Sure, why attempt to improve the climate resilience or affordable housing in the cities where millions of people already live, when you can just buy land upstate and get a whole new toy to play with? And why tell local, state or national government anything - they'll only be supplying the land, water, sewerage, utilities & transport links. You pay your taxes, you deserve to get something back.

This is going to be one hell of a planning application. What's the land use code for "feudal stronghold"?

  • maol@awful.systems
    hexagon
    ·
    10 months ago

    A sidenote: the brothers who made Stripe are involved. One of them (John I think?) was complaining on Twitter recently about all the unnecessary "environmental red tape" in Ireland.

  • BrickedKeyboard@awful.systems
    ·
    10 months ago

    Doesn't the futurism/hopium idea of building an ideal city go back to Disney? Who does more or less have feudal stronghold rights over florida?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EPCOT_(concept)

    Because of these two modes of transportation, residents of EPCOT would not need cars. If a resident owned a car, it would be used "only for weekend pleasure trips."[citation needed] The streets for cars would be kept separate from the main pedestrian areas. The main roads for both cars and supply trucks would travel underneath the city core, eliminating the risk of pedestrian accidents. This was also based on the concept that Walt Disney devised for Disneyland. He did not want his guests to see behind-the-scenes activity, such as supply trucks delivering goods to the city. Like the Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World, all supplies are discreetly delivered via tunnels.

    Or The Line in Saudi Arabia.

    Definely Sneer-worthy, though it's sometimes worked. Napoleon redesigned Paris, which is probably a good thing. But they are stuck with that design to this day, which is probably bad.

    • maol@awful.systems
      hexagon
      ·
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      Way before Disney. Le Corbusier. The Garden City movement. It goes back to the Renaissance, really.

      Napoleon III appointed Haussmann to redesign Paris, and he did a good job (although some aspects of the design were intended to prevent civil unrest). But Paris was already a major city. They didn't decide to build a totally new capital 60 miles from Paris. I guess St. Petersburg is a closer analogy?

    • Evinceo@awful.systems
      ·
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      Part of the point of these ideal cities is you get you set up your own system of low taxes, privatized everything, and no democratic control of the city. Libertarian fever dream, like seasteading.

    • self@awful.systems
      ·
      10 months ago

      imagine if you had taken even a moderate break from your bullshit and tried posting like this instead

  • GSV_Spinnaker@awful.systems
    ·
    10 months ago

    Classic Californian ideology. Get frustrated that an existing system isn't perfect, and decide that the only solution is to build an entirely new system separated from the old one. Promise lots of nice stuff (walkable cities yay!) but you can be sure it's only going to be available to the wealthy.

    How are you going to make low-density med-style homes in CALIFORNIA cheap? 0% chance that the people doing this are in favour of rent controls. Once all the houses in the walkable areas get bought by the super rich, who's going to work in the shops? Workers will get bussed in and you'll be left with another rich person enclave that happens to have a street mall that you can walk to.

    Also all of their promo-images were AI generated which bodes really well.

    • maol@awful.systems
      hexagon
      ·
      10 months ago

      Also all of their promo-images were AI generated which bodes really well.

      God, I didn't even notice that. A pack of millionaires but they're too cheap to pay a concept artist.