It doesn't have to be a suburb. But the kind of thinking that everything has to be concrete also leaves us with a food issue. Granted this is an exaggeration, but you can't look at an area that's not developed as backwards. Where do you think your food is grown...in rural areas. Yes, that's not downtown and entirely different point. But that's where my air point comes into play.
Yes, in LA people need to ride the bus more, Chicago does a much better job, but it's still pretty bed. Look at Dallas...DART hasn't made a dent in traffic.
Somewhere like D.C. is a place I would consider a good example. Look all around that city and the surrounding cities (i'm not going to call them burbs because they are cities in their own right). There is a lot of green around there and it's still very much vibrant, alive, and is much cleaner in air quality. The Potomac stinks to high heaven, but that's just crap in the river.
The arguement of downtown still having room to grow out instead of up is a good one. That's one reason why it's hard to convince anyone to build a tower downtown. Land further out is so much cheaper, why do it? When you've got someone like Devon, you've found gold...but there are a dozen that didn't move for every one that did.
I'm not trying to be a debbie downer or anything, I'm just saying that making it all concrete has it's drawbacks. They aren't as immediately tangible, but they are there.
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