Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are going to dispute objective data, because at the end of the day they like living in cities that have become playgrounds for single white adults, rather than cities that have playgrounds for kids of all backgrounds.
I would not object to the data, but I think there is a major logical flaw. Birth rate has steadily declined in the US over the past 10 or so years, this isn't a cities phenomenon. I would like to see a comparison on how cities are fairing relative to rural areas, today vs. in the past.
You can't possibly make an argument that birth rates in Manhattan have declined by 15% in what, ten years?
If you think birth rates have declined over the past ten years, that would explain the dwindling number of babies but not children aged 10+.
Birth rates in US have declined by 15% over last 10 years, so Manhattan decline is average and NYC (at 9%) is significantly better than average. Brooklyn has been en vogue the past decade and many families migrated there.
I have no idea where you got the stats for the dwindling number of kids 10+. Anecdotally, I just visited NYC 3 weeks ago with my kids and was amazed at the number of playgrounds and how cool (read high end) many were.
Well, not anecdotally:
"According to a study in 2012 by the Trust for Public Lands, the most playground-friendly city in America is Madison, Wis., with a total of 7.1 playgrounds for every 10,000 residents. Cincinnati is second, with 5.1. By this yardstick, some of the more successfully gentrifying cities in America in recent years have abysmal numbers. New York City stands at 2.1 playgrounds per 10,000 residents; Chicago, at 1.9; Washington, D.C., at 1.7; San Francisco at 1.6 and Los Angeles close to the bottom at 1. If you plot the percentage of children in a big city against the number of playgrounds, you nearly always get a correlation. This is not to say what causes what, but it does make clear that quite a few cities desiring a reputation for family friendliness have failed to address a simple problem that is limiting their attractiveness to young families."
This is a dumb way to measure playgrounds. I live in DC and quickly can walk to 7 playgrounds. I doubt anyone in Wisconsin can say that.
Do you think EVERYONE in DC can walk to 7 playgrounds?
It's Madison. Not the entire state of Wisconsin.
Anonymous wrote:
Yeah...you need more playgrounds because the distances are greater.
My suburban neighborhood has about 175 or so households and maybe 900 people total. But there's 3 playgrounds...because each house sits on 1/4th - 1/3rd an acre. You need to get in a car or be prepared to walk a 2-3 miles in blazing unshaded paths with a stroller to get to the subdivision's playgrounds if you live near them.
Pretty much the same all across sub-divisions outside of cities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are going to dispute objective data, because at the end of the day they like living in cities that have become playgrounds for single white adults, rather than cities that have playgrounds for kids of all backgrounds.
I would not object to the data, but I think there is a major logical flaw. Birth rate has steadily declined in the US over the past 10 or so years, this isn't a cities phenomenon. I would like to see a comparison on how cities are fairing relative to rural areas, today vs. in the past.
You can't possibly make an argument that birth rates in Manhattan have declined by 15% in what, ten years?
If you think birth rates have declined over the past ten years, that would explain the dwindling number of babies but not children aged 10+.
Birth rates in US have declined by 15% over last 10 years, so Manhattan decline is average and NYC (at 9%) is significantly better than average. Brooklyn has been en vogue the past decade and many families migrated there.
I have no idea where you got the stats for the dwindling number of kids 10+. Anecdotally, I just visited NYC 3 weeks ago with my kids and was amazed at the number of playgrounds and how cool (read high end) many were.
Well, not anecdotally:
"According to a study in 2012 by the Trust for Public Lands, the most playground-friendly city in America is Madison, Wis., with a total of 7.1 playgrounds for every 10,000 residents. Cincinnati is second, with 5.1. By this yardstick, some of the more successfully gentrifying cities in America in recent years have abysmal numbers. New York City stands at 2.1 playgrounds per 10,000 residents; Chicago, at 1.9; Washington, D.C., at 1.7; San Francisco at 1.6 and Los Angeles close to the bottom at 1. If you plot the percentage of children in a big city against the number of playgrounds, you nearly always get a correlation. This is not to say what causes what, but it does make clear that quite a few cities desiring a reputation for family friendliness have failed to address a simple problem that is limiting their attractiveness to young families."
This is a dumb way to measure playgrounds. I live in DC and quickly can walk to 7 playgrounds. I doubt anyone in Wisconsin can say that.
Anonymous wrote:Eventually those college educated whites will.have children. Some may be able to stay. Most lower income people will not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are going to dispute objective data, because at the end of the day they like living in cities that have become playgrounds for single white adults, rather than cities that have playgrounds for kids of all backgrounds.
I would not object to the data, but I think there is a major logical flaw. Birth rate has steadily declined in the US over the past 10 or so years, this isn't a cities phenomenon. I would like to see a comparison on how cities are fairing relative to rural areas, today vs. in the past.
You can't possibly make an argument that birth rates in Manhattan have declined by 15% in what, ten years?
If you think birth rates have declined over the past ten years, that would explain the dwindling number of babies but not children aged 10+.
Birth rates in US have declined by 15% over last 10 years, so Manhattan decline is average and NYC (at 9%) is significantly better than average. Brooklyn has been en vogue the past decade and many families migrated there.
I have no idea where you got the stats for the dwindling number of kids 10+. Anecdotally, I just visited NYC 3 weeks ago with my kids and was amazed at the number of playgrounds and how cool (read high end) many were.
Well, not anecdotally:
"According to a study in 2012 by the Trust for Public Lands, the most playground-friendly city in America is Madison, Wis., with a total of 7.1 playgrounds for every 10,000 residents. Cincinnati is second, with 5.1. By this yardstick, some of the more successfully gentrifying cities in America in recent years have abysmal numbers. New York City stands at 2.1 playgrounds per 10,000 residents; Chicago, at 1.9; Washington, D.C., at 1.7; San Francisco at 1.6 and Los Angeles close to the bottom at 1. If you plot the percentage of children in a big city against the number of playgrounds, you nearly always get a correlation. This is not to say what causes what, but it does make clear that quite a few cities desiring a reputation for family friendliness have failed to address a simple problem that is limiting their attractiveness to young families."
This is a dumb way to measure playgrounds. I live in DC and quickly can walk to 7 playgrounds. I doubt anyone in Wisconsin can say that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are going to dispute objective data, because at the end of the day they like living in cities that have become playgrounds for single white adults, rather than cities that have playgrounds for kids of all backgrounds.
I would not object to the data, but I think there is a major logical flaw. Birth rate has steadily declined in the US over the past 10 or so years, this isn't a cities phenomenon. I would like to see a comparison on how cities are fairing relative to rural areas, today vs. in the past.
You can't possibly make an argument that birth rates in Manhattan have declined by 15% in what, ten years?
If you think birth rates have declined over the past ten years, that would explain the dwindling number of babies but not children aged 10+.
Birth rates in US have declined by 15% over last 10 years, so Manhattan decline is average and NYC (at 9%) is significantly better than average. Brooklyn has been en vogue the past decade and many families migrated there.
I have no idea where you got the stats for the dwindling number of kids 10+. Anecdotally, I just visited NYC 3 weeks ago with my kids and was amazed at the number of playgrounds and how cool (read high end) many were.
Well, not anecdotally:
"According to a study in 2012 by the Trust for Public Lands, the most playground-friendly city in America is Madison, Wis., with a total of 7.1 playgrounds for every 10,000 residents. Cincinnati is second, with 5.1. By this yardstick, some of the more successfully gentrifying cities in America in recent years have abysmal numbers. New York City stands at 2.1 playgrounds per 10,000 residents; Chicago, at 1.9; Washington, D.C., at 1.7; San Francisco at 1.6 and Los Angeles close to the bottom at 1. If you plot the percentage of children in a big city against the number of playgrounds, you nearly always get a correlation. This is not to say what causes what, but it does make clear that quite a few cities desiring a reputation for family friendliness have failed to address a simple problem that is limiting their attractiveness to young families."
Anonymous wrote:More educated people ( that have fewer kids) means fewer kids. Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spent time in San Francisco from about 2008-2010 on and off and was always struck by how few children I saw. I didn’t even see many teens. It was all post-college 20s and up. On one of my trips, I took my grandmother, who was born and grew up in San Francisco and she noticed it too compared to her youth.
Still seems like there are a lot of kids and families in DC in comparison, but once you get out of preschool age, they seem to be mostly concentrated in the less desirable areas.
Not sure this is true in many WOTP areas—these neighborhoods seem to have a good amount of kids and the elementary schools are packed to capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are going to dispute objective data, because at the end of the day they like living in cities that have become playgrounds for single white adults, rather than cities that have playgrounds for kids of all backgrounds.
I would not object to the data, but I think there is a major logical flaw. Birth rate has steadily declined in the US over the past 10 or so years, this isn't a cities phenomenon. I would like to see a comparison on how cities are fairing relative to rural areas, today vs. in the past.
You can't possibly make an argument that birth rates in Manhattan have declined by 15% in what, ten years?
If you think birth rates have declined over the past ten years, that would explain the dwindling number of babies but not children aged 10+.
Birth rates in US have declined by 15% over last 10 years, so Manhattan decline is average and NYC (at 9%) is significantly better than average. Brooklyn has been en vogue the past decade and many families migrated there.
I have no idea where you got the stats for the dwindling number of kids 10+. Anecdotally, I just visited NYC 3 weeks ago with my kids and was amazed at the number of playgrounds and how cool (read high end) many were.
Anonymous wrote:I spent time in San Francisco from about 2008-2010 on and off and was always struck by how few children I saw. I didn’t even see many teens. It was all post-college 20s and up. On one of my trips, I took my grandmother, who was born and grew up in San Francisco and she noticed it too compared to her youth.
Still seems like there are a lot of kids and families in DC in comparison, but once you get out of preschool age, they seem to be mostly concentrated in the less desirable areas.