it's detached suburban single use housing thopic.twitter.com/VE5w2aYWxH
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Not a density example in this case but proximity: the Dunks across the street from my office is barely walkable despite being right there
because the street is wide, traffic is fast and heavy, landscape is overwhelmingly just tarmac (exposed to wind, rain, snow, sun) etc
I'd say (not there so I don't know) that that's probably because the vast majority of their business is drivers.
If density was higher they'd accommodate pedestrians because they'd make up a higher portion of their customers.
assuming that the density was pedestrian friendly and not towers-in-a-parking lot
That would be hell, but I haven't seen *many* examples of this fortunately, even the more densely populated areas of LA are pretty walkable.
I think the free market *tends* to fix this problem at high densities (though not every time obviously).
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