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The Amazing Expanding World

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 06 Jun 2008, 03:15:27

There is an interesting article in The Economist this week about America's suburbs. The 'inventor/architect' of the two-story enclosed shopping mall, Victor Gruen, lasting impact on suburbia, although now seen as its blight, is actually the walk-about town centre that pundits like James Kunstler pine after and lament its demise.

As much as strip malls are an eye sore now they can just as easily form the nucleus of a farmer's market or distribution centre for the local economy tomorrow. They will have to be rhetrofitted to make up for their lack of insulation against heat and cold in the absence of air conditioning, but otherwise where is the difference between a souk, outdoor market and a mall? Only perception and the sense of community.

When the Muslims over-ran Cyprus they did not tear down the churches. They turned them into mosques. Form follows function. So it makes sense to use what you already have versus starting over from scratch. Who in urban America is not within walking distance of a strip mall?
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby Heineken » Fri 06 Jun 2008, 08:40:34

Whatever happens, the retail square footage in the US is obviously way excessive. It was built with endless growth and credit-fueled "prosperity" in the mindless mind.

I think your vision is correct for some of that "footage," Bill, but three-fourths of those big boxes are going to end up empty and falling apart. A province for rats and hobos.
"Actually, humans died out long ago."
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 06 Jun 2008, 10:09:43

RE shopping malls: Indoor tent cities? ; - ))

Well, the problem as I see it is that they are in general horribly energy inefficient buildings relying on excessive power to heat and cool them. No doubt some of them could be converted into cow barns or just warehouse space.

I am thinking of some 'old towns' that I am familiar with like here in Limassol. What strikes me is how densely they used to build. Here that is to create shade because it is hot. But also I suppose to facilitate walking around with shorter distances. Not too many years ago they still used donkies here! ; - ))

Ignoring the blight of crime for a minute I could see a return to denser cities, and therefore less of those strip malls and shopping centers being empty, but converted to another use. Just thinking. I would not want to have to defend that point. But just in general smaller apartments and houses as well as being built in a denser fashion.

Whereas suburbia may follow Victorian England with many larger homes split into duplexes, fourplexes and single apartments. Years ago we converted a two-story house into just such a fourplex. It really was not hard to create two up and down units with two smaller apartments in the basement.

We have been collecting rent on that place for 30-years now, so it was a great investment near a hospital and a local college. It really is in need of some sprucing up now, but if we could get the detached house and lot next door it might be worthwhile to simply knock it down and put up an eight or sixteen unit apartment building. Just in general I like smaller, three or four story walk-ups in good neighborhoods near services and close to schools, universities, hospitals, etc.
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby MarkJ » Fri 06 Jun 2008, 11:23:08

Local restaurants, shopping centers, super-centers and convenience stores are adding square footage and additional parking to handle the increased business. Some restaurants have added drive-thrus to handle increased traffic and free up parking spots as well. Even some of the rural areas have 3 or 4 convenience stores in the core areas.

Many of our older cities in the Northeast are too small, too crowded and poorly designed since they were built when walking, horses and/or trains were the primary forms of transportation and before modern building codes and zoning laws existed. Many of the homes and buildings are grossly inefficient, poorly designed, too small, have limited or no parking, no room for expansion and they're in need of total foundation-up renovation or demolition. The cost of demolition, lead/asbestos abatement, hauling, landfill fees and hazardous waste disposal is astronomical. Taxes are very high in some cities as well in comparison to the suburbs since they don't have large vacant building lots or vacant tracts of acreage which promote new construction and growth of the tax base.

Shopping centers, homes, housing developments, senior citizen housing, vacation homes, malls, super centers, businesses, industrial parks, outdoor recreation and tourism moved to the suburbs or semi-rural areas since that's where the large building lots, or large tracts or undeveloped/underdeveloped acreage and farm land exists. The zoning laws are better, taxes are lower and there are more incentives and tax breaks in the suburbs as well due to growth in tax base.

People are pushing for less strict zoning laws in the suburbs, but small homes, subsidized housing, small lots, multi-family homes, traffic, noise, crime, crowded school systems, blighted properties, lack of parking, lack of room for expansion etc is why many people left the cities decades ago. Non owner-occupied multi-family homes really brought the property values in some neighborhoods down substantially. Lanlord/Tenant laws favor the tenants, not the owners, so many landlords have gotten out of the business or let their properties go downhill. I've converted many 2/3/4 family city homes to single family homes in order to sell them at a decent price. Once the tenants, their rugrats, their swing-sets, pools, barbecues, bikes, toys, junk and all their vehicles are gone, it really cleans up a neighborhood. Due to winter off-street and snow emergency parking, some of the city properties have vehicles parked in the front yards, back yards, side yards, on the sidewalks etc. Makes them look like hell.
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby cube » Fri 06 Jun 2008, 16:12:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '.')..
As much as strip malls are an eye sore now they can just as easily form the nucleus of a farmer's market or distribution centre for the local economy tomorrow. They will have to be rhetrofitted to make up for their lack of insulation against heat and cold in the absence of air conditioning, but otherwise where is the difference between a souk, outdoor market and a mall? Only perception and the sense of community.

When the Muslims over-ran Cyprus they did not tear down the churches. They turned them into mosques. Form follows function. So it makes sense to use what you already have versus starting over from scratch. Who in urban America is not within walking distance of a strip mall?
MrBill I think you and I think alike...well sometimes. :razz:
Here's my observation of half the people on this board:

If gasoline prices go up what will society do?
people say - buy a hybrid car which will set you back $24,000
I say - buy smaller/cheaper car for $12,000

If food gets expensive what will society do?
people say - grow a vegetable garden
I say - how about NOT eating out at restaurants

If society can no longer afford McMansions what will happen?
people say - we will rebuild our cities using a new urbanism model
I say - how about renting out a room in your home for extra cash?

See what I mean?
It's like half the people on this forum have trouble imagining that you must at least take 2 steps forwards first before walking a 1,000 miles. People want to imagine the most extreme example possible before imagining the least intrusive decision being tried first. Sure humanity will eventually reach the ultimate end result of PO (whatever / whenever that will be) but first there are many "steps" that have to be crossed first.
//
Getting back to retail.
I used to live in Washington and there was this 1 mall in particular that was on hard times. You can tell when a shopping mall is going downhill. The first step is when the franchise stores go belly up and they are replaced with mom and pop shops. Independent stores are never decorated as lavishly like franchises so this gives the mall a very ghetto look. The next step is when an "anchor store" goes belly up. The space gets rented out to a "less prestigious" store. For example a Nordstrom may go out and get replaced with a Target store. I've seen some spaces in a mall leased out to commercial businesses and not retailers. Multiply this out and the mall owners will get so desperate they'll literally try to rent out their storefront to anybody. I heard stories of anchor stores being converted to night clubs. Once you get to that level, you're only 1 step away from the city declaring an Urban renewal project. :twisted:
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby MarkJ » Fri 06 Jun 2008, 16:58:50

Converting single family city homes to multi-family homes, adding additions, plus renting out rooms, basements, garages etc was how many people survived in the past. Of course many modern building/safety/fire/mechanical/local codes didn't exist and/or people could get away without using licensed contractors and working without plans, approval, permits, variances and multiple inspections.

When you swing a hammer in some highly populated areas these days, you'll have several neighbors calling building inspectors and code enforcement departments to check up on you. Some city residents will take pictures, video, measurements and call surveyors looking for ways to stop or slow down your building or home improvement projects. If you set one foot on their property, start too early, work too late or if sawdust lands on their crappy postage stamp sized lot, some of the city residents freak out.
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby cube » Fri 06 Jun 2008, 18:09:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MarkJ', 'W')hen you swing a hammer in some highly populated areas these days, you'll have several neighbors calling building inspectors and code enforcement departments to check up on you. Some city residents will take pictures, video, measurements and call surveyors looking for ways to stop or slow down your building or home improvement projects. If you set one foot on their property, start too early, work too late or if sawdust lands on their crappy postage stamp sized lot, some of the city residents freak out.
You do have a good point. City zoning laws in the USA extremely discourage (high density living).
however.....
If ---> correction when things get bad do you think people will care? What's the government going to do? Put people in jail? At least they'll get a roof over their head and 3 meals a day. That might actually be a good deal post PO. Laws can and will be broken when people get desperate enough. It's happening right now as we speak. The law says you have to pay your home mortgage but that's not stopping many people from walking away.

This is how suburbia will collapse:

step 1: rent out rooms in your home for extra cash
step 2: if you lose your home than move in with your parents, brothers, sisters
step 3: at this point there will be so many people violating city zoning laws .... city officials will be forced to change the rules to allow high density living arrangements or risk losing re-election to an angry mob of voters
step 4: high density condos and apartments will be built closer to the city core because that's where the demand for new housing will be
step 5: suburbia has collapsed. Anything outside of the city core (20 mile wide by 20 mile long) is a "dead-zone". City services like telephone, water, sewage, garbage, electricity does not exist in this dead-zone. Whatever abandoned McMansions have long been stripped of copper pipes and useful raw materials by thieves.

summary:
American cities will be rebuilt to emphasize high density living. However if you're getting pretty images of a James Howard Kunstler style yuppie new urbanism image think again. It will NOT look like this:
Image

It will look more like this. :twisted:
Image
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby MarkJ » Fri 06 Jun 2008, 18:57:17

Most of our local population lives in the suburbs or outskirts of the cities. These are the same places where my relatives have lived for over 200 years. We also provide water, food, professional, emergency and medical services for the cities. Many city residents travel to the suburbs to work, shop etc.

Modern building codes, zoning and deed restrictions prohibiting manufactured homes, small homes, small lots, subdivision and multi-family homes priced people in lower income brackets out of the suburbs.

If there was a housing crisis, it would make more sense to build on vacant tracts of acreage in the suburban areas. The roads, access to main roads, water/sewer piping, natural gas piping and electric is much better and much newer in many of the suburbs as well due to the the amount of new homes, money, tax revenue, property tax revenue, housing developments, businesses, super centers, industrial parks etc.

Many suburbs would suit future expansion better than the small poorly designed, blighted, overpopulated aging cities. Plus many areas are closer to work, shopping, farms, water, lakes, streams, rivers, fish, game, timber...

With homes so close together, or so many people living in a single building, fire or disruption to natural gas, water, sewer etc could displace many families at once. Having all your eggs in one basket isn't a good idea.
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby cube » Fri 06 Jun 2008, 20:17:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MarkJ', 'M')odern building codes, zoning and deed restrictions prohibiting manufactured homes, small homes, small lots, subdivision and multi-family homes priced people in lower income brackets out of the suburbs.
The reason why building codes are the way they are now is because people can afford it. That's why US law sates: "a home must be at least 2,000 sq feet with a front and back yard." Okay maybe that's not literally what the law says but I think you know what I'm getting at. What happens if nobody can afford to live in a 2,000 sq ft home? --> The laws will change to fit society's new economically diminished status. Once the law changes, new high density buildings will be built by professional companies which I think society would much prefer to live there. However in the meantime I expect to see a lot of "jury rigged" set-ups, much to the chagrin of city officials. :)

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MarkJ', 'I')f there was a housing crisis, it would make more sense to build on vacant tracts of acreage in the suburban areas. The roads, access to main roads, water/sewer piping, natural gas piping and electric is much better and much newer in many of the suburbs as well due to the the amount of new homes, money, tax revenue, property tax revenue, housing developments, businesses, super centers, industrial parks etc.
You have a point here. The advantage of building on a vacant lot is you don't have to pay the cost of demolishing the old building.
however...
Thanks to suburbia the only place to find a vacant lot is to travel ridiculously far away from the city center. Once oil hits $300 / barrel who will be able to afford the gas for such long commutes?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MarkJ', 'H')aving all your eggs in one basket isn't a good idea.
Actually that's my vision of PO.

Lets look at San Francisco area
The "metro area" measures 60 miles by 60miles (3,600 sq mi) and there's 8 million people.
What will happen is there will be a "contraction". Those 8 million people will get squeezed into an area 20 miles by 20 miles. (400 sq mi). With people living closer together you have more taxpayers per sq mi This will make it easier to provide city services like water, sewage, and electricity.
//
yes there will always be people who will live far away from the city center. However I'm guessing the majority of society will get squeezed into these high density cities. If you look at the 3rd world this is a common living arrangement. Lagos, Sao Paulo, Mumbai...
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby katkinkate » Sat 07 Jun 2008, 02:55:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '.')..... Who in urban America is not within walking distance of a strip mall?


I thought that was the problem, vast distances between residences and the shops (and jobs and other facilities), forcing people to drive.

Of course they could create new residences out of the upper floors of shopping complexes and build blocks of appartments where the car parks are now and create the communities around the shopping facilities.
Kind regards, Katkinkate

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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby MarkJ » Sat 07 Jun 2008, 09:42:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MarkJ', 'M')odern building codes, zoning and deed restrictions prohibiting manufactured homes, small homes, small lots, subdivision and multi-family homes priced people in lower income brackets out of the suburbs.
The reason why building codes are the way they are now is because people can afford it. That's why US law sates: "a home must be at least 2,000 sq feet with a front and back yard." Okay maybe that's not literally what the law says but I think you know what I'm getting at. What happens if nobody can afford to live in a 2,000 sq ft home? --> The laws will change to fit society's new economically diminished status. Once the law changes, new high density buildings will be built by professional companies which I think society would much prefer to live there. However in the meantime I expect to see a lot of "jury rigged" set-ups, much to the chagrin of city officials.


The building/safety/fire/mechanical/local codes, zoning laws, deed restrictions and historic preservation laws are in place to discourage sprawl, blight, unlicensed builders/contractors/tradesmen, mobile homes, shanty towns, affordable (low-income) housing developments, apartment buildings, slumlords and to promote health, safety, energy efficiency, manageable population density and to protect property values and the environment. For example, many minimum lot size requirements and subdivision laws in suburban and rural areas are due to the distance between the well and septic system and/or available water. Perk tests and soil tests are required because of septic systems and drainage as well. Not too long ago, sewer lines and gray water lines ran directly onto the ground or in swamps, streams, rivers, ponds, lakes, homemade septic systems. Shallow dug wells often provided water. Potable water systems also had no backflow prevention isolation either. People with boiler systems used to drink stagnant boiler water, toilet water, boiler antifreeze/chemicals, lead etc when wells ran low.

People won't touch many of the older city homes with a 10 foot pole due to lead paint, lead solder, lead piping, lead flange connections, asbestos shingles/siding/insulation, water, sewer piping problems, foundation/drainage/water infiltration problems, plumbing problems, structural problems, poor insulation, old windows, knob and tube wiring, fuse boxes... too many issues to list.

Many cities and/or sections of cities are a good example of a bad example, so builders, developers, homeowners in suburban or rural towns and villages have learned form their mistakes. Besides being limited by available free space and tax base growth, many city governments are the biggest collection of a$$holes you could possibly assemble. Perhaps living in a small home in overpopulated high traffic areas, paying high taxes, breathing exhaust fumes and ingesting lead alters brain function, business sense and reasoning.


What would happen in a housing crisis situation is they would allow more subdivision, developments, townhouses, condos, multi-families, apartment buildings, modular homes, mobile homes and mobile home parks. They would also extend gas and municipal water and sewer to subdivisions once they had numerical justification. For example, they recently changed the zoning laws which will allow me to subdivide my farms into multiple building lots while still retaining agricultural zoning status on the remaining acreage. Should I choose to build or sell enough homes or lots, the county will extend municipal water & sewer at their cost and they'll build and maintain a new road servicing the properties.

Concerning affordability, the size of the home is only part of the issue. The cost of the land, survey, permits, plans, variances, tree/stump/boulder removal, hauling, excavation, foundation, fill, gravel, basement, waterproofing, drainage, well, septic, utilities, furnace, boiler, water heater, pressure tank, electrical service, driveway, culvert, landscaping, extras and property taxes alone put the cost of even smaller modular homes or mobile homes out of reach of lower income and credit challenged homebuyers.
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby cube » Sat 07 Jun 2008, 16:35:19

to: MarkJ

Lets put aside the zoning law debate for now.

It is my observation that population density is increasing right now, yes perfectly within the law.
here are some examples:
1) People losing their homes and moving in with relatives. There are 2 families living uner the same roof.
2) People with 2nd homes unable to sell them are renting them out. Renters sometimes will cram extra people in. Officially the rental agreement may state 3 people but once these renters move in they call up their friends and next thing you know, there's double the amount of people living there.
3) Some home owners will literally rent out rooms in their home. It may feel very weird having renters in your home but if you're short on cash what other options are there? BTW this is a common practice in cities with traditionally very expensive housing like San Francisco.
4) People living with their parents for a lot longer. Instead of moving out after college they move back in with their parents.

These ideas are not new, but the recent housing fiasco has only multiplied these practices. What used to be considered rare is actually quite common now. With the economy going downhill I expect population density to just keep on increasing as more and more people start sharing homes.
//
Now here comes the interesting part!
If density is increasing in 1 area then by default it must be decreasing in another area. Is there a pattern here? I think yes. I think population density is slowly shifting towards the urban core while the very far flung suburbs are being depopulated. The argument is simple enough. If you could only afford say $600 to pay for rent, that should be enough to rent a room in someone else's home that is "closer" to the urban core. You could be within 5 miles driving distance of your job, you don't have to be 50 miles away. Who wants to commute that far anyways? In fact in today's economy, a home that is (way out) 50 miles away from the urban core is practically un-rentable and un-sellable. There's a population shift towards the urban core right now IMHO. :twisted:
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby MarkJ » Sat 07 Jun 2008, 19:15:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')ou could be within 5 miles driving distance of your job, you don't have to be 50 miles away. Who wants to commute that far anyways? In fact in today's economy, a home that is (way out) 50 miles away from the urban core is practically un-rentable and un-sellable. There's a population shift towards the urban core right now IMHO.


50 miles? What we call The Suburbs are homes and developments on the outskirts of cities. The homes are often closer to shopping, malls, super-centers, businesses, industrial parks and other large employers than many city homes. We call homes 10 or 15 miles from cities Rural. 50 miles from a city is beyond rural. That's what we call the boonies. Many of the homes in these areas are second homes, vacation homes, camps, ski homes etc.

During the summer many people live in their vacation homes on or near the lakes, rivers and mountains, but they commute to work in the area of the primary home.
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Re: The Amazing Expanding World

Unread postby VMarcHart » Sat 07 Jun 2008, 22:36:28

Why live within 5 miles driving distance to work, when we could live 2 miles bicycle distance or 1 mile walking distance?

Interesting rational that driving 5 miles isn't bad or too bad. It is, whether it is private vehicle, car pool, public transportation, etc.

My job requires some travel, and I fight it all the time. Not only it's a chore, but that's what phone, internet, faxes, etc are there for.
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