Is it possible to have an ultra dense city that has a low cost of living?

Haven’t read through the responses to the OP yet, so this has probably already been mentioned, but the Chinese are already trying to do this…their mega city of Jing-Jin-Ji is there attempt to impose this. The proposed city will, IIRC, have over a hundred million people in it. :eek:

From farmers that work and or live in more rural areas. I am not calling for the complete desertion of rural areas, it’s still useful land, I just want even stronger magnets to pull people outside of those engines of conservatism. Because that is what just gave us Trump.

Because it means even if I have obscure interests and hobbies, there are many people nearby with similar interests. Even if I don’t interact with them directly, it means businesses and services that cater to those people can survive and even thrive.

What do you think conservatism represents? Not necessarily Trump supporters, but in general? You make it sound like constraining ones self to bend to a higher authority is a good thing - it’s not. That you think conservatism, however you define it, is anachronistic is especially strange given where we are in the current political climate.

Cities can be a draw as much as they like, but when you start talking about wanting to grind rural areas to dust and coming up with ways that are destructive to ways of life not in the city, well, that seems antagonistic.

Except LA/LB is rated #3 here…

http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2011/02/08/10-best-cities-for-public-transportation

honestly, a lot of what I’m reading out of this is that

  1. the set of people who like being around and living in close proximity to a lot of other people tend to lean liberal

  2. the set of people who don’t like being around and living in close proximity to a lot of other people tend to lean conservative.

in other words, a person’s inherent personality and socialization wants/needs drive their viewpoints and where they want to live, not the other way around.

Even ignoring your broad brush statements against rural residents, in order to achieve your goals I would think you would want to do just the opposite. I doubt that you would be able to convince very many conservative rural voters to move to the city and suddenly become liberals. The cities are already attractive enough. For the most part cities are where the jobs are (that is one of the main reason its so expensive to live there). The fact that conservative rural voters don’t move to the city is largely due to traditions of home and family that make them prefer to stay in places where they grew up, where they know everyone and where their family is. All you are going to do is further concentrate the Democratic vote and exacerbate the problem.

Rather than draining the swamp a far better idea is to gentrify the swamp. Make farmville Alabama the next silicon valley or biotech hub. With the internet and teleconferencing there is no reason that these industries need to be near industrial hubs. Bring in a bunch of young well educated software engineers, of all different shades and orientations. Open a shushi bar on main street an organic juice bar by the gas and go, and a transcendental chakra healing clinic up by the feed lot. Rather than have the 54% of the population that votes Democratic confined to a minority of voting districts, we need to spread them out, so that there are no more safe Republican districts and gerrymandering stops being a wining strategy.

That’s fine for singles, I suppose - what about married couples? What about married couples with kids?

Communal kitchens? Can we have separate storage areas with locks? Because otherwise you’re going to have a certain segment of people stealing food instead of buying it.

Then there are issues for the disabled, who may require physically larger facilities than the able-bodied.

No. Fucking. Way.

The only way I could possibly tolerate that small a square footage is if I had actual privacy. My first apartment was about 150 square feet with a private bathroom and a kitchenette, so I have some experience with the situation. I had about a year and a half of dorm living - during part of which my roommate was hiding her drugs and alcohol in my closet and stealing some of my stuff. The communal kitchen was tolerable except, of course, when some group decided to take it over and you were not invited - go eat somewhere else. And people stealing food I bought for myself. No thanks. That’s why I was happy to pay more per month for a place, even a tiny place, unequivocally MINE.

FUCK no!

Not when I could be arrested because one of my roommates is doing drugs or stealing and hiding their shit among my belongings. Not when people could steal from me. Not when I have no privacy to have sex with a significant other. Not when there is no chance for family units to BE families and raise their kids.

I’d rather live in a tent. A tent of my own. At least then I could improve my living conditions.

Alabama already has that. It is Huntsville (aka “The Rocket City” because that is where many of NASA’s literal rocket scientists live and work) and has one of the most educated populations per capita of any city in the U.S. However, Madison county, AL still broke hard for Trump. OTOH, it does have all the other stuff you mention even if it didn’t change the political results.

I never understood why sushi, wine bars, yoga and Starbucks are supposed to signal a virtue but plenty of conservatives love all of those too. It isn’t all diners, truck stop coffee and wrastlin’.

Me too. Communal living especially in small spaces is my personal idea of a living hell. I have done it a few times out of necessity and will never do it again. I would probably commit suicide if that was the only option because privacy and open spaces rank right up their with family in terms of personal priorities. I am glad that many people love it because that creates even more open space for me but I am never going to join them. When I read this thread, it sounded much more like a personal threat to me than a serious idea.

Count me in with the tent dwellers.

“how can we double the population density in cities so more people will want to live in them?” WTF? Crowds and lack of privacy are the worst things about cities. I can’t see how doubling those things is somehow going to make cities more appealing.

I’m a misanthropic introvert with anxiety issues. I don’t do well in really high density situations.

Can we at least agree that cracker barrel is less virtuous than whole paycheck, and truck nuts are less classy than one of those coexist stickers?

*We’re gonna live in Density City,
Go ahead and give in (Density City) like modern men,
And modern girls, we’re gonna live in the modern world. *

  • Tom Petty

No, we can’t agree on that. You happened to pick the perfect examples of the dichotomy. I have both a Whole Foods and and a Cracker Barrel within several minutes of driving. Whole Foods is the only business I ever boycotted in my entire life and I have been to them from Texas to Massachusetts. It has nothing to do with the business model itself. It is about the flies that it attracts. I have written about my troubles with Whole Foods before. A significant percentage of their patronage is mentally ill and many of the rest are horrible people that you shouldn’t ever concentrate in one place.

Here are some examples:

  1. The Chicken Teriyaki kid - I took a coworker to get some lunch at a Whole Foods store in Cambridge, MA. A mother just straight up asked us if we could watch her three kids while she shopped. The request was so odd that we accepted and the mother disappeared. It turned out that the two year old in question only ate chicken teriyaki from that specific store (as in every meal). His father was some famous doctor and they had just come back from Europe and they had to have Chicken Teriyaki from that store flown into everywhere they were. They were sweet kids and we took care of them for about an hour but the request was bizarre.

  2. The line problem. I tried to check out at Whole Foods and got in line. Suddenly a guy behind me accused me of cutting in line and wanted to punch me. That wouldn’t have worked out but the cashier did a good job in telling me not to teleport to the front of the line in the future. He was a very nicely dressed guy that was absolutely livid that I could cross the space-time continuum in front of him. Another time, the people in front of me in the checkout line refused to leave. An older married couple was holding the cashier hostage with political conversation that she didn’t want for many minutes even when asked them to move along.

  3. As far as I can tell, Whole Foods is full of a bunch of angry, white people for no reason.

OTOH, Cracker Barrel is dead simple. I don’t go there often but it is the only place that you can get fried catfish consistently in the Boston area or coast to coast for that matter. The decor and friendliness is great too. My Yankee daughters absolutely love the different style. I am starting to thing that Southern Belle’ism might be genetic based on the jugs of sweet tea they are taking a liking to.

You side stepped the truck nuts, I think that’s a win for city stickers.

I have never bought truck nuts myself because they are lame but you have to admit that ATV’s, shotguns and fireworks are just flat out awesome. Even Sweden thinks so. If you don’t think so, I could probably show you the best time of your life in a rural property. I don’t live very far from NYC but I never go there because it bores me. Northern New England is a whole lot more exciting if you participate.