DP but I decided to live further out even though I could have afforded to buy something closer in because when I ran my commuting costs and housing costs, I wasn’t saving enough on the commute to justify the higher price just to be closer the work. Now I’m almost entirely WFH so the financials work out even better. Density has collective benefit, sure, but in a lot of individual situations it doesn’t make financial sense. |
Parking in downtown Bethesda and downtown Silver Spring is definitely not scarce. In fact, there's way too much parking, built and paid for at taxpayer expense. Most of it is empty most of the time. I would love to see the parking-garage land converted to more productive use. |
They should charge market-rate, so the space (owned by the tax-paying public) is most optimally used, not given away to car owning freeloaders. |
Sure it works out for you, because you are not paying your share of the infrastructure costs for the sprawl- those are spread amongst all taxpayers, even those who live closer in. If you had to pay each time you drove on a road or for the actual proportional cost of bringing sewer and electric to you then the math would likely not work out in your favor. |
Except moco is a city, dumba$$. You clowns keep trying to turn suburbia into a concrete jungle like NYC, when it will never work. So yea, it will take 4 hours to do a handful of errands it'd take 45 minutes to do by car because you could never build busses, trains and bike paths to cover the whole area and have the system running with minimal waiting times while having it be economically viable. Such delusional nonsense. I need to take fluffy to the vet, get a gallon of milk, and drop stop at FedEx to drop a package off for delivery. Lol, good luck doing that by bus. Hope you got 6 hours to piss away. |
| ^isn't* |
What is this crazy fantasy future dystopia you keep bringing up? What is wrong with you? Cities grow, get over it. We have a government and planners for a reason: to make it work. Jesus, calm down. Believe it or not, many, many people do things via the bus. If that makes you cry, I'm sorry. Get over it, grow up, and shut up. |
I am far from the fringes of developed MoCo and the sewer and power lines have been here a long time. If a developer were building near me you’d call it smart growth. I would have considered a condo closer in but very few of those are built now. |
So there are actually a lot of neighborhood shopping centers that have grocery stores, vets, and/or shipping storefronts, in walking distance of where a lot of people live, right here in Montgomery County. It also seems foolishly time-consuming and wasteful to transport yourself all the way to the store by SUV, and then transport yourself and a gallon of milk back home by SUV, unless the store is very close by, in which case it's...in walking distance! But everything is always impossible when a person is bound and determined to make it impossible. |
No sense reasoning with these anti-growth NIMBYs, they only care about their own way of life and expect us to pay for it. |
If I could go everywhere in a straight line, sure. But I can’t and despite all the posturing about walking and pedestrian safety, the planning board still approves plans that are dangerous for pedestrians and oriented toward car driving. |
MoCo is almost double the land area of NYC with 1/8th or so the population, yet urbanist morons and cyclists like you have insanely stupid visions of getting NYC density in the suburbs, as if everything will become magically walkable, bikable, and accessible with public transit in a reasonable amount of time. Lol, this idea is pure pie in the sky nonsense. Areas are much larger with not enough population density to support all of the spending you'd have to do to build 1000 more transit stops by rail. It's so stupid it is laughable. You have to drive in the suburbs. We live in the US. MoCo is not NYC. It will never be NYC. We don't live with density like Tokyo, Hong Kong or Seoul. Comparing life in those areas to life in the burbs is so dumb. Yes, it would take inordinate amounts of time to run errands because everything a scattered all over a much larger area with less people. That means less lines run, and there's not enough people to make any similar styles of transit in NY or Tokyo economically viable. Cars it is. |
The county garages in Bethesda are underutilized so market rate is less than what they charge now. |
Another scam. Stop voting for crooks. |
Believe it or not, many, many people do things via the car. If that makes you cry, I'm sorry. Get over it, grow up, and shut up. You should take your own advice. |