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It's interesting, this is the first time I can think of in recent history where my infrastructure for living has been materially affected by rain. (It has in the past at my parents' place, but they have a river running literally under their house, so it's much easier to do)
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Today in hyperlocal Twitter, much of London is going to be flooded by the end of today We don't seem to get 'normal' weather anymore. It's either way below average temperature ("lol what summer?"), a suffocating heatwave or now 'monsoon-like rainfall'. twitter.com/ret_ward/statu…
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The lifts in my building have been out since the last heavy rain, and my bins become inaccessible if there's heavy rainfall because they're in a basement area that is easily flooded.
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None of this is a massively big deal, but it highlights the degree to which these buildings (which are I think only about 20 years old) were not designed with this sort of weather scenario in mind.
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Yeah. In general I feel like the entire design of this building is the opposite of that - it just feels like everything is superficially fine but nobody has thought through any of the details of what living in it would actually be like.
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"superficially fine but nobody has thought through any of the details of what living in it" is something that I get unreasonably angry about. I don't want listings to tell me about the fancy bathroom tiles; I want to know the technical details about the HVAC systems!
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