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austinl | 1 year ago
In America and Europe, restaurants and shops are basically all zoned to be on the ground floor, with residential or office units above. This gives the density a different feeling, because commercial/dining space extends upward.
jerlam|1 year ago
Makes it hard to believe Americans when they claim their city is "very dense" when it is mostly single story buildings surrounded by parking lots.
reaperducer|1 year ago
Chicago used to have a number of "vertical malls." I think Water Tower Place (7 floors) and The Shops at 900 (7 or 8 floors, IIRC) are the only ones left. Unless you also count smaller places like Block 37 (4 floors).
Some are now shadows of their former selves. Some sit empty (Chicago Place), or in various stages of redevelopment.
Fauntleroy|1 year ago
ChuckMcM|1 year ago
hobotime|1 year ago
hendersonreed|1 year ago
Elevators are smaller there. But I think the cost of building is lower there, for a variety of reasons, which makes this more feasible.
diggernet|1 year ago
avidiax|1 year ago
unknown|1 year ago
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