What are suburbs
Wtf are you talking about do you know how much was destroyed in U.S. cities from the 20s until the 70s The projects were themselves a product of this movement, the whole aim was to give poor people in cities lawns
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I'm talking about two diff things here: - suburbanization, which--in older cities at least--was about replacing urban building patterns with more spread-out, low density ones, with the difference in population relocating to fringes (so yes, it did *also* urbanize the country)
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- projects, where a dense low-rise neighborhood would be demolished and replaced with subsidized high-rises with lots of lawn between them (hence "give the poor urbanites a lawn")
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An observer at the time could be forgiven for assuming that the planners and officials sincerely believed that access to grass was a panacea for social, economic, and health woes
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As far as the projects went, being forcibly moved into a new dwelling was something that people might've been able to get over--but while cities tried to make one new housing unit for each one lost, there was no such consideration for small businesses, and that blow was fatal
End of conversation
New conversation -
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I'm talking about the cities I'm experienced with, which sprawl into the endless fields around them and never had much more of a downtown than a few brick buildings around a square.
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