Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t realize that San Francisco was upzoning the Marina, Sea Cliff, Sunset, Richmond neighborhoods for much greater height and density. Are they going to let 130’ buildings replace the low scale structures than line Columbus Ave and the North Beach streets?
So then why do that in DC neighborhoods?
It's one thing to say that density spreads coronavirus. It's wrong, but at least it's plausible.
It is another thing entirely to say that upFLUMming is spreading coronavirus. That's just ridiculous.
UpFLUMming enables significant height and density to be added to less dense residential neighborhoods.
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t realize that San Francisco was upzoning the Marina, Sea Cliff, Sunset, Richmond neighborhoods for much greater height and density. Are they going to let 130’ buildings replace the low scale structures than line Columbus Ave and the North Beach streets?
So then why do that in DC neighborhoods?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t realize that San Francisco was upzoning the Marina, Sea Cliff, Sunset, Richmond neighborhoods for much greater height and density. Are they going to let 130’ buildings replace the low scale structures than line Columbus Ave and the North Beach streets?
So then why do that in DC neighborhoods?
It's one thing to say that density spreads coronavirus. It's wrong, but at least it's plausible.
It is another thing entirely to say that upFLUMming is spreading coronavirus. That's just ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Density kills.
No thanks.
Absolutely.
But it makes developers a crap ton of money. And the US population has been increasing, so the Hugh density movement will continue to succeed.
It makes developers a ton of money because people want to buy what they're selling.
Also, it doesn't kill.
Does during a pandemic. And I doubt Covid will be the last one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Density kills.
No thanks.
Absolutely.
But it makes developers a crap ton of money. And the US population has been increasing, so the Hugh density movement will continue to succeed.
It makes developers a ton of money because people want to buy what they're selling.
Also, it doesn't kill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Density kills.
No thanks.
Absolutely.
But it makes developers a crap ton of money. And the US population has been increasing, so the Hugh density movement will continue to succeed.
Anonymous wrote:Density kills.
No thanks.
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t realize that San Francisco was upzoning the Marina, Sea Cliff, Sunset, Richmond neighborhoods for much greater height and density. Are they going to let 130’ buildings replace the low scale structures than line Columbus Ave and the North Beach streets?
So then why do that in DC neighborhoods?
Anonymous wrote:Gov Cuomo seems to be a hero emerging from the COVID debris. People are even talking about his future potential for higher office.
“Why are we seeing this level of infection? Why cities across the country? It’s very simple. It’s about density,” Cuomo said at a recent news conference, punctuating his statement with a PowerPoint slide emblazoned with “DENSITY” in all capital letters. The coronavirus, the governor continued, “is very contagious. The dense environments are its feeding grounds.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What about historic districts ?
What about them?
Aren’t historic districts protected from what the mayor is proposing? If they are mostly comprised of two story buildings, how would a 12 story building under new zoning meet the compatibility test?