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mia 水明
@miawintam
one reason why suburbs or even cities like Denver feel less walkable are bc the buildings facing streets are just too wide. when you’re walking past 100 ft of walmart wall, there’s nothing to engage with. no entryways, no people, no life. but streets with narrower buildings—20 ft or less—give you much more to interact with. more shops, more neighbors, more texture. we’re built for human-scale places, not oversized slabs made for cars. (Image by matthew Fredrick and vikas Mehta)
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Steve
@sdv.eth
I *hope* suburbs can change this by sprinkling more intentional and neighborly concepts like Little Free Libraries. https://warpcast.com/sdv.eth/0xdbb6b505 https://warpcast.com/sdv.eth/0x5e05b660
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triumph
@triumph
my heart melts a lil bit every time i stumble upon a little free library
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mia 水明
@miawintam
I have so much hope for suburbs! They’re sprawled out all across the us so we have no choice but to pour resources and intentional planning to make them more pleasant and walkable. Investing in robust bus systems and little free libraries is how we must move forward!
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