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Incredibly Strange Landscapes Created By Humans
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Incredibly Strange Landscapes Created By Humans |
05/14/09
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Just what I was thinking ...
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[www.fototucavieira.com.br]
And here's the satellite image, thanks to google:
[maps.google.com]
05/14/09
And I thought different socio-economic strata were squished together here in NYC. (Not everywhere of course, I realize there isn't exactly much mid/low-income housing on Park Ave and 68th Street.)
So, without implying that they would, what's to stop folks from one side of the "wall" from simply jumping over, hopping up the terraces and robbing those rich sonsofguns blind?
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And in the satellite image, that pool looks like a penis. There, that's my daily penis comment.
Penis.
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One of the more fascinating imagery anomalies I've seen.
[maps.google.com]
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Would link a video but googlefail=youtubefail.
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Or I can wait until Seattle resembles towns like that. They way they've been putting up huge apartment blocks and condos these last 15 years I have to wonder. Hyper-dense urban dwelling may come to us all someday.
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So DC is already a short but large and confused sprawl like London, Rome or Paris as opposed to vertical canyons like NYC, Chicago or Hong Kong. It's just going to get bigger until bleeds into everything.
It might have something to do with geography too. Maryland is mostly flat, so DC had room to spread out. Rather than being on an island or in a hilly region which forces you to start stacking things up.
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DC's height restrictions and the height restrictions in some of its suburbs, like alexandria, are urban planning designed to create a more european/colonial feel. however it lacks the fractal street designs found in european cities, at least in the district itself, which were born out of cart roads and walking paths gradually evolving into streets as the city slow grew and engulfed them. the district is not without it's own forms of confusion, however, thanks to l'enfant's brilliant 'let's add tons of diagonal cross roads to the standard city grid of rectangular blocks.' so all the roads are, for the most part, either perfectly straight or circles in the district.
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Yes, being the nation's capital, DC benefited from good urban planning right from the start. It was meant to be a beautiful city. I just wonder how long that's going to last as all the East Coast cities begin to bleed into each other. Gibson's Sprawl is on it's way!
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The thought of living in a place where the dwellings are stacked like cord wood and all look the same--being just doors with numbers on them... well, you can have it. Give me a house in the countryside, or even wooded light urban residential, any day of the week.
I'm not opposed to arcologies, but they need to have a lot of open (and preferably green) space inside (the "ecology" part of arcology). Mazes of identical, artificially lit hallways cannot be good for the psyche.
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That's one of the concentration camps once we won the war.