“Instant neighborhoods” don’t make for great cities, but DC insists on them – Greater Greater Washington: "In certain corners of DC, flocks of construction cranes are busy assembling dozens of apartment towers from scratch – while other neighborhoods look much the same as they have for decades. This imbalance is quietly undermining the character and continuity of DC's urban fabric by eroding the physical, economic, and social diversity within neighborhoods. Yet DC's planning policies explicitly encourage this pattern when they single out a few areas to develop all at once, while exempting other areas from growth."
---------------------------
This kind of planning is not conducive to having any sense of community. Jane Jacobs would be protesting.
1 comment:
How is DC any different from virtually every other city requiring new development to be "master planned" and HOA-burdened?
Post a Comment