Fighting development does not make you an environmentalist.
Alex Steffen:
One of the most unfortunate side effects of the urban activism of the
’60s and ’70s is the belief that development is wrong and that fighting
it makes you an environmentalist. We know that dense cities are both
environmentally better and dramatically more equitable places. Walkable
neighborhoods are better than the suburbs for people with a wide range
of incomes, and what happens in cities that don't grow is that they
gentrify and poor people are pushed out. Trying to fight change makes
you less sustainable and more unfair.
. . .
the best thing a city can do is densify as quickly as it can. That
needs to be said every time this issue comes up, because it’s the only
universal strategy that works. That’s the best-documented finding in
urban planning—that as density goes up, trip length goes down and
transportation energy use goes down.
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