The Problem With Shopping Malls

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  • Опубликовано: 29 авг 2024
  • Victor Gruen invented the shopping mall with a distinct purpose, but he did not succeed in fulfilling that purpose... What went wrong?
    Inspired by:
    / @notjustbikes
    / @citybeautiful
    WB Productions will feature video essays, documentaries, explainers, and infotainment on a variety of subjects. Not just urban planning stuff, lol
    More to come!

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @for_light_and_life
    @for_light_and_life Год назад +1546

    The most worrisome part about America’s suburban experiment for me is the fact that it keeps everyone so disconnected and forces people into their own bubbles which in turn leads to more polarization. If the US ever falls, this would be one of the main factors leading to the downfall in my opinion.

    • @jesseleeward2359
      @jesseleeward2359 Год назад +80

      Suburbia sucks. That is why I moved to Savannah from Ohio. This is literally Ohio.

    • @burtan2000
      @burtan2000 Год назад +25

      @@jesseleeward2359 It's worst in the Rust Belt because so people and money left.

    • @jesseleeward2359
      @jesseleeward2359 Год назад +14

      @@burtan2000 they left the cities. The cities are ghost towns. But that us shat happens in countries the scale of USA

    • @baldisaerodynamic9692
      @baldisaerodynamic9692 Год назад +58

      because cities suck. over crowded, smelly, over priced, everyone on top of each other.

    • @punchkicker3837
      @punchkicker3837 Год назад

      @@jesseleeward2359 Savannah, GA is no different from Ohio idiot. I don't recall a subway system or even light rail for that matter in Savannah.

  • @kaw8473
    @kaw8473 Год назад +245

    Our local mall has always blown me away with its incompetence. Their rent is so high that half the floorplan is dead and their idea of attracting customers is remodeling the mall to add/ remove stupid crap every 10 years. How about just lower the damn rents so you can offer people a variety of interesting products at a reasonable price. I'm fired up because it has strung me along for 20 years with false hope that it'll be a fun place to spend a few hours.

    • @drivers99
      @drivers99 Год назад +26

      I miss when you could go there and there'd be things I was actually interested in: an arcade, a book store, a music store, radio shack, video game store, musical instrument store, tropical fish store, toy store (what else am I missing). Those got wiped out by the big box (or become obsolete) like Best Buy, Barnes & Noble, Guitar Center, Pet whatever big box store, etc.
      I guess now they have Lego store (bring lots of money though), Hot Topic (although I'm too old for it really), hmm, Apple Store? haha

    • @opheliasrue
      @opheliasrue Год назад +11

      Exactly, I feel like malls die so easily, kids can’t walk there so interesting attractions such as playing at an arcade becomes a weekend treat to drive your kids to, most stores are chain stores that are meant to shove mass produced shit down your throat, and whatever sense of community that the mall brings is just butchered completely

    • @lioneldemun6033
      @lioneldemun6033 Год назад +2

      Parking lots of French malls are open air dumps, it looks like nobody takes the responsibility to keep them clean.

    • @matxalenc8410
      @matxalenc8410 Год назад

      Providence Place?

    • @umchileanyways8603
      @umchileanyways8603 Год назад +1

      same since I live in a rural area in alabama I go to a local mall in georgia and it fucking sucks. I go online shopping and I'll occasionally go there if I really want something that costs half the price

  • @odiug95
    @odiug95 Год назад +130

    I'm by no way European, I'm from South America. But I've travelled the world a tiny bit, and the place where I felt the biggest culture shock was the US. I thought having grown up with their T.V., movies, books, that it would feel like home, but what I found was this soulless gray place where I couldn't walk anywhere (and why would you travel somewhere when you can't even walk). Strangely, New York felt like the least crazy, most normal city of them all.

    • @harrychown6854
      @harrychown6854 Год назад +26

      And that's why New York has the highest property prices in the US along with San Francisco. It's because in the centre of NYC, there is a resemblance of the walkable, community-spirited city. And it's in high demand in the US.

    • @MickeyMouse-lm6zj
      @MickeyMouse-lm6zj Год назад

      it depends on where you are

    • @MickeyMouse-lm6zj
      @MickeyMouse-lm6zj Год назад +5

      new yorks also extremely expensive and has a huge crime and immigration issue

    • @sdrc92126
      @sdrc92126 Год назад +1

      Where'd you go? I heard a saying once that went something like Cities are made for people who pay for their entertainment; the country is for people who like to make their own entertainment.

    • @DonGivani
      @DonGivani Год назад +3

      Same thoughts, these car centric cities are soulless. NY is different, very nice !!!!

  • @madensmith7014
    @madensmith7014 Год назад +229

    Whoever that guy is, his plans are almost exactly what we have here in the Philippines. Malls are surrounded by apartment buildings, there's usually medical facilities inside like dentists and clinics, and there's even attached transport terminals for people who commute. There aren't much trains here but the very few have stations directly near malls. Being near schools is almost just a coincidence since planners don't really like the idea of young students loitering around after class, even if that's something that's already happening. It's no stretch that they're mini-cities in an already densely populated city.
    Imo, the secret to that is the air conditioning. When the climate is hot or raining, malls are really convenient to be in.

    • @conradojavier7547
      @conradojavier7547 Год назад +4

      You'd be lucky if your Home is near a Train Station.

    • @faustinuskaryadi6610
      @faustinuskaryadi6610 Год назад +12

      We also have Mall+Apartment complex in Jakarta, Indonesia. For example: Central Park Podomoro City on West Jakarta.

    • @SharkFishSF
      @SharkFishSF Год назад +12

      Third world countries are more community living oriented except some car centric cities. Most metropolitan and sub metropolitan cities of India are planned as per people's convenience, not by car centric infrastructure.

    • @phoenix5054
      @phoenix5054 Год назад +8

      The apartments came after the malls though, so does the terminals and the train stations. I presume Ayala and Sy (mall owners) lobbied the government to make sure that train stations ended on malls. And unlike in the US, malls are centric to urban rather than sub-urban culture.

    • @penskepc2374
      @penskepc2374 Год назад +3

      Thats essentially what's replacing malls here. They're called "lifestyle centers" and actually have a lot of potential, but unfortunately modern urbanist are an incredibly whiney bunch with zero foresight that have found a reason to hate them too.

  • @tombloom99
    @tombloom99 Год назад +984

    I have argued for this sort of city for 50 years. It's just gotten worse ever year. I hope your work improves things.

    • @MelGibsonFan
      @MelGibsonFan Год назад +58

      None of this urbanist shit will change anything unfortunately. It falls into the same problems most of left RUclips has, it’s preaching to the already converted.

    • @TheThreatenedSwan
      @TheThreatenedSwan Год назад +1

      It doesn't work in a slightly better Brazil.

    • @warw
      @warw Год назад +60

      @@MelGibsonFan I can understand what you mean, but not just bikes definitely converted me and made me show up to city council meetings. Ive heard random normie people talk about how unwalkable our country is, all of this hype I think really can help people to at least discuss it.
      I'm hopeful, but not overly hopeful.

    • @MelGibsonFan
      @MelGibsonFan Год назад

      @@warw I remember orgs like Transportation Alternatives way back, before NJB became a thing and yeah it’s definitely become more mainstream so I think he’s just riding a kind of zeitgeist.
      I just find NJB’s content to be geared towards a certain kind of upwardly mobile ex suburban yuppie. Dude talks about “traveling the world” and then after having kids just up and moving to the NL. Like wtf bro most people don’t have it good enough to flee the rich suburbs of Canada for one of the wealthiest places on the planet lol. So his particular content lacks any kind of irl approach to urban policy and doesn’t take class based issues into account. Interacted with him a few times on Reddit and he’s got an insufferable God complex, so admittedly his personality is probably what predisposes me to hate his channel.

    • @Libertyjack1
      @Libertyjack1 Год назад +11

      @@MelGibsonFan It will need to come from a change in people's mentality, but this is hard when our cultural drivers are those who have a stake on keeping people segmented and divided on a bunch of sweet nothings.

  • @p1mason
    @p1mason Год назад +653

    I think there's two lessons to be learned from the shopping mall.
    The mid century rise of the suburbs was accompanied by a cultural shift where the idea of going outside without a car became an increasingly foreign concept. This shift required a reimagining of many traditionally pedestrian activities to allow people to undertake these activities from within a car. Restaurants gave way to drive in and then drive through establishments. High street movie palaces gave way to drive on theatres. Cities built parkways through and to their major parks to allow for "recreational driving", and so on. Shopping malls represent a similar attempt to vehicularise the traditionally pedestrian main street experience.
    What is so interesting is that shopping malls (compared to other attempts to vehicularise the main street) are mildly auto hostile. Whilst they are designed for people in cars to drive to, they then require you to walk. A lot. And yet, compared to strip malls, power centres and commercial stroads, shopping malls achieved arguably much higher levels of success.i think the lesson is that most people are much less sold on the car dependent lifestyle than is commonly supposed.
    Secondly, despite being mildly auto hostile, shopping malls didn't do anything to actually change people's lifestyle towards a more sustainable, pedestrian one. This is because shopping malls did nothing to actually challenge car dependancy in the suburbs and on the residential streets where people live. I think the lesson is that if you want to change people's lifestyle away from driving, you've got to start at home. Refitting residential suburbs to nudge people towards staying local, waking, or using sustainable transport is worth far more than even the greatest pedestrianised downtown.

    • @joshuamckee7019
      @joshuamckee7019 Год назад +24

      I think it's going to go even further the other direction. Instead of drive in theaters people can can watch their movies at home.
      Instead of going to the store Amazon will deliver to your home.
      Heck many are now working from home. This will allow people to withdraw even more from cities.

    • @robertodell9193
      @robertodell9193 Год назад +47

      @@joshuamckee7019 "This will allow people to withdraw even more from cities."
      This will people to withdraw even more from other people. ☹

    • @dzonikg
      @dzonikg Год назад +18

      I am not from USA but i have solution ( cost money ) ,i would make parking lots over ground illegal ..so if you have shoping mall, parking should be under shoping mall (its like that in my country) ..and where there is allready huge parking lots in cities move them undergroung and on top build park or residential buildings

    • @harrygoldun5779
      @harrygoldun5779 Год назад +6

      Think it has already arrived in the US, no one needs a car, mainly for the fact that most have withdrawn from the social aspect of life and prefer to sit at home in front of a screen, be it for entertainment, or for day to day activities. The art of humanity in the States is rapidly disappearing. So whatever Gruen envisaged wouldn't have worked. Strange then that the shopping mall, the suburban shopping strip and the use of a car or public transport is booming inplaces like Australia. Seems a different mindset exists were socialising and getting out to a location is just part of daily life, with the malls doing a roaring trade, just as they did back in the 70's, 80's and beyond. No matter what you analyse on this subject, the problem lies with the people themselves.

    • @TheThreatenedSwan
      @TheThreatenedSwan Год назад

      The reason for the rise of the suburbs is explained better by one paragraph from Robert Putnam than the hours of astroturfed urbanist channels.

  • @davidhutchinson5233
    @davidhutchinson5233 Год назад +69

    I'm so with you. I have moved to FL and am resisting buying a car. I cannot stand them. Another reason for the police to intervene in your life. The registrations, the licenses, the car payment, the insurance, the gas and on and on and on it goes. New to your channel....but I love it. Thank you.

    • @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj
      @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj Год назад +9

      Yes owning a car is so expensive now.

    • @punchkicker3837
      @punchkicker3837 Год назад +2

      You just proved to be the biggest idiot ever for moving to Florida. If you want to live without a car and live somewhere, then pick Boston, NYC, Philly, Chicago, or DC.

    • @RestrictedHades
      @RestrictedHades Год назад +11

      why would you move to florida if you hate cars

    • @punchkicker3837
      @punchkicker3837 Год назад

      @@RestrictedHades That's what I asked that idiotic b-stard David.

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад +2

      Funniest thing I ever read! Why did you move to Florida if you don’t want a car??? That’s like moving to Alaska because you don’t like the cold! Man the DUMB decisions you anti-car people make! 🤣

  • @YoungOne48
    @YoungOne48 Год назад +60

    2:35 Ironic considering that keeping all the apartments and everything probably would've generated more profit than just the mall.

    • @thefirsttrillionaire2925
      @thefirsttrillionaire2925 Год назад +7

      The schools alone would’ve! Everyone would meet there after school! 🤦🏽‍♂️

  • @eryngo.urbanism
    @eryngo.urbanism Год назад +341

    Love seeing another Urbanist starting a brand new channel! Great editing, great research, great video. Can't wait to see more!

    • @caixiuying8901
      @caixiuying8901 Год назад +8

      insane that this channel has less than 2k followers, I thought this was a much bigger channel
      will sub

    • @zerocool6452
      @zerocool6452 Год назад +5

      @@caixiuying8901 Same so I thought why not give him a sub ^^

    • @DrJams
      @DrJams Год назад +1

      and if he gets his way we'll all be living in tiny homes waiting for the bus being timetable dependant

    • @zerocool6452
      @zerocool6452 Год назад +4

      @@DrJams You know you can still have big home if you want. And waiting on teh bus isn't even bad thing if they have buses going evry few minutes heck you don't even need to take public transport at all but we also don't need an infrastructure that revolves around cars.

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад +5

      @@DrJams Exactly, so sick of this anti-car propaganda that urbanites especially Europeans are bent on pushing on us Americans! I LOVE the suburbs as I like to be around people like me and the last thing I want is to be forced into tiny pods in the city that tell me I cant leave my place at any time I want!

  • @jahanitahani
    @jahanitahani Год назад +141

    For a first video, the quality is insane. This advocacy for better human oriented design is what the US needs. I love how well edited and put together this is. Sometimes it can be boring to just hear someone talk with stock footage. I really hope you can put out more incredible content!

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад

      You're not gonna force us to leave the suburbs and country and move into the crime ridden cities. Aint gonna happen clown, we arent Europe.

    • @MickeyMouse-lm6zj
      @MickeyMouse-lm6zj Год назад

      not everyone wants to be in a city

  • @Ven100
    @Ven100 Год назад +309

    Loved the video. As someone who was born in England, grew up in the US during the 90s but still visiting Europe a lot, it's one of the reasons why I made the decision to move back permanently. I love these cities (like London) where you don't need a car and everything is within walking distance. Need groceries? Walk there. Sure, you can't buy/carry as much groceries as you would with a car, but the fact that it's so close - you don't need to. Infact, it being close lets you get freshier ingredients on the reg. That combined with great mass transit which lets you step onto a train in one city and off in another city center, it makes things like "Let's go to Amsterstam for the weekend" Or Paris. Or Barcelona.

    • @bigrunts9768
      @bigrunts9768 Год назад +13

      Americans would use trains if it was fast as driving on your own.

    • @JohnDoe-xc5kn
      @JohnDoe-xc5kn Год назад +33

      I am able to live car free in Seattle pretty well 90% of the time. But when people hear me say something like “it’s just a 15 minute walk” they look at me like I’m crazy. It’s like you actually live in a place where you have a choice and you still don’t appreciate it.

    • @NFFFFFFFF
      @NFFFFFFFF Год назад +1

      @@bigrunts9768hat’s what they are suggesting.

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад +7

      Stay in Europe, We Americans Love our cars and all this video is is just more Anti-car propaganda. I WILL NEVER GIVE UP MY CAR FOR "THE ENVIORNMENT"!!!!!!!!!!

    • @morelikegayattorney7099
      @morelikegayattorney7099 Год назад +14

      It's honestly so cool that Europeans can just hop on a train and be in another country. If the US and Canada were smart there would be several trains connecting to each other in the New York - Toronto - Montreal region, but alas

  • @Roobar_Plays
    @Roobar_Plays Год назад +7

    As a European, I can tell you that such dense building is not ideal either. There's simply not enough air to breathe. There's concrete and brick everywhere you look. In contrast, you may have green lawns, but in my view, at least it's something more green to look at and you have more air and sun. Not to mention that I love the idea living away from my noisy neighbors. Living surrounded by cement is not making me any more social. I just want to go more often outside of my city and breathe a fresh air, connect with the nature. We also have malls, but our cities are so old that they don't allow for much infrastructure changes for a greener life and pedestrian only streets. What may look good on paper and pictures, these pedestrian only streets are a nightmare for the living people there because of the loud music from bars, shops etc. And people in most European cities still use their cars to go to their malls despite the dense building.

  • @RushWaggonerwindyshadow32
    @RushWaggonerwindyshadow32 Год назад +177

    This is a great video! Helped me formulate some ideas for my senior thesis on Victor Gruen next semester! Definitely see some awesome potential for your channel and wanted to say I was here from the very very beginning! Just subbed!

    • @willbarkerprod
      @willbarkerprod  Год назад +7

      Thank you!! Glad it helped you with your thesis that's so cool! Best of luck

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад

      @obimk1104 Because I LOVE my car, I dont mind driving the distance.

    • @DrJams
      @DrJams Год назад +2

      @obimk1 People don't want to live by factories so that's why we have zones. Stop watching other channels that want you to live in tiny expensive apartment blocks waiting around for the bus messing around with timetables

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад

      @obimk1104 I dont even want to travel on buses or trains. Filled with smelly strangers who might rob and beat me up because I bought valuables.
      We are NOT EUROPE, we are a massive country where people live in spread out areas unless you live in the northeast and California. At least we have freedom of speech and most of all ability to own firearms. Stay on your side of the pond!

  • @Zyo117
    @Zyo117 Год назад +70

    The editing is definitely top notch. It's covering a lot of topics and summarising what other channels have posted in individual videos per topic, but that's not a bad thing.

    • @mitjed
      @mitjed Год назад +2

      Its like a television documentary level.

  • @princessmarlena1359
    @princessmarlena1359 Год назад +71

    Some malls are being converted to apartments. I myself squatted in one of the deserted stores (Gilly Hicks) of a dying mall, along with a few other people who found other empty stores to occupy.
    I was able to pick the locks, get inside, change the locks, and move in. I’d use the bathrooms, and shower/bathe in the fountain nearby my spot (I’d wear a cheap one piece swimsuit while bathing). I had a mini freezer and mini fridge, microwave, and hot plate for my meals, and a folding cot.
    Unfortunately the local sheriff’s department forced us out. Later, the junkies, gangs, and drug dealers moved in and turned the mall into a war zone. It got to the point where the SWAT team had to sweep it in a raid, and eventually the building was demolished, the land fenced off. It still sits as a vacant, weed choked fenced lot today.
    TL/DR Some malls are being made into apartments. I myself along with a few others squatted in the stores of a dying mall, we made our own methods to inhabit them. Police kicked us out, we got replaced by addicts and gangs, police forced THEM out, mall building demolished and is still an empty lot.

    • @skylu-original
      @skylu-original Год назад

      Why there wasnt any legal inhabitants? Crazy prices or what was the reason?

    • @princessmarlena1359
      @princessmarlena1359 Год назад +11

      @@skylu-original there were legal tenants at first, but the mall owner(s) were pretty much absentee landlords. They cut back on maintenance, security, and the tenants just either moved or shut down their shops completely. Especially since people stopped coming to that particular mall.
      It’s really hard for a shopping mall or brick and mortar stores in general to compete against the convenience of the internet, but if a mall venue is really nice such as The Grove in West L.A. or The Americana of Glendale, CA. people would still be willing to visit it.

  • @barnacleboi2595
    @barnacleboi2595 Год назад +14

    I live in NYC and, even though there are a lot of things I hate about living here like the sky high rent, I still love the fact that you dont need a car if you live here. You can get anywhere within a 15 mile radius using public trans. On top of that, even if you dont want to use trains or buses, everything you need is also within walking distance. I still dont have my drivers license at 24 lol but im getting one soon.

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад +2

      You couldn’t pay me to live in a major city. High crime, expensive, and tiny apartments. I’m a big house guy.

    • @harrychown6854
      @harrychown6854 Год назад +1

      Downtown NYC is an exception to the rule. It was developed before the motorcar. And there's a reason those rents are sky high. It's because the walkable, community-focussed neighbourhood is a highly liveable environment, which creates huge demand. Downtown San Francisco will be another example, but there's not many others. Can you imagine living somewhere like Fort Worth, or London Ontario? Their only options are to live in soulless, ugly and boring suburbs where there isn't a single facility within walking distance. They don't even usually have sidewalks. But even if they did, they wouldn't lead anywhere useful.

    • @happyfunball3266
      @happyfunball3266 Год назад

      @@harrychown6854 I live in San Francisco, and it's just as you say. A walkable, livable place like San Francisco is also highly desirable and therefore it's expensive. It's a place where people interact and regularly stop on the street and talk with each other, and where things are readily available with just a short walk. But since so many more people want to live in a place like this than there is available space, demand is high. You'd think that that demand would translate into more livable places, but instead we have the soulless, atomizing suburbs.

    • @harrychown6854
      @harrychown6854 Год назад

      @@happyfunball3266 You are a lucky American. One of the few to live in such an environment!

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Год назад +32

    An example of GOOD mall design is Newport Centre mall, which is right in the middle of downtown Jersey City, NJ. The location is quite accessible thanks to dollar vans/shuttle buses (that go up to the GWB), the PATH (from Newport station; goes to Midtown and Lower Manhattan, and Newark), and the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail (which serves most of Hudson County). The mall opened in the 80s, and the area around it flourished and became more urban because of it. Unlike other malls in the US, Newport is THRIVING
    The problem with its design? Even in an urban environment surrounded by transit, it STILL has a parking garage. Newport is the most popular stop on the HBLR, and the majority of Jersey City doesn't own a car. So having a big garage is pointless, and it's better to use the land to expand the mall's number of stores, or perhaps for housing as well (since there's booming demand for housing in Jersey City).

    • @lukebradley7879
      @lukebradley7879 Год назад +2

      It also helps being soo close to the biggest city in the United States literally across the River which makes all this 100% easier. Most other malls don’t have that advantage

    • @mergat2970
      @mergat2970 Год назад

      Why are you everywhere

    • @Maxwellchaos7439
      @Maxwellchaos7439 Год назад

      Yes! I live in Jersey City, I love Newport and I think it'd be great if the parking was turned into more store space or living space. Whenever me and my family drive into the parking area, it's a desert because of how little people actually take their cars there. I know so many people who just walk to the mall. If I could Id stay at Newport for an entire day and never get bored and meet so many cool people. Newport's design should be everywhere

    • @ardius9777
      @ardius9777 Год назад

      They should convert those empty lots into flea markets or parks. It's what we do here in open air parking lots in Malaysia on certain days of the weeks, we have night markets in them.

  • @XBKLYN
    @XBKLYN Год назад +55

    In NJ I think the pandemic has accelerated the rebirth of small walkable towns. Many people no longer commute to NYC for work so there's been a bit of resurgence in coffee shops, restaurants and bike shops in the places I'm familiar with in the burbs. Now if only we could get some protected bike lanes to connect all these small towns 🤔

    • @MelGibsonFan
      @MelGibsonFan Год назад +6

      I got back in my bike for the first time in years when the pandemic hit. Cars were few and far between and it became much easier to cycle.

    • @XBKLYN
      @XBKLYN Год назад +1

      @@sparklesparklesparkle6318 you randomly picked this forum to whine about your own inadequacies?

    • @MelGibsonFan
      @MelGibsonFan Год назад

      @@sparklesparklesparkle6318 lol wtf are you even saying?

    • @MelGibsonFan
      @MelGibsonFan Год назад

      @@sparklesparklesparkle6318 So funny enough I actually am someone who left New York because of the cost of living. 40 years would take you back to the most violent year in NY’s history though so weirdly NYC has actually gotten better since then. Unfortunately if you’re the kind of deranged culture warrior that a lot of right wingers are and you believe in the “DeMoCrAt CoNtRoLlEd CiTiEs” narrative then I’m not sure anything I say will change your mind.
      NY has largely been in the leadership of Republican mayors, it’s core local political bodies are by and large subservient to the interest of big capital. Few things demonstrate this more than the decade long defunding of the MTA under Giuliani and Pataki. Housing costs are a big one too. Every effort to make housing more affordable has been beaten back by, you guessed it, republicans. Excessive broker fees capped? Republicans led the effort to reinstate them, affordable housing subsidized? Republicans fought that. Rent stabilization implemented? Republicans fought that… you get what I’m saying.
      Too many republicans don’t understand the nature of finance or it’s capture of the Democratic Party. You guys are hyper obsessed culture warriors and too insular to care what most functional democracies are actually like and just how extreme your party really is.

    • @MelGibsonFan
      @MelGibsonFan Год назад

      @@sparklesparklesparkle6318 I guess you would like to fix the economy by implementing policies explicitly rejected throughout almost every industrialized nation which has guaranteed it's citizenry a better quality of life through safer streets, healthier food, better and cheaper education, longer life expectancy etc...

  • @birchtree5884
    @birchtree5884 Год назад +13

    This channel comes swinging out of the gate with this banger. Looking forward to the future!

  • @NankitaBR
    @NankitaBR Год назад +9

    Here in Brazil shopping malls are usually in very dense city centers, in places that are easily accessible by public transportation and walking. So for us shopping centers are very useful because they are basically a commercial street but in a single place and without noncommercial buildings in between like in the street, so they are still very much in use and not decaying here because they are useful. Usually their parking lots are mostly either underneath or above the mall itself, so it has parking spaces for those that want to drive but they are still very accessible by people walking that don't want to cross huge parking lots to get inside. Shopping malls are not the problem itself, the way they are built amd though about in the US is.

    • @richardscathouse
      @richardscathouse Год назад +1

      In most US cities you need a degree in navigation to figure out a public transportation system.

  • @Lildizzle420
    @Lildizzle420 Год назад +38

    places like Phoenix metro center are starting to create full mixed developments with housing and an elevated light rail station, so it's good to know the guys dream is finally coming true. the good thing about Phoenix is that it's possible to reduce car lanes.

    • @Xenomorph-hb4zf
      @Xenomorph-hb4zf Год назад

      walking outside in phoenix without an AC? 40c weather lmao

    • @aqua2poweros699
      @aqua2poweros699 Год назад

      In Nyc the MTA and DOT are adding bike and bus lanes to their existing roads for existing bus lines and popular biking areas. Many nyc subway stations in the outer bouroughs are close to residential areas allowing commuters to just use the train or bus to get where they need to go.

    • @jeanmarcleplattenier2762
      @jeanmarcleplattenier2762 Год назад +1

      What? I live here. This city is a car town. Public transportation is inconvenient and cumbersome.

    • @danakraemer8512
      @danakraemer8512 Год назад

      When I was a kid, living In suburbia, Anaheim, CA., I’d get on my bike and go see my friends. I didn’t ask mom to drive me. Cold day, wear a jacket, hot, wear shorts. Sunscreen - you have got to be kidding. I was slow at the end of the day for all the vitamin D my body made. Rarely sick as a kid.

  • @Kai...999
    @Kai...999 Год назад +5

    One thing the hood has over the suburbs is the sense of community I guess. Ignoring the murder and gang beefs, there's always people outside doing stuff 😶

  • @adamhall8963
    @adamhall8963 Год назад +7

    The production value on this video is top tier, can''t wait for more!

  • @perryborn2777
    @perryborn2777 Год назад +6

    Living in a city the past three years has really made me hate the way we design them in the US. When I lived in an apartment just down the road from the school I was attending, it wasn't so bad, cause I had sidewalks, a convenience store, food at the University and a couple restaraunts around, and a mall about a mile away all connected by sidewalks, but once I moved further out into the suburbs, I started to notice the problems.
    I like having the option to drive, but it sure would be nice if I had the option to walk, bike, or ride a train/bus to get to my destination as well. But I don't. If I want to go somewhere, I've gotta drive. I really hate how hard it is to convice people that cars and walkable areas can coexist, cause the answers have already existed for decades, we just ignore them.
    I'm glad to be moving back out to the country soon. At least then it'll make sense when it takes me 30 minutes to get to the grocery store, as it's in another town 30 miles away instead of 2 miles as the crow flies and thirth minutes of traffic

  • @iamfinky
    @iamfinky Год назад +10

    Sadly this can't happen in America, as the country runs on profit. People's quality of life doesn't generate a profit so this won't happen.

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 Год назад

      Are you by any chance related to my Marxist, Ex-Guru, aptly named...
      Normie FecalStain?

    • @bchristian85
      @bchristian85 9 месяцев назад

      The 2010s saw a lot of good things in terms of urban revival in cities a cross the country. Unfortunately, the pandemic has been a speed bump for it and the rise of WFH has brought into question whether or not it will continue, but at the end of the day it really comes down to culture and the fact American culture still treats the suburbs as the ideal. Culture could be turned against suburbs like it was turned against urbanism in the mid 20th century. I'd say we were well on our way, but there has been a backlash.

  • @BerryMitchels
    @BerryMitchels Год назад +4

    As a European swiss who moved to Ohio, I couldn't agree more with the points you made in this video. We desperately need to find a way to end or at least lessen car dependency in the usa.

  • @AdamSmith-gs2dv
    @AdamSmith-gs2dv Год назад +4

    Problem is I don't think modern walkable centers would be any better. One thing you are forgetting is that the walkable areas have old buildings that were actually constructed with love and care unlike todays buildings that are just built to be the cheapest thing possible to meet all the government regulations. Would a walkable town with a bunch of crappy 5 over 1s be any better than a mall? I don't think so and the reason I don't think so is because I have been to many of these crappy new trendy places in many cities. The absolute worst was Charlotte NC, that city is is just completely souless and is filled with modern apartment blocks and 5 over 1s with crappy chain stores

    • @Kuzyapso
      @Kuzyapso Год назад +1

      It doesn't matter. This is just another youtuber who wishes America was Europe

    • @austinreed7343
      @austinreed7343 Год назад +2

      While yeah it wouldn't be as nice as a bunch of old buildings, it would at least be safer than a mall. I'd consider that to be boring, but practical, because despite the comparative lack of charm and character (even tacky 90s-style buildings like Rainforest Cafe would be cool to have), it's still not as prone to traffic problems like noise pollution and car wrecks, and also still better for the environment. That's what's really important; the charm and uniqueness can build up over time.

  • @Mrs._Ukraine
    @Mrs._Ukraine Год назад +4

    If the USA would want to be a car free pedestrian friendly society, it would probably take atleast 1 and 1 quarter century considering how much larger the US is than the Netherlands, and how much more people they have.

    • @Tom-xy9gb
      @Tom-xy9gb Год назад

      probably. Only thing protecting the car culture is big government. We have to push them back to let the market decide what they want in their neighborhoods.

  • @theultimatereductionist7592
    @theultimatereductionist7592 Год назад +23

    I personally LOVE being kept physically far apart from others. Not everyone wants to be crammed together.
    But I totally agree: people should have the choice.

    • @royalsd
      @royalsd Год назад +15

      Yea, though a small portion of people are like you. Humans are meant to be social and in a group as it’s how we r evolved. People are becoming more introverted because of isolation because of the internet and cars. I don’t like to say this but I bet that in most cases this was also the cause to your love of being away from people.

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 Год назад +6

      Well the suburban areas are the worst of all possible worlds. People are spread too far apart to conveniently come together if they want to, yet crammed in too close together to be physically far apart. And worse, EVERYTHING dumps onto these very heavily travelled 4, 6, and 8 lane arterial roads and THEY dump onto extremrly busy or downright jammed freeways and tollways that are 6, 8, or 10 lanes wide or even wider!

    • @lunayen
      @lunayen Год назад +5

      If you have a job, then you can never be too far away from people. And you can build a walkable city with public transit where people aren't crammed together, but they aren't wasting land for one large house.

    • @khianakalypso4743
      @khianakalypso4743 Год назад +2

      Even though I have social anxiety, I generally like being in public. I don't want to be surrounded or right up against people, but I am not the type who likes to feel completely alone. Living in an apartment though.. most miserable thing ever, I swear. Sharing walls and dealing with your neighbors issues is not fun. Only downside to the world of less vehicles, but otherwise i'd like it!

    • @eazydee5757
      @eazydee5757 Год назад

      @@khianakalypso4743You’re kind of like me, except I wouldn’t mind living in an apartment at all.

  • @alfredsaalo1441
    @alfredsaalo1441 Год назад +6

    It is ironic how "the land of the free" is the opposite of free in some aspects

    • @wa-bu3ke
      @wa-bu3ke Год назад +2

      Always was

    • @harrychown6854
      @harrychown6854 Год назад +2

      It's also ironic how "the land of the free" is quite literally not the "land of the free". There is an index of freedom created by some boffins and scientists, and the US routinely comes out at around the 25th "most free" country in the world. Meaning there are 24 countries considered "more free".
      The US was also recently assessed by the economist as being a "flawed democracy" (one step below the best category of a "full democracy"). It makes me cringe when Americans talk about their land being the land of the free, when it literally isn't. It would be more accurate to call it the "land of the free-ish". Because that's what it is. It's kind of free.
      It was indeed the first country to fully embrace democracy etc (albeit France might have something to say about that). But it certainly isn't leading the pack today.

  • @andrew2137
    @andrew2137 Год назад +3

    Lived in Europe for a few years, having lived in Atlanta all my life. I love my country but fuck me I miss trains. I miss just not having a car and still being able to travel basically anywhere on foot no problem. My parents live 3 hours away and I'd love to just be able to hop on a train and go visit. I remember I came back to the US and saw that I-75 had this elevated structure being built alongside it on the Northside, I remember thinking "Shit, are they finally building a rail system?" but no it's a god damn toll road...

  • @mrdaym
    @mrdaym Год назад +9

    It's impossible for you to not have heard of NotJustBikes.

    • @highway2heaven91
      @highway2heaven91 Год назад +1

      He’s definitely Urbanism YT Central (along with Strong Towns).

  • @danielbabb4776
    @danielbabb4776 Год назад +4

    As an American that also hates cars, and just got back from two months in Europe, ITS PARADISE.
    I thought my expectations for walkable places were unrealistic, but literally EVERYWHERE I went, IT WAS PARADISE.
    Even the least walkable places on the entire continent (middle-of-nowhere in the countryside Austria) had better transit than the best places in the USA

    • @GamerTim3
      @GamerTim3 Год назад +1

      Europeans after making some of the best cars and some of the best roads, only to hate them years later

  • @Nosgoroth
    @Nosgoroth Год назад +23

    One single video? Only a hundred subscribers? What the heck, watching the video I didn't expect that at all, it's so well done. Subscribed.

  • @stuartcampbell4626
    @stuartcampbell4626 Год назад +2

    "Expletive, expletive, expletive, disgusting...I hate it!" As a former pastor who focused on community building and as a current architecture student, this statement summarizes my feelings to so many suburban forms, at so many levels!

  • @Varg390
    @Varg390 Год назад +6

    Imagine needing a car to go to the supermarket and not walking for less than 5 minutes to buy a plunger... I imagine it :(

  • @Lezzylree
    @Lezzylree Год назад +3

    This might be the best introductory video on this topic for its length that I have seen. incredible job!

  • @createLazyWorkerJack
    @createLazyWorkerJack Год назад +15

    In Hong Kong, we have apartments on top of the mall and sometimes a public transport station under it. This design is common here due to the lack of land but it solves the problem in this video.

    • @panda7915
      @panda7915 Год назад

      I can imagine living there x) it's funny

  • @mufgada
    @mufgada Год назад +5

    I really like this video.
    Vienna's Mariahilferstraße, Austria's busiest shopping street, is a good example of how transitioning from cars to humans is both possible and profitable. Including Vienna at the beginning and end of the video would also help to tie the video together.

  • @Misaka-gt5yj
    @Misaka-gt5yj Год назад +3

    You can't really stop the car unions from lobbying tho

  • @userofthetube2701
    @userofthetube2701 Год назад +9

    It's nice to admire Amsterdam. But do keep in mind that most of the cityscape shown in this video is at least one hundred years old. More recent neighborhoods are far less walkable and more car centric than the older ones. So even though the sprawl in Amsterdam may be less extreme than in the US, building walkable and attractive urban environments in a world where cars exist has proven to be difficult.

    • @Mendrawza24
      @Mendrawza24 Год назад +3

      This is the problem I see with channels like this one. They see a snapshot on a postcard and think that life is that way, not realizing that for any of it to be practical, the cars and highways they hate so much are still necessary.

    • @userofthetube2701
      @userofthetube2701 Год назад

      @LeonFuego This wasn't quite the point I was trying to make. Cars and highways are obviously necessary to some degree. But I do believe it's still possible to build neighborhoods that are much like those shown in this video. It's just that at some point urban planners decided that they would not do so anymore because the car was seen as the future. However, it's all about balance which for the moment still tends to be very car centric.
      My hope is that one day new neighborhoods will be designed in such a way that car travel is made largely unnecessary, while still providing access in cases where the car is the only option. And for that studying why these older neighborhoods are so attractive could be very useful.

    • @punchkicker3837
      @punchkicker3837 Год назад

      @@Mendrawza24 Cars and highways are necessary in rural areas like farms, NOT in big cities that have metro or commuter rail systems you son of a wh-re.

  • @krone5
    @krone5 Год назад +3

    The mall concept is based upon real city streets, the problem is when the the mall is not connected with its community, for example in my area, many malls are near a cemetery, and not near actual housing.

  • @kaihang4685
    @kaihang4685 6 месяцев назад +2

    The first time I went to a shopping mall like this, both my parents and I were practically jumping up and down with excitement at the "return to civilisation" feeling we had.
    For context, we had just moved from Hong Kong to a car-centric hellhole where - as we described it - "either deserted or only has cars".
    Thanks to your video I understand why. It was sad that we were *this* excited at a shopping mall because it was the only place that reminded us of our life back in Hong Kong.

  • @swunt10
    @swunt10 Год назад +3

    You don't even need a big urban city. Small towns with a main street and a market square can be very rural but still urban enough to be car free. The diameter of a small town should not exceed 1 Mile. That way even if you live on the outskirts in some single family home it would still be less than half a Mile (5-10 Minutes walk) to get to the more urban center with shops and apartment buildings. Add to that a train station to connect to other small towns in the region going all the way to the next big city and you have the perfect alternative to suburbia. One big urban city with no sprawl and in the surrounding countryside you have small towns, farming villages, farmland and forests. That is sustainable in every sense of the word. It's good for the environment, it's good for peoples mental health, it's sustainable financially and economically as well.

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un Год назад +24

    With the rise of online shopping, malls have struggled and shuttered. Now they're reinventing themselves to be more appealing to everyone, whether it be to include indoor water parks and theme parks like the American Dream Meadowlands or a housing development. But Cheesecake Factory is the peak of American malls. Its decor screams "Let's further treat ourselves and eat here before shopping some more". Sure they're weird with their dictionary-sized menus, but that's what makes them stand out. The first restaurant opened in 1978 in Beverly Hills, and the rest is history. I hope to open just a street of Cheesecake Factories but they're all different designs with statues of me.

  • @IHateStroads
    @IHateStroads Год назад +8

    Editing on par with channels with 5M+ subscribers. Great production.

  • @BPEKSupraInteractive
    @BPEKSupraInteractive Год назад +4

    Profits over people... Always the trend in America

    • @wturner777
      @wturner777 Год назад +1

      And unfortunately that includes infrastructure.

  • @Zero8880
    @Zero8880 Год назад +3

    The golden age of malls was the 80s/90s. Most malls had a store that catered to everyone in the family. Whether it be clothing and jewelry stores for mom and teenagers, electronics stores and Sears for dad, or KB toys and arcades for the kids, or the food courts and movie theaters for the whole family. Nowadays, it seems like there are more dead malls than thriving ones. Sadly, most of the thriving malls where I live only cater to women these days. The only thing they have for me are leather massage chairs so I can wait for my wife to finish shopping. It's sad, bc in the 90s, I considered myself a mallrat.

    • @nolesy34
      @nolesy34 Год назад

      They need a massage chair and waiter to bring beer, then ALL MEN would come

    • @richardscathouse
      @richardscathouse Год назад +1

      Didn't know; I was too poor to play.

    • @nolesy34
      @nolesy34 Год назад

      @@richardscathouse you could play monopoly and WIN the mall

  • @heroprotagonist24
    @heroprotagonist24 Год назад +13

    Once you move out of the US to another country
    you realize how every aspect of life in the the US is based around consumerism and materialism

  • @D3Vlicious
    @D3Vlicious Год назад +5

    The issue isn't with shopping malls per se, but rather American's over-dependence on cars. Take a look at shopping malls in Asia which are usually attached to public transportation and even to residential spaces.

  • @micha0585
    @micha0585 Год назад +6

    Great video. I was surprised to see that your account has only 54 subscribers, I think you deserve many more. However, the topic is very depressing.

  • @HolloVVpoint
    @HolloVVpoint Год назад +3

    Basically every town, city high street center in the UK and Europe.
    It’s not a new idea as such because that’s how our towns and cities have always been, I’m guessing Gruen was homesick and wanted to bring a bit of his old home to his new home.

  • @michaelraith9481
    @michaelraith9481 Год назад +6

    So 'Mericans butchered a good and sensible idea. Ok.

  • @eurosonly
    @eurosonly Год назад +3

    You know you've got a poor design and a problem when the parking lot is 3 times as big as the damn destination it engulfs. What a waste of land space. Build up not around.

  • @nopedynopenope107
    @nopedynopenope107 Год назад +2

    was surprised when i found out this was the first and only video on your channel so far, pretty good shit

  • @freeinghumanitynow
    @freeinghumanitynow Год назад +4

    This is interesting. If I recall correctly, Walt Disney wanted something similar in his parks and was planning it when he died. Legend has it that after his death the planned community was scrapped.

  • @GuitarLessonsBobbyCrispy
    @GuitarLessonsBobbyCrispy 6 месяцев назад +1

    You go to shopping malls today, and there's almost nothing but tech stores selling cell phones and cell phone cases. Hardly and variety, and if you're looking for something specific, it's either out of stock, out of date, or sold online only. Remember when stores were packed with merchandise? Now it's like they only have the bare minimum.

  • @gecko4878
    @gecko4878 Год назад +4

    I hate cars with all my heart

  • @rogermichaelwillis6425
    @rogermichaelwillis6425 Год назад +2

    I hope to never own a car again. It's one reason I moved away from the US. For now, I live in Istanbul, Turkey. There must be a dozen bakeries within a two minute's walk from my apartment. Cafés and markets are everywhere. Plus, the transit system is excellent. Owning a car here would be a hindrance.

  • @NDUWUISI
    @NDUWUISI Год назад +5

    Great video! Please make more urban planning videos
    Also as someone who spent his honeymoon in Amsterdam earlier this year, that place is magical! 👌🏾

  • @Deriathan1
    @Deriathan1 Год назад +1

    Sad think is, that I see such regress also in Europe. This "walkable towns" are basically only in town centres, but suburbs are becoming the same as in America.

  • @aljazjanezic3274
    @aljazjanezic3274 Год назад +18

    excellent video! You explained the concept of car dependency perfectly. I think more people need to realize how car infrastructure is killing us and our cities. The editing is also stunning.

  • @georgeoust
    @georgeoust Год назад +2

    I know what I’m asking is not possible but I would love to combine the European way of walking everywhere and American way of having a big house, that’s secluded enough you can have your own life. I live in Europe and I absolutely enjoy being able to just walk out of my house, walk 3 minutes and be in the open and just walk around. But what I like abt America is their big houses (we don’t have these here, everything is pretty cramped), with their own backyard and it’s basically a whole world of its own, and you don’t have to worry abt annoying your neighbor. You can even not socialize with your family if you’d like, and as someone who needs alone time to recharge their batteries that’s great. I am a university student, so I don’t work, but I do commute to uni. If we exclude uni and my commute there, I spend easily 5 of the 7 days in my house. I would love to have an American suburban house. Sadly, what makes the walkability of my city possible is also what prohibits the existence of such houses.

    • @lunayen
      @lunayen Год назад

      A big secluded house costs moe to maintain, and it's harder to keep warm. Plus, thanks to zoning laws, you can't build the house at a size that fits you best. You will not appreciate it.

    • @shin-ishikiri-no
      @shin-ishikiri-no Год назад

      @@lunayen Yeah the zoning laws in the US were designed by Barbarians. Horrible.

  • @ToontownAndCpenguin
    @ToontownAndCpenguin Год назад +3

    I grew up near Portland Oregon & my childhood home was about a 20 minute walk to the nearest bust stop that required going over a big hill. In my early 20's, I'd start taking the bus to get around, even though the walk was such a hassle & when I moved out, I chose an apartment off of the MAX line, sadly having to go for an affordable one meant that there wasn't much else within a close walking distance, even walking to the nearby Subway restaurant took like 15 minutes. There was a Fred Meyer close to the apartment complex but it was about a half hour walk through neighborhoods & another apartment complex to get there. It's such a pain, even somewhere with decent public transportation takes a while to get from place to place without a car. Part of it is waiting at crosswalks & being mindful of the roads. I never learned how to drive & I'm in my early 30's now, when I was a teenager, other than being in a car accident that caused me to be unable to look at the car in front of me for years, I just flat out didn't want to learn how to drive because I was trying to figure out how I can do better for the environment, I looked into efficient cars but they were too expensive & whatnot so I decided since we have trimet, I'd just use that. Well, Portland got too dangerous to be around, my extended family are in their 70's, & I couldn't afford rent. My parents decided to move closer to family to spend time with them while they're still around & I needed somewhere more affordable to live so I followed. Sadly, their public transportation system is well, it's not Portland lol. I'm locked at home almost all the time, I can walk to some nearby restaurants & a little farther away is a Walmart, theater, GameStop, & more restaurants so I have places to walk to but it takes a while to get there. I wish things were more walking friendly. I'm considering spending this summer learning how to drive because I'm sick of being stuck at home. I'd rather be in a community where you don't need cars but that just doesn't exist where I live & I'm sort of tied to here until my extended family are gone because I grew up away from them, I want to spend time with them before they're gone.

  • @jfmezei
    @jfmezei Год назад +2

    I is ironic that suburban shopping malls are dying in the USA because people now go to "big box stores" where the parking of equivalent size is dedicated to a single store. (and Amazon has bought some failed malls to convert them into fulfilment centres). So instead of drincving and parking in malls to visit multiple stores, you now drive/park for each individual (big box) store you need to visit.

    • @richardscathouse
      @richardscathouse Год назад

      Sad really since the Convid Scare most smaller unique stores are gone and no one wants to stock inventory in a store anymore. Must as I dislike Amazon it's the only option for unique shopping choices. Especially books and kitchen wares IME

  • @zk0rned
    @zk0rned Год назад +3

    Only problem with your theory here is that Tokyo has exactly what you specified, and it doesn't seem like it's that much helpful than the alternative

  • @Jon_Nadeau_
    @Jon_Nadeau_ Год назад +2

    "You need to eliminate the need for a car, and create a landscape designed around people, bikes, and public transit" Um yeah thats's pretty much everything I hate when I go out. I'd rather keep my sports car and single family home on my cult a sac. The city is just not for me. I'm so glad I left.

  • @TheHy6xD
    @TheHy6xD Год назад +5

    You said he included housing and other necessities to his project, but they didn't build it. It's not his fault they didn't implement it.

  • @driley4381
    @driley4381 Год назад +2

    For almost every American alive, this is the only world they've ever known and the thought of anything else is either confusing, unfathomable, or downright terrifying. Add that to the fact that Americans have been convinced that "cars = freedom" and you get....this.

    • @driley4381
      @driley4381 Год назад +4

      @Phillip Banes Sure, "freedom" in the form of debt and maintenance costs while having your entire life dictated by the glowing numbers at the gas station. Much freedom.
      Americans don't "prefer" to drive. Americans, and all other humans, "prefer" whatever option is the easiest and most efficient way to get around. We've just been working overtime since the 1950s to make sure that "driving a car" is and always will be the ONLY option in the United States and Canada.
      Just because YOU like to drive doesn't mean that should be the ONLY option for EVERYONE to get around in America. I imagine you'd prefer to drive on roads that are much less congested.

    • @driley4381
      @driley4381 Год назад +1

      @Phillip Banes Honestly, you answered your question in your own comment.
      How can someone "prefer" something that is literally the only option?

    • @danielkelly2210
      @danielkelly2210 Год назад +2

      @@phillipbanes5484 Nope. They don't.

    • @Piterdeveirs333
      @Piterdeveirs333 Год назад +2

      @Phillip Banes I would rather have the freedom to actually be able to choose between driving a car and public transit. Right now I do not have the choice because of how lobbying has fucked public transit in the US

    • @Piterdeveirs333
      @Piterdeveirs333 Год назад

      @Phillip Banes most public transit in the US is a fucking joke

  • @AlbertoLopez-mn8ms
    @AlbertoLopez-mn8ms Год назад +4

    Great video. I don't live in the US but I can empathize with it a bit. I live in the second largest city in Mexico. The city was never planned for the growth experienced in the last 25 years and now chaos reigns in the streets. A battle of the car centric make wider roads where possible vs add bike lanes is non stop all over town. Bikes are good but not if you have to go 10km to go to work every day...

  • @mygetawayart
    @mygetawayart Год назад +12

    certain american towns brag about having the one walkable road with a few shops, greenery and a fountain to the point that it becomes one of the main attractions and i find that so cute and depressing at the same time. They'll even go so far as call it "the cultural district" or smth like that...

    • @opheliasrue
      @opheliasrue Год назад +1

      I live in a place like that, it is genuinely the only truly cute place in town but it gets no support because there’s so little access to it. It naturally just becomes that one place in town that everyone avoids because of the car traffic and becomes worse in quality

  • @kb_100
    @kb_100 Год назад +4

    NIMBYs hate this video

  • @Crazea
    @Crazea Год назад +1

    Brand new mixed use mini communities are already popping up across america. But, a lot of people also just choose to stay in the suburbs with their houses, yards and cars as well. There is no one size fits all when it comes to peoples living preferences.

  • @wmmseo
    @wmmseo Год назад +4

    As a person living in Asia, I really don't understand why the developers just don't copy Asia. It looks a lot more like Victor Gruen's vision here than anywhere else that I've ever been. They have better integration into the urban landscape (mixed use zoning), access to public transport, walk-ability and much more. The biggest difference that I see is the greatest weakness of US and Canadian malls. I don't know much about other places, but in the Philippines, the malls are supported by huge 50 story condominiums (or more stories) and apartment buildings that provide a built-in consumer base. Most of the malls have three to five giant hi-rise buildings either sprouting right out of the top of them or connected to them. Trump Tower in Makati (Manila) is built right on top of Century City Mall. It is built so you can get off on the ground to third floors without ever leaving your condo. All of the malls here have all the basics built in as well: A groceries store, hardware store, department store, and even health-food stores and health club gyms. The Philippine also has a version of Amazon called Lazada and I have the choice to order things out of stock or are cheaper or just go downstairs and get everything that I need. Even if there is a typhoon or flooding, I never have to leave the building. If that kind of building existed in the USA, you could shop during a blizzard and not even notice that anything is happening. In addition to all that, the condos and stores have backup generators so you don't notice when power is out either. It's a sweet setup.

    • @richardscathouse
      @richardscathouse Год назад +1

      Monoculture and inbreeding help I'm sure. Everything is great when no one is different

  • @DenshaOtoko2
    @DenshaOtoko2 6 месяцев назад +2

    Good thing there are walkable cities where I live.

  • @catalyst_yt1472
    @catalyst_yt1472 Год назад +5

    Good video man keep up the good work!

  • @DieSuidAfrikanTikkoppe
    @DieSuidAfrikanTikkoppe Год назад +2

    I can’t believe this is your first/only video it’s so good and I can’t wait to see more ❤

  • @outterlimits1
    @outterlimits1 Год назад +3

    Great video. How about, making one on the drive-in theaters? Why doesn't the large state of Texas, with all it's wide-open flat lands, build a high-speed train linking all it's large cities? 🤔

    • @richardscathouse
      @richardscathouse Год назад

      Because our politicians are all owned by corporations that make more profit when you stay in one place.

    • @user-qm4mb7ct3d
      @user-qm4mb7ct3d Год назад

      It's only due to f××ked up American car-based mentality, nothing more

  • @kwamesmith3214
    @kwamesmith3214 Год назад +1

    I've spent more time in comas and ICUs than in malls and shopping centers... It's sort of great if you can bring lucid dreaming abilities under control

  • @pacman3556
    @pacman3556 Год назад +4

    1:01-- People's definition of "lively" living conditions are different. To me that is hell on Earth....people packed in on top of each other. Constant people everywhere. No space to yourself. Everyone knows your business etc. I wouldn't want to live packed in like that.

    • @user-qm4mb7ct3d
      @user-qm4mb7ct3d Год назад

      So it's better to live in these paper houses which can be blown by some wind but alone?

    • @pacman3556
      @pacman3556 Год назад

      @@user-qm4mb7ct3d who says people living in the suburbs or rural areas live in paper houses that get blown over in the wind?

    • @user-qm4mb7ct3d
      @user-qm4mb7ct3d Год назад

      @@pacman3556 c'mon! These modern suburban houses are built of cheap materials. They are as tough as paper and get blown apart by hurricanes as shown in news. If they were built of bricks then it would be better as brick buildings are windproof, soundproof, waterproof etc. They can withstand numerous storms and stay over centuries. Sure they get damaged but not torn apart

    • @pacman3556
      @pacman3556 Год назад

      @@user-qm4mb7ct3d your house might be built that was but not all. And why does it matter. Some people prefer to live in a different style of house rather than be packed in like sardines. As I said people's definition of "lively" living conditions are different. Who would want to have with all those people piled in on top of you constantly in your space.

    • @user-qm4mb7ct3d
      @user-qm4mb7ct3d Год назад

      @@pacman3556 and not everyone is ready to pay giant bills for rebuilding the house after each storm + have extra free inefficient space that costs money

  • @MuffHam
    @MuffHam Год назад +4

    I would day Toyoko is a good example for what a city should look like. Meteo Toyoko has several sub cities within it. These sub cities have there own identity and layout. But are all connected via the best plubic transit system in the world. You can get almost anywhere in Japan via train.

    • @caseyadams1861
      @caseyadams1861 Год назад +3

      Japan is about the same land size as California, but with over three times as many people. Expecting the US to be like Japan is just unrealistic. Both countries have vastly different cultural/societal norms and geographies. Just because it works there doesn't mean it will work everywhere--or anywhere--else.

    • @wa-bu3ke
      @wa-bu3ke Год назад +1

      @@caseyadams1861 it would work dumbass
      And he said a city not the whole country

    • @caseyadams1861
      @caseyadams1861 Год назад

      @@wa-bu3ke, oh, I'm sure it will work out just perfectly. And, all of its inhabitants will be as friendly and nice as yourself.

    • @shin-ishikiri-no
      @shin-ishikiri-no Год назад +1

      @@caseyadams1861 Barbarians love their barbarian lifestyle. Not surprising.

  • @zacharyjones6729
    @zacharyjones6729 Год назад +1

    i love finding a new good urban planning channel

  • @snabbisnabb595
    @snabbisnabb595 Год назад +3

    I have probably been looking at the Not Just Bikes channel too much to recognise the shots you integrated.

  • @UnipornFrumm
    @UnipornFrumm Год назад +1

    in my country shopping malls dont have a lot of car parking space,because the malls are in the middle of the city,you can go to mall by walking or bus,or tram,or of course,car,people have money for cars,dont forget that

  • @SeaBassTian
    @SeaBassTian Год назад +11

    I think I have a better understanding of why I was so excited to go the Mall as a teen, I don't think it was the I was gung ho on materialism, I think it was I was excited to have random encounters & people watch. Great video! Bonus points for including 2 shots of the mixed use development we have in RVA!

  • @brad5426
    @brad5426 Год назад +1

    The problem I see is the sprawl of US car parking zones. Car parks of this expanse would never fly in my country and would need to be stacked up in multi story buildings. The land gained from doing this can be extremely valuable and be used for pedestrians.

  • @sinanentwistle8700
    @sinanentwistle8700 Год назад +4

    as a European i genuinely find these big suburban places in America scary its almost dystopian

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад +3

      We’re not a tiny country. Plus we value our privacy, so stay on your side of the pond.

    • @sinanentwistle8700
      @sinanentwistle8700 Год назад +2

      @@Labyrinth6000 thats cool, but from what ive seen most people dislike these weird suburban places, my friends in america are always driving places too. But every one just seems so apart over there. I wouldnt know though, not american

    • @wdwfanatic1394
      @wdwfanatic1394 Год назад +1

      @@Labyrinth6000 "privacy" you're literally being watched on all your devices. There is no privacy that you speak of. Also, the "we're not a tiny country" argument...China is the third biggest country and they accomplished a huge high-speed rail system. Not to mention their cities have grown and built more transit infrastructure. If they can do it, so can we

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад +2

      @@wdwfanatic1394hina has a high speed rail system built with practically slave labor from the one party government. Plus they have that public transit system because if there was a riot, they can shut it down and people wouldn’t be able to mobilize quickly. Nice try though. I Know this argument very well since their transit system is all about control over the people.

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад +3

      @@sinanentwistle8700well American is NOT Europe nor will we ever be.

  • @OCDGeek128
    @OCDGeek128 Год назад +2

    You knocked it out of the park with this first video, man. Nice choice with the Sims music too. Liked and subscribed, I look forward to seeing this channel grow!

  • @CharlieND
    @CharlieND Год назад +7

    I'm surprised your channel isn't bigger because you're production quality is seriously impressive.
    For me, shopping malls are a place that I've always enjoyed going. And some of my favourite malls just happen to be the ones that are directly connected to multiple forms of transit, making them easily accessible. That's how it should be. Unfortunately a lot of malls these days get built on the outskirts of cities with huge parking lots built around them, but I will always prefer the ones that can be accessed without getting stuck in traffic.

  • @cath4566
    @cath4566 Год назад +1

    new urbanist channel just dropped

  • @highway2heaven91
    @highway2heaven91 Год назад +25

    A couple of thoughts:
    I love this video and the research done behind it is amazing. It reminds me a lot of a Johnny Harris video.
    I find it quite sad that cars and parking lots always somehow get shoehorned into every development. It’s like every walkable development always has to find a way to please the car-lover.
    I love the addition of a new Urbanist channel, but it’s going to take a lot more than a large online community to really change things. There are many people out there who are used to our autocentric society who will probably never stumble across any of the videos on YT. We need to do a lot more to raise awareness of this.
    However, I applaud the strides that we’ve taken as a society. Lifestyle centers, mixed-use communities, the expansion of transit in North America, the addition of bike lanes in many cities, the resurgence of downtowns in small towns and major cities and the addition of intercity rail in Florida, Texas and California are evidence that there is a growing appetite for a car-less lifestyle in America and projects like these would have been inconceivable 20 or 30 years ago (at least before RUclips became popular).
    Anyway, I’m rambling off topic. Great video and I can’t wait for the topics that you’ll discuss next. Hopefully we’ll see you on Nebula in the future!

    • @skylu-original
      @skylu-original Год назад +2

      These channels will do almost nothing. The future is in the hands of developers and they like money and hate to take risks to build something nice, car-free (where cars are unnecessary. But bigger problem than cars are housing prices... artificially inflated prices, necessity for life turned into investment to feed greedy, already too rich people. Housing prices are the roots of all problems.

    • @DrJams
      @DrJams Год назад

      @@skylu-original Cars are good because you don't have to wait for the bus messing around with timetables. People want cars because it works better than timetable dependant public transport. The issue is tiny crampt homes in densely populated cities that have few parks.

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Год назад +2

      Keep rambling, i LOVE my car! The goal is to not live in the major cities, than the traffic ain’t so bad. That’s your own fault for staying in them. Perhaps move out?

    • @aaaaaaaard9586
      @aaaaaaaard9586 Год назад +3

      @@Labyrinth6000 Did you build road electricity water sewage and all the utilities you need on your own? Chance is that your local government has built expensive infrastructures for your low density area using tax money it has earned from nearby big city. Most american suburbia are financially insolvent for good reasons.

    • @kittykittybangbang9367
      @kittykittybangbang9367 Год назад +1

      @@DrJams "Cars are good" * gets stuck in traffic for the next few hours *

  • @computernerdtechman
    @computernerdtechman Год назад +1

    Most Americans don't want dense housing. They want SPACE. They don't want people living above or below them packed in like sardines. That is why single family housing is SO popular in the U.S. and is the symbol of the American dream. Americans don't want to live like Europeans. Americans LOVE their car culture and the freedom it provides.

  • @bc5441
    @bc5441 Год назад +10

    It is good that you point out the necessity of the car in Gruen’s original vision of the shopping mall. Also, when comparing the climates of Vienna, the Netherlands and Minneapolis (in whose suburbs Southdale was built), you see a much less hospitable cold-weather climate. People there drive to where they want to go rather than walk in part because it’s brutally cold.
    It’s interesting to see some of the uses of repurposed shopping malls: schools, museums, medical centers, offices, gyms, apartments. Everything that was excluded from the start. If everything had been put together to start, who knows what might have happened.

  • @maple-leafs13
    @maple-leafs13 Год назад +2

    I hated the mall when I was kid because it felt so sterile with all the concrete and artificial lighting. I still hate them. Much prefer something like in europe outdoor dense small shops.

  • @ElSobNo1
    @ElSobNo1 Год назад +8

    You need more subscribers man, this stuff is too good

  • @DisVezis
    @DisVezis Год назад

    Hello. As a resident of Europe, I can comment a little on this topic. More specifically Poland. Everything you said in this video is pure truth. In terms of urban planning, Europe is much friendlier to people than American concrete development, where it is not pursued anywhere and in, for example, Poland, but it is the protests of residents that often make it difficult.
    Sorry for spelling errors, I'm still learning English.

  • @NAUM1
    @NAUM1 Год назад +4

    Part of it also is they chose to follow a little bit of what had been before after the destruction of World War 2. And what was before was a lot of unplanned communities. So maybe take the planning out of it and let individuals decide on their own.

    • @azhariarif
      @azhariarif Год назад +1

      this is actually a good point. Planned cities are almost always, devoid of people.

  • @kinocorner976
    @kinocorner976 Год назад +2

    As a trucker, I hate cars too 🤣
    For a different reason.

    • @richardscathouse
      @richardscathouse Год назад

      I'm not thrilled with most. Truck drivers either.

  • @Trupen
    @Trupen Год назад +3

    Great video, you definitely had experience with it before :)

  • @JohnRollercoasterJr
    @JohnRollercoasterJr Год назад

    Love your sound design. Super satisfying when an element pops on screen and it’s not just a whoosh effect