5 points

No, opening residential to commercial property would ruin it. One business won’t…the droves of others will.

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87 points
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Businesses don’t usually just completely overrun entire neighborhoods, and “opening” doesn’t mean “do whatever the fuck you want”. You can still specify that you don’t want night clubs or auto shops in a specific place.

Mixed zoning is the norm in Europe, and it sure as fuck doesn’t ruin any neighborhoods, quite the opposite in fact.

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13 points

Japan too

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Canada too. I lived on top of a tattoo and vape store across the street from a cafe and grocery store. There were rules to keep the face of the buildings looking kept up.

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9 points

I was struggling to understand this thread as a European running my business from my home, in my case I’m more of a “go visit” than “receive visits” but I also know of others in the neighborhood that do hairdressing, electronics repairs, etc.

I also have multiple supermarkets in walking distance…

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6 points

In Spain some people play an uno-reverse and live in industrial zones. There’s also restaurants in industrial parks.

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51 points

It’s funny, because mixed use zoning is some of the most desirable places to live in terms of market value. People don’t want to drive for. Every. Single. Thing.

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14 points

The argument against mixed use is often that they don’t want to be forced to live in a mixed use area, but the same people are fine with forcing everyone to live how they want. Most likely they only want single family homes because they have never experienced good mixed use and can’t imagine how great it is.

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23 points

it’s as if you think the alternative is businesses being like “alright boys, suburbs are on the menu”.

of course there’ll be regulation, mixed use zoning doesn’t mean chaos.

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3 points

Mmmmregulation paidforbysaidcompanies

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15 points

I see you’ve never lived and worked in a pleasant walkable community

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19 points

That’s not how cities work.

Home based businesses are normal in Canada where I live, people have hair, massage, other aesthetic studios, small scale businesses, professional services like counselling, etc. Heck, you can even rezone some corner properties to a neighbourhood commercial zone that only permits a handful of uses like corner stores or coffee shops.

The less homogenous a neighbourhood is the better it is for everyone. Unless you like being a slave to your car and driving 15 minutes to the store when you forgot milk.

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7 points

What do you mean by “others”?

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1 point

Other businesses

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6 points

That’s why you set limits and have laws/zoning that allow some things and not others. It doesn’t have to be all or nothing.

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5 points

no, it won’t. where did you get that idea from?

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5 points

Absolutely ruined, dreadful and downright hostile these mixed streets

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1 point

mixed

See, that’s where you trigger the Karens

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27 points

Reminds me more to Edward Scissorhands’ neighbour

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25 points
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Was thinking the same thing.

Ironically, a hairdresser. The pastels would probably be too colorful for op’s hood.

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6 points

If this ain’t Delaware… Every time I drive there it’s like some Vivarium shit

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6 points

This is my entire county in Missouri.

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6 points

Its all suburbs and highway fast food interchanges

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4 points

Levittown vibes

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36 points

Every house essentially having a small storefront space attached. But it’s just to park a car

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