it, should be minimum one parking bay per e.g. apartment. Biggest issue in the US is how everything is designed to be sprawled out, so it's a chicken vs egg problem at the moment, and you also can't get public infrastructure at the moment. I hope car sharing will start helping sort it out, if that cost is a bit less than actually owning a car, and it's convenient enough, I doubt many would keep owning a car, would make areas with medium density be quite viable/wanted.
@MatthijsvanDuin3 жыл бұрын
@@Masterrunescapeer "I doubt many would keep owning a car" .. so why exactly are you saying there should be "should be minimum one parking bay per e.g. apartment" if you anticipate their disuse? Why would you force this ugly and unproductive waste of space onto people regardless of whether they have any need or use for it? My apartment doesn't have a parking spot nor have I ever felt even the slightest desire to have car or space to park one.
@Masterrunescapeer3 жыл бұрын
@@MatthijsvanDuin because that's not the situation right now, you can't do it based on a possible future when right now it doesn't exist, you first have to bring proper public transit and then you can start exempting it.
@stephensell71455 жыл бұрын
The bit about Detroit was really sobering 20:15.
@skippyasqueeze3 жыл бұрын
@Brady Raul @Apollo Victor wow super cool that you guys both joined youtube one day apart just to say this! if it was the SAME day i'd be suspicious but as it is I'll have to try it out myself
@safe-keeper10423 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the part when he said "Detroit wasn't different, Detroit was just early" was incredibly chilling.
@AllenGraetz2 жыл бұрын
@@safe-keeper1042 You're easily chilled.
@thomasthuene31733 жыл бұрын
One should not underestimate of how much zoning in this plays a role, much of it motivated by making sure that "undesirable" people cannot move to where you (the desirable people) have moved. Great example is Lexington, MA, which literally went on the barricades to stop the red line extension because they were afraid to have black people move there. Now they live in traffic purgatory.
@InuJF3 жыл бұрын
Arlingtonian here -- that was Arlington, not Lexington
@PankajBhambhani643 жыл бұрын
Love the term "traffic purgatory", I think thats what it is and that's what they deserve.
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
But racism doesn't exist in america. Obama was elected, shut up! Even though everything seems to come down to racism lol.
@isidoreaerys87453 жыл бұрын
This is a Magnum Opus, a Manifesto on American History and Architecture.
@jooky873 жыл бұрын
Wow one of the most comprehensive talks on this subject
@jooky873 жыл бұрын
Just shows perception is not always reality. The “poor” people are the hardworking people keeping things going.
@michaeljfoley12 жыл бұрын
I'm sure plenty of the wealthier people in the outer suburbs are hard working too, it's more a matter of, they expect their far-flung exurb subdivisions to have publicly provided urban-level infrastructure and amenities. It's that public to private investment imbalance, that makes those developments so financially problematic.
@Tygearianus2 жыл бұрын
“We need to make cities worth a two block walk.” Hear hear!!
@G5Hohn2 жыл бұрын
Zoning rules have a huge role in all this. Most of the reason you don't have complex neighborhoods comes down to zoning. In most small cities, you simply can't put a convenience store in a subdivision, even though that subdivision has excellent sidewalks and is otherwise walkable. Why do we think of walkability only in terms of walking for its own sake vs having something to walk to? Why can't I walk to a small store in my neighborhood? I'd love to be able to walk a block or two and get milk or bread instead of hopping in the car and going to the MegaMart. Heaven forbid you not want to budget 2 hours and $200 for a single mega grocery trip, but rather just want to get a single bag of some small items a 10 minute walk away. Strong countries are built on strong states. Strong states come from strong cities. Strong cities come from strong neighborhoods. Chuck is absolutely correct about the bottom up approach being the only viable path.
@atomic.rabbit2 жыл бұрын
a bag of milk, right?
@F14thunderhawk2 жыл бұрын
the problem is none of his conclusions are remotely correct even if his concept is correct. hes advocating for the same, incredibly expensive maintenance and budgetarily intensive spending and construction of infrastructure that cities currently undergo. a cheap road that a town normally builds? lasts 3 to 10 years. a Properly built road? lasts at least 70 years. Germany spends less per mile maintaining the Autobaun because Hitler had it built right. And its not like that highway system doesnt see abuse either, considering Patton had fun driving the Ruhr pocket up it with the 3rd army. If entire US Armored Brigades couldnt fuck the autobaun, why is Eisenhower's Interstate not rated for usage by US Armies? because Americans dont care to think about spending the money build infrastructure properly, just to get it built.
@theultimatereductionist75922 жыл бұрын
"Chuck is absolutely correct about the bottom up approach being the only viable path." No. THAT is what he is wrong about. Yes - governments ABSOLUTELY SHOULD give everyone a choice: walk, bike, car. Absolutely SHOULD, in fact, pander MORE to walking, biking than to cars. However, where Marohn goes wrong is pushing vague philosophies such as "bottom up approach". Top-down approach where you plan EVERYTHING so everything is INTEGRATED is EXACTLY what we should do. Idiotically piece-meal additions & renovations in a chaotic unplanned manner is exactly what has been done wrong for thousands of years: as he talks about it: the trial and error approach that has led to countless failures. He is talking about trial and error of evolution as a JUSTIFIED thing, without emphasizing the countless errors/failures.
@beback_ Жыл бұрын
@@F14thunderhawk Lol Hitler didn't build shit. The Nazis you seem to look up to got their asses handed to them by... Russia, which given current events doesn't exactly look like a first-rate power.
@thomasthuene31733 жыл бұрын
@ 35:40: Do that small thing. Interestingly, during the pandemic, this is what many towns did. Seating outside, with allowing patrons to consume alcoholic beverages, suddenly was ok, and no American mass-extinction occurred. Pop-up shops on sidewalks, widened sidewalks and closed or narrowed city streets. Moody Street in Waltham, MA, or Main Street in Nashua, NH, were never as attractive.
@SkashTheKitsune3 жыл бұрын
New York is doing it very wrong, they have enclosed much of the sidewalk to accommodate the "outdoor seating" to be basically an addition of the restaurant completely ignoring the purpose of that allowance
@mattf37612 жыл бұрын
MAKE BETTER USE OF WHAT WE HAVE!!! Yes! The first R in the recycling triangle is reduce waste. The cheapest construction project is one that didn't happen.
@isidoreaerys87453 жыл бұрын
“‘Maintenance Free’ simply means that it will never be Maintained.”
@theultimatereductionist75922 жыл бұрын
Well said.
@ed17262 жыл бұрын
What a great talk. Why don't politicians talk like this?
@empirestate87913 жыл бұрын
High-density areas are cheaper to live in, since you can rely on public transit, biking, and walking rather than a car, saving a ton of money that would otherwise go to fuel. Most infrastructure will cost less per resident, and more space will be available on the city outskirts for parks, warehouses, and other low-density developments which couldn't happen due to urban sprawl.
@gildone843 жыл бұрын
The only problem right now, and it would only be a temporary one if we were were to re-design more cities, is that demand for such places exceeds supply. That makes housing more expensive. There is no way I could afford to live in most of the most walkable, transit-friendly neighborhoods of N. America. We've chosen a hybrid-- a small city that is walkable to a degree, but due to the fact that most houses here are small and there are no luxury condos or apartments (yet), it hasn't become un-affordable. And, my town desperately lacks adequate transit too. We still have to drive more than we'd like, but it's not as bad as some adjacent cities.
@capnpaco3 жыл бұрын
@@gildone84 That just says there need to be more high density areas though, right?
@kyriacosstavrinides8933 жыл бұрын
High density doesn't however mean residential towers. High-rise residential towers have similar maintenance issues that suburban communities do. Take for example the tower that collapsed in Miami and realize that that specific tower's maintenance budget wasn't too different to other towers. High density is more like duplexes and small apartment buildings.
@janganliatchannelini2 жыл бұрын
Damn this person should be a president of all countries
@kevinfalconett80122 жыл бұрын
We need more strong towns!
@d.e.74672 жыл бұрын
This subject is covered in depth by the KZbin channel "Not Just Bikes". People-centric should be the top priority. If that means walking or driving a car, then so be it. He is loathe to blame cars, but after WW2, the USA went car-centric, and the world followed.
@richcampus5 жыл бұрын
"THE PROPERTIES OF A RAIN FOREST ARE EMERGENT. YOU CAN'T GO OUT AND CREATE A RAIN FOREST" @24:21
@maxnewts3 жыл бұрын
The 1940s car biased suburbia development messed people’s perception of wealth up. It isn’t always about whether the families look like they are clean and simple. It’s about their productivity. I always say to people that wealth is not on the surface, as you can be plentiful in textures but still have low productivity and still be as constrained as someone with lesser quality of surroundings. (I.e. car, watch, clothes, fancy technology). I derive true wealth to be someone’s ability to use the products and objects around them in good resource management and productive mindsets to benefit their overall experience (i.e. choosing the bike over the car for shorter journeys so they can save money, switching their products which require fossil fuels over to electricity for things like heating and cooking, so they don’t have as grand a maintenance cost etc.) This isn’t about preferred textures from the big box store catalogue, it’s about building your life so you don’t have insecurities such as financial or housing lifestyles.
@jeffcostner3 жыл бұрын
This is incredible and I hope America listens to the this man. I'm curious, though, what can be done to encourage people not to live in the suburbs? Part of the appeal is that it is so much more affordable to live in the suburbs than going into the heart of a city. An apartment in the heart of NY or Toronto is outrageously expensive but if you go to the outskirts of the city it's so much more affordable. I guess maybe I don't understand what the average person (who isn't a city planner) can or should do about any of this. It's interesting to learn about, though.
@joshthegringo3 жыл бұрын
In my experience the major thing that keeps people locked into suburbs is good public schools. We need to find a way to make inner city schools more attractive.
@DC-xj2fe3 жыл бұрын
Change property taxes to be according to what it actually costs to service/build infrastructure for an area (instead of houses' property values), and that cost alone would discourage a lot of would-be suburbanites. If that were the case, it probably wouldn't be more affordable to live in the suburbs.
@lkrnpk3 жыл бұрын
Suburbs are not a problem if they are: a) more dense at least in the core b) they have a great public transport connection, train to downtown The problem is that the US does not have that in most places. You can still live in single family homes in Europe, for example, but then they are very close to some kind of ''suburban core'' which is in turn next to a train station. That suburban core has a few mid-rise apartment buildings where poorer people can live, and a bit more outside of that there are duplexes, triplexes and single family homes for wealthier people or people who just like that type of living. Since ''suburban core'' is much more dense, it can sustain shops, smaller malls, school, kindergarten, a doctor's office etc., so you don't need to drive far or even drive to the city at all, because your workplace too might be near a train/metro station on the other end (or other kind of mass transit). Essentially in Europe suburbia is a series of small towns along the routes of mass transit. Not just a huge block of same single family houses and cul de sacs. That also helps with gentrification issue, as poorer people still have apartment blocks where apartments are in suburbia but way cheaper than single family homes, so people mix more and there is a balance. And it helps with maintaining infrastructure too as more taxpayers live in the same area, which in turn also attract more shops and businesses. Also, more people use mass transit to commute so streets can be smaller
@kyriacosstavrinides8933 жыл бұрын
I don't know about getting people to move out of the suburbs, but the first step is probably letting them fail.
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
It is so expensive because everyone wants to live in a walkable neighbourhood but they aren't allowed to be build anywhere.
@gravityhypernova4 жыл бұрын
Wondered what people were talking about with the Diverging Diamond fiasco. I wondered what this 'fiasco' was. After looking it up, it sounds like it was just a bunch of unfounded internet outrage that ignored what was actually said in order to 'refute' Charles without actually addressing what his critique was. It went from being about the fact that gigantic overworked highways are expensive and alienating at the human scale (even if he acknowledged it is efficient for traffic) to an argument that it was successful simply because it reduced pedestrian injuries. Ignoring that this is just moving the goalposts from the entire stated theme of this video and what Charles' work seems to be focused on: the financial unsustainability and thus irresponsibility of these large scale and expensive infrastructure projects, which kick the can of maintenance down the metaphorical road. If people watched this video and have an ounce of comprehension, they can see that he is challenging the previous decades of design, so we can avoid the need for those sorts of dangerous eyesores like the DDI in the first place. The rest of the globe has examples of ways that accomplish transport and livable places, but America has a fondness for doing things differently. .. no matter how stubborn or inefficient. Why? Because some people make a profit while doing so. But everyone ignores the long term, cumulative maintenance costs: another form of real debt. This talk was before the pandemic, but this year has contributed toward the difficulties of every city to simply keep up with sewer, road and water maintenance. Companies have stopped bothering to renew office leases, and discover they are happy to save that money while also finding that many of their employees are happier working from home, without an unpaid and boring or stressful commute. For being able to spend less time on the road, burning gas, and more time with family. TL;DR: The DDI does what it was made for better than what came before... but it's still a polished turd. The point was never to congratulate it for being well-polished, it's to point out that it's still shit.
@theultimatereductionist75922 жыл бұрын
The DDI is exactly an example of unplanned idiotic piece-meal evolutionary thinking, rather than top-down integrated and plan EVERYTHING including proper safe walk paths and bike paths approach.
@pux0rb4 ай бұрын
Late reply, but this is one of the best summaries I've read about the DDI. People missed the entire point of the criticism of car-centric infrastructure.
@allanroberts86114 жыл бұрын
Chuck is a legend
@888ettio3 жыл бұрын
Amazing speaker, we should be talking about this more. I would like to hear him on solutions tho
@tomasbritt44443 жыл бұрын
Notjustbikes mentions a return back to the traditional urban model as the solution
@nwm-art41773 жыл бұрын
I moved from the burbs into the city near light rail. Best decision. Life is better.
@movia12342 жыл бұрын
I am reminded of this quote from an old right conservative, "Change is essential to the body social, the conservative reasons, just as it is essential to the human body. A body that has ceased to renew itself has begun to die. But if that body is to be vigorous, the change must occur in a regular manner, harmonizing with the form and nature of that body; otherwise change produces a monstrous growth, a cancer, which devours its host. The conservative takes care that nothing in a society should ever be wholly old, and that nothing should ever be wholly new. "
@nmhood4 жыл бұрын
Fantastic talk 🔥
@kopias4 жыл бұрын
Amazing talk. Thank you.
@roteschwert2 жыл бұрын
Funny thing, Charles Marohn is one of those rare Republicans that aren't attached to financially insolvent suburbia. This guy is actually practicing what he preaches (fiscal conservatism). They'd probably call him a RINO nowadays.
@SexyCommandoMeso2 жыл бұрын
People like Charles are the best shot society has at actually fixing any of this stuff. There's a lot of similar talking points on the other side of the political spectrum, but from what I've seen on KZbin at least, their content tends to veer too far into the leftist/socialist angle in a way that probably alienates many of the people who would otherwise be on board (and crucially, some of those people likely hold the public offices required to put the rubber stamp on these changes). The eye-opening thing about the Strong Towns presentations is they show that _even under the lens of capitalism_ suburban sprawl is a bad idea.
@roteschwert2 жыл бұрын
@@SexyCommandoMeso Agree. The overwhelming amount of Yimbyism is preached by urban leftists which instantly turns off a lot of folks
@theultimatereductionist75922 жыл бұрын
Why do you say Marohn is a republicunt, a member of the most fascist hypocritical full-of-shit anti-American anti-freedom-for-those-who-deserve-it terrorist organizations on the planet?
@theultimatereductionist75922 жыл бұрын
@@roteschwert All your anti-socialist anti-communist pro-anarchy hypocrisy (ALL laws ALL government = communism, socialism) is what turns people off from conservatives/conservatism, and the extreme 2-party dictatorship in the USA: only republicunts and democraps. Never any Greens, Socialist, Communists, Transhumanists or any other parties. Just evil conservatives and useless worthless centrists in power.
@jannanasi4444 Жыл бұрын
I think he might be independent nowadays. He wrote an article in 2019 ("What Democrats and Republicans Get Wrong (About Each Other)") where he mentioned a political perception gap test and wrote "For the sake of the test, I identified as a Republican (I’m really not these days)." He's also on the Board of Advisors for the American Solidarity Party.
@muhilan85404 жыл бұрын
Strong Towns red-pilled me...
@skenzyme814 жыл бұрын
Muhilan Selvaa Ditto, some of his early videos blew my mind.
@bhatkrishnakishor4 жыл бұрын
Seen you on Lex's videos, you got good taste 👍
@safe-keeper10423 жыл бұрын
For me it was Not Just Bikes. Then again NJB borrows a lot from Strong Towns, so I guess it was Strong Towns by proxy.
@kaiserteddie95643 жыл бұрын
@@safe-keeper1042 the guy says he was inspired by strongtowns
@OhWell02 жыл бұрын
This guy is great!
@rhizocarp3 жыл бұрын
18:13 Three-car garage with attached house. ROFL!
@gtsupport83753 жыл бұрын
Not just bike brought me here :)
@DougGrinbergs3 жыл бұрын
4:37 Fresno boundaries from 1897... Watch that growth!
@JurOz19805 жыл бұрын
Thx, good talk!
@MaydayAggro2 жыл бұрын
So sad seeing the main street of his town today versus the way it started and grew.
@someguyontheinternet78562 жыл бұрын
These ideas need to catch fire.
@shane_rm10254 жыл бұрын
Read Progress and Poverty by Henry George
@susanbaynham-evans84533 жыл бұрын
Great talk thank you.
@justinleemiller2 жыл бұрын
Brilliant guy.
@vincewhite50873 жыл бұрын
Tell cities, no new malls. Transform old malls first.
@ShidaiTaino3 жыл бұрын
No more malls
@ianhomerpura89372 жыл бұрын
@@ShidaiTaino or replicate what Japan, China, and many other Asian countries are doing: build the malls either beside or above railway and bus stations. Build them where the foot traffic is, and they will never run out of customers.
@eem80393 жыл бұрын
I am a plumber and I love little plans
@charlestolley2294 Жыл бұрын
The ideology he's preaching was once called "conservatism", it's a hard ideology to come by anymore
@kylejmarsh39882 жыл бұрын
Too bad the slides are not showing.. though I really like the suit Charles!
@Jordan-ws5vn3 жыл бұрын
Fantastic talk
@Nabium3 жыл бұрын
People would rather live in unsafe communities where they die from traffic accidents due to bad infrastructure design, than to live in unsafe communities where people die from violence caused by social issues. It's more instinctive to us as a species to fear a another man than a car. But America might be that one beautiful culture where both of these communities can flourish together. Having both more car accidents and homicides than other comparable developed countries. Of course poverty, social issues, car culture, gun culture, gun laws, car ownership, traffic laws etc are a part of it, but, we seem to forget the impact of urban planning and infrastructure on both crime and traffic safety. While a drunk guy driving in America killed a man, a drunk guy driving in Europe injured a guy. You can blame the drunk guy all you want; but the difference between life and death in the situation was the urban planning and infrastructure. And if you cram all the poor people into projects and into inner cities, then guess what; it's gonna be hard for a kid growing up there to be an example of social mobility. The American attitude is often that of responsibility of the individual; you blame the kid when he starts dealing drugs. But you didn't grow up in his artificially contructed neighbourhood where all the unemployed were squeezed together, so, you don't really understand that if you were in his shoes then you might be throwing your shoes on a wire to signal you've got a new batch of drugs coming in. It's not just your individual personality which caused you to be a working member of the community, it's about the circumstances which shaped you. And America's urban design is one of the root causes for several of it's major problems, especially traffic related deaths and homicides. There isn't a single country in the EU with higher homicide rates or traffic-related death rates than the US, not a single one. Even Norway which is a very car dependent country, the US has 6 times as many traffic related deaths. Caused by poor urban planning more than anything else.
@Monsterdrinker983 жыл бұрын
best comment ever goddamn…
@davidsixtwo3 жыл бұрын
Really good & useful
@adamschrepfer10863 жыл бұрын
32:39 Peoria Illinois!!
@stevenpetryk3 жыл бұрын
It would be nice if this talk overlaid the slides that he's talking about while he's talking about them.
@karlamcgee51832 жыл бұрын
yes
@Iansdaboss3 жыл бұрын
At 33:40 he mentions Steve *something* .. can anyone decipher what he's saying.. Mazan? I can't find on Google.. Seems interesting..
@mgjmiller19952 жыл бұрын
Steve Mouzon. Engineer and New Urbanist
@davidgardner76184 жыл бұрын
super interesting!
@macioluko94843 жыл бұрын
@34:03 Eventually if we keep on this path we’ll end up with a country not worth defending.
@benderboyboy2 жыл бұрын
1 million poor people will pay more tax than 10 billionaires.
@Zarrx2 жыл бұрын
Assuming you started and are the CEO of a multi-billion dollar company why would you report more than necessary on your income? it would be clearly obvious that you would keep your recorded personal income in 200-300k or so. So yes, 10 people reporting under $500,000 on their personal income pay less tax than 1 million people reporting $28,000 to $40,000 dollars on their personal income. If you want to tax the rich you need to reduce tax incentives and tax breaks for incorporated companies.
@timmccaul3 жыл бұрын
Any available research on the affects of large scale apartment complexes that get dumped into the isolated neighborhoods
@Chiszle4 жыл бұрын
Time for said change.
@vincewhite50873 жыл бұрын
Also all the codes.
@ThePixel19832 жыл бұрын
"We all have to copy Detroit." - Feels like watching a horror movie and screaming at the screen "No, don't go in there!".
@yougobike Жыл бұрын
Did you listen to the whole recording? He said Detroit messed up and they did. Thus we messed up too when we copied. He said we should not had copied them back then.
@DougGrinbergs3 жыл бұрын
34:55 fix a struggle - just do it: tactical urbanism en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tactical_urbanism
@Fixtheproblemwithgoodpolicy3 жыл бұрын
❤
@tyrvinodinson97902 жыл бұрын
That's what happens under capitalism, the wealth gets striped out by the ultra wealthy and the working class gets left to suffer the consequences
@wendypennell94323 жыл бұрын
We need little bodegas in suburbia
@vincewhite50873 жыл бұрын
Gradual is good. Bootstrapping.
@vincewhite50873 жыл бұрын
Most Canadian cities that the downtown makes more money, only if office & condo towers. But these areas don’t look like the old strip mall in other pictures. Now my city has over 40% empty towers now &it’s getting worse.
@NK-vd6wv3 жыл бұрын
CoVid. Pandemic is the only vulnerable aspect.
@Account.for.Comment3 жыл бұрын
@@NK-vd6wv Not exactly. We know what the pandemic bring in crowded areas, but suburban areas, the datas is harder to find and easier to lie. It still a bigger hassle to bring in neccessary supports, much easier to die without someone else noticing. Also, not all high-dense cities are crowded if the urban planners did their jobs right.
@Beroean302 жыл бұрын
Canadian cities are urban spawls
@Trinhnguyen7142 жыл бұрын
perhaps it would help if our kids are/were to be attracted to stay and or come back... instead of dreading i.e. "can't wait to run off away etc..."
@danny-li6io2 жыл бұрын
They should do a discussion about how actively Google engages in censorship.
@vincewhite50873 жыл бұрын
Most of homeless & high crime is near towers too.
@sonoftheright5 жыл бұрын
*shows Williamsville* "This is another place in Upstate New York." Dude, this is literally in the suburbs of Buffalo, which you were just talking about.
@muhilan85404 жыл бұрын
Technically a different place
@vincewhite50873 жыл бұрын
My city is always hype todo crazy uppy things, but doesn’t want to clear snow & stuff, but for crazy crap they find all kinds of money. Need new examples. Crack house or abandoned homes don’t pay taxes.
@theultimatereductionist75922 жыл бұрын
I really wish Charles L Marohn would read my comment and respond to my question/criticism about philosophy, which is: Isn't building a completed brand-new development/ecosystem the LOGICAL HOLISTIC INTEGRATED way of doing things? .e.g such as the FANTASTICALLY WONDERFUL Swiss train system. Isn't that BETTER THAN STUPIDLY INCREMENTALLY TACKING ON stuff, such as making a car-dependent city, then tacking on a bike lane by painting a line down the road, then tacking on a handicap ramp, as an afterthought?
@musicotensai Жыл бұрын
He’s talking about what’s already built. You can change a single family home to a duplex. Allow tiny homes and low rise apartments in the neighborhood. The other option would be teardown neighborhoods and displace people. The swiss already had traditional way of incremental building and efficient land use. The next logical step was their rail system.
@AllenGraetz2 жыл бұрын
I love the confidence Chuck has in declaring that the outcome a political process, taxable value, is a measurement of economic activity and financial productivity. Wonderful stuff. I can' imagine why nothing of the sort is found in academia.
@addammadd2 жыл бұрын
4:30 oh man you know stuff’s going pear shaped when Fresno comes up. Fresno, the butt filled ashtray of California. Care to guess its political distribution?
@vincewhite50873 жыл бұрын
They are spending it in police, fire , ems
@miridium1213 жыл бұрын
Great talk, horrid camera work. Got dizzy watching.
@thomaswade30723 жыл бұрын
"the sidewalk ends right off screen" unfinished and pointless, like most google products
@erikwsince19813 жыл бұрын
His answer at the end about the automobile is disappointing. The other nations that he’s talking about, don’t rely on the automobile as much because they haven’t built their infrastructure around the automobile alone, they’ve built it around multiple modes of transportation, and they’ve made not having a car a possibility because of it. That should be the goal. You shouldn’t need a car just to live in society. Period. I feel he’s missing his own point here. Kind of weird.
@timothygroten41932 жыл бұрын
No what he’s saying is that the car dependency is a result of the way we finance our development. The goal is not to eliminate cars. The goal is to change the way we finance and implement development. When this is changed, an outcome will be less car dependency. He was just trying to emphasize that we need to focus on finance/development as the root cause to be dealt with, as it causes all of the problems we see today (infrastructure debt, car dependency, housing prices, etc…)
@gemelwalters29422 жыл бұрын
@@timothygroten4193 yes but the problem with that answer is it dismisses the very deliberate development choices to facilitate automobiles. This wasn't just some accidental design born from poor financing or something we stumbled into. It was years of lobbying and influencing policy to appease the automobile industry. He's answering the "how" but not the "why". If you're city is built to facilitate cars and not ppl then the problem is very much the cars.
@williamjameslehy1341 Жыл бұрын
American cities weren't car-dependent until after WWII, and the change happened within a single generation. No reason we can't undo all that damage in another generation.
@saideepakb3 жыл бұрын
Surprised/confused he didn't say a word about race.
@theultimatereductionist75922 жыл бұрын
"Chuck is absolutely correct about the bottom up approach being the only viable path." No. THAT is what he is wrong about. Yes - governments ABSOLUTELY SHOULD give everyone a choice: walk, bike, car. Absolutely SHOULD, in fact, pander MORE to walking, biking than to cars. However, where Marohn goes wrong is pushing vague philosophies such as "bottom up approach". Top-down approach where you plan EVERYTHING so everything is INTEGRATED is EXACTLY what we should do. Idiotically piece-meal additions & renovations in a chaotic unplanned manner is exactly what has been done wrong for thousands of years: as he talks about it: the trial and error approach that has led to countless failures. He is talking about trial and error of evolution as a JUSTIFIED thing, without emphasizing the countless errors/failures.
@vincewhite50873 жыл бұрын
Suburbs of Rome are bland & boring too. Been there.
@gildone843 жыл бұрын
His concern is financial productivity.
@Netherlands0313 жыл бұрын
This talk could have done with some more calculations and graphs
@decappa Жыл бұрын
he talks about the ills of suburbs and only says the word suburbs like one time
@vincewhite50873 жыл бұрын
You said 13,500 people twice when talking about home town.
@jackbillings41093 жыл бұрын
Yes. His hometown’s population didn’t change, but it now covers 10x the size
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
Because the sane amount people live there as before. That is the point.
@mitchelldavis93722 жыл бұрын
This doesn't make sense to me. If cities are built all the wrong ways, Why aren't they dying? Why is no one in charge trying to fix it? Like what is the timeline for something to cause change?
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
They are basicly sustaining themselves by sprawling out even more. And just only doing the bare minimum of maintenance on infrastructure to patch it up to where it keeps working, that is why roads are in a sorry state, bridges are barely standing, people still get poisoned from lead pipes etc. And most cities own the land in the city limits that is not yet developed, selling that off to developers to build shiny new stuff to keep the lights on, but ironicly also taking on more future liability they can not sustain. The cash from those sales funds the most acute maintenance needed on old infrastructure, and the new infra that was needed for the new development can be ignored for the next 30 years before that starts failing. Not just bikes did a video on this. It's basicly digging one hole to fill another into forever. This can be done for a pretty long time actually, you can keep an old car running for years if you just keep patching only the most important things as cheap as possible. It will look like a wreck, it will have some holes, the seats will be broken, a window and a couple of lights missing. But it will still drive you to work for years.. Until it just sudenly seizes catasrophicly on the highway, like detroid.
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
And why is nobody trying to fix it? Because politicians that want to change anthing or god forbid tries to touch anyones hunk of steel or proposes some lefty stuff like having places where people are more important then cars or spend money on anything making a city more livable gets chased out of office with pitchforks...
@Paul_C2 жыл бұрын
Growth Ponzi Scheme. Search for that, and remember the man who perfected it still resides in jail, or did he die?
@perrybiava15743 жыл бұрын
I am handicapped. I am not going to ride a bike or walk three blocks. I am also not going to share a wall with a noisy neighbor.
@Masterrunescapeer3 жыл бұрын
Currently living in an apartment, I think I've heard my neighbors once when they were shouting in front of my front door, that's pretty much it, have never actually heard their conversations/TV/loud music. The issue is that lots of apartments are built as cheaply as possible and then you get paper thin walls, there are enough ways that you can reduce noise that besides actually shouting and general heavy walking, you don't have much noise in an apartment. Would love if the US spent some time doing things like figuring out that carpets are actually good in apartments for noise dampening, maybe put in legislation in regards to wall thickness/techniques that minimize noise transference, etc. Also class of neighbor, rules in regards to noise that are enforced, etc. Does mean I myself can't play super loud music though, which is a bit annoying, but have a headset.
@heatherswanson16643 жыл бұрын
I totally agree. I think we should make accessible transit a priority. In addition to making regular transit vehicles accessible to mobility device users the city needs to provide transportation options such as vans for people with disabilities that can take them to places such as doctors appointments door to door, at the same cost as regular transit tickets.
@nate4fish3 жыл бұрын
It’s about choices, building codes can address noise if the people decide they want to force that.
@Masterrunescapeer3 жыл бұрын
@@heatherswanson1664 here in Europe, Vienna, all subways can be rolled onto with a wheelchair, there's elevators. Trams (street cars) if they're the newer ones are also wheelchair friendly, there are still a couple of old ones but never two in a row, so max wait off-peak is around 10 minutes if you get really unlucky as a wheelchair user (as in just missed the previous one). On-peak ~5 minutes since one every 2-3 minutes. For visually impaired there are guiding strips on floors to stairs and subway, etc. The entire bus fleet is also low floor. In Cape Town, South Africa, the entire MyCiti bus system is wheelchair accessible, so are all stations. Most modern transport systems take disability into account, the US just has a lot of older systems still from the 60-80's which really isn't great. Wish they'd get public transit properly sorted, but the urban sprawl makes it difficult for most places to have a cost effective one.
@kyriacosstavrinides8933 жыл бұрын
It's not one or the other. There's plenty of possibilities in between.
@tasteflavored2 жыл бұрын
Go out and create unique and interesting microcultures in your immediate area so companies can monopolize and profit from it. He doesn't even acknowledge the fly in the ointment to all his flowery ideas: gentrification.
@Paul_C Жыл бұрын
It is America, however hard you campagne, you are not going to talk people out of their cars. End of story.
@fermatachambersoloists Жыл бұрын
Worked on me, and countless other young people. Maybe older generations have a love affair with cars but we sure don’t.
@williamjameslehy1341 Жыл бұрын
Worked for me. I felt "free" when I first got my license. But then I went to college in Boston where you don't need a car thanks to dense, mixed use cityscape and public transportation, and I learned what true freedom was. Being dependent on a machine that costs tens of thousands of dollars plus costly fuel and maintenance is a terrible way to go through life. A world where you can walk out your front door and get to work, school, shopping, restaurants, friends' houses, etc with just your own two feet is an amazing feeling.
@pistachiogarza3393 жыл бұрын
Multifamily homes is a terrible idea. lets say you bought your side of the duplex 20 years ago and it is starting to need repairs, wages have remained stagnent as workers output has become more efficient, while cost of living and building materials have inflated. You cannot afford to repair out of pocket , and banks refuse to finance mortgages on multifamily homes. It's the wealth disparity, and the rich refusing to pay taxes. Construction of a big box store or chain hotel is often publicly subsidized, in some cases they do not even pay property taxes because they claim the sales tax and jobs will make up for the city footing the bill.
@cinnanyan3 жыл бұрын
I don't know where you heard that banks refuse to finance mortgages on multifamily homes but it's not true.
@pistachiogarza3393 жыл бұрын
@@cinnanyan That's what my grandmothers credit union told her when she needed to repair her duplex. Maby it was ageism after all, It instantly soured me on banks/credit unions and duplexes. We trusted her credit union because she had been a member for 70 years at the time.
@Masterrunescapeer3 жыл бұрын
@@pistachiogarza339 you will not get a mortgage if you are over 70 about, all you have is a pension and if pension collateral is not enough, how are you going to afford a mortgage? What happens when you die, does asset cover the cost, plus is it worth it for a lower cost dwelling in the case that lawyers need to be involved (as they need to lay claim to estate on her passing)? Once you get old enough, it becomes very difficult to get loans.
@nate4fish3 жыл бұрын
It really rubs me the wrong way that we allow our governments to give tax breaks to companies especially Wall Street
@baronvonlimbourgh17162 жыл бұрын
They work everywhere else..
@bobboberson20244 жыл бұрын
Well, this guy no longer has any credibility after his Diverging Diamond fiasco. But you can fail that hard and survive in America.
@geoman7984 жыл бұрын
Maybe give this presentation a watch, its quite eye opening, and then you may see that his critiques on the diverging diamond were extremely valid
@bobboberson20243 жыл бұрын
@ Search him. He just likes to give engineers a hard time.
@gildone843 жыл бұрын
@Bob Boberson... And another one lacking the observational and comprehension skills to grasp that the DD video was a commentary on how pedestrian-friendly they are and nothing more. He clearly explained that in the first 35 seconds--and you completely missed it. I'd suggest refraining from judgments about failing hard and still surviving, as you very much resemble that remark. And since Marohn is a P.E. himself, he is certainly allowed to critique his profession. Instead of being so butt-hurt over nothing, engineers should be mature and adult enough to accept the fact that, like all professions, engineering isn't perfect and is causing some problems that need fixing.
@bobboberson20243 жыл бұрын
@@gildone84 Aw, pipe down. Don't get so angry. Your personal attacks are unbecoming. Charles is provocative, I'll give him that. He thought the diamonds were "ugly." Not exactly deep thoughts. But he'll be fine. I'll be fine. And you... Not sure.
@ShidaiTaino3 жыл бұрын
@@bobboberson2024 oh no an intersection. God have mercy on us all
@w4158004 жыл бұрын
Just read about this guy opposing the Diverging Diamond, currently on a youtube safari down voting all his videos.
@ghostofeverettruess4 жыл бұрын
i dont get it
@melpomeninelaj88814 жыл бұрын
@@ghostofeverettruess www.strongtowns.org/journal/2018/5/14/that-ol-diverging-diamond But Calvin here is being naive because as you can read also in his article: 'I love the notion of me being "the worst example of our dramatic outrage culture" - my kids would find that funny. I also find it fascinating how comment after comment insists that DDI is a huge success because it handles traffic well. Yeah, I'm sure it does, but the video I was reacting to tried to make the case that it was "pedestrian friendly" which it most certainly is not.'
@skenzyme814 жыл бұрын
Calvin Ye The “Diverging Diamond” is a brilliant gem of traffic engineering. It’s great for cars... right now. In the long run, the DD is part of an unsustainable pattern of development. It’s tough.
@tindo71474 жыл бұрын
The problem is he won't admit he's wrong.
@al-du6lb4 жыл бұрын
@@tindo7147 @calvin ye you guys obviously don't fully understand his message. The diverging diamond does it's job well, but Chuck is envisioning a world where we don't need diverging diamonds, the federal flower of the US.