Where is their green space? Is there a green space ratio that is factored in your view of ideal planning? Examples?
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Remember that in a lot of the past, access to nature was not exactly sought-after...nature was what you built houses to be protected from! Moreover, a lot of urban history took place where nature wasn't exactly "green," or the greenery wasn't quite natural (eg Egypt, Mesopotamia)
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ah, i see - it's a city feature, but not an every-neighborhood feature
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Nonono--it can easily be an "every neighborhood" feature. But you can never see an entire neighborhood from one photo of houses on a street within it!
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well, sure. i guess i'm only taking issue with the assertion that people who like parks don't really want to live in cities - i think evidence points mostly the other way. but, that's okay, I understand your position better now.
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of course, i do see people who live in suburbs use "green space" as an issue to try to prevent growth and increasing density, because they don't want their lower-density environment to change, but that's a little different.
End of conversation
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