Culture The pushback against the 15-minute city - 'Freedom' means staying in your Green Serfdom

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After years of tireless advocacy to popularize greener and more accessible neighborhoods — where the necessities of daily life can be reached within a short walk or bike ride — champions of the 15-minute city are suddenly the target of far-right conspiracies. The theory is getting its 15 minutes of fame — not as people-centered urban spaces but rather as dystopian, quarter-hour prisons, with opponents saying that they will threaten personal freedom.

Yet, with societies increasingly fractured and fragmented, the concept could be the solution to bridging our divides. By creating more open, integrated, and healthy neighborhoods, it is possible to restore the in-person connections that are an antidote to polarization.

The concept of a 15-minute city emerged in the 1990s as an alternative to the single-use zoning paradigm that had dominated urban planning during the postwar era. It is the ultimate mixed-use development where residences, schools, shops, and parks stand side by side and are accessible within minutes by foot or bicycle. The intention is not just to reduce dependence on polluting vehicles and eliminate the need for long commutes but to also reduce food deserts and promote healthier and more sustainable lifestyles.

Fifteen-minute cities have legitimate flaws, including reinforcing spatial segregation if not properly planned. Getting them right means focusing on equity. That means planning and incentivizing opportunities for integrated and mixed-income neighborhoods. As our research with Harvard professor Ed Glaeser shows, low-income people rely on the ability to travel beyond their own neighborhoods, toward employment and opportunity in other parts of the city.

Still, the idea of 15-minute cities received an unexpected boost from the COVID-19 pandemic. Many mayors and city councils took advantage of the lockdowns to reimagine city spaces, including by re-greening neighborhoods and reducing spaces devoted to roads. So-called complete neighborhoods started springing up in new developments from Paris to Portland, Ore., to Melbourne, weaving each part of the city together into a walkable, livable whole.

But earlier this year, what many considered a pandemic success story was caught up in the whirlpool of political polarization and digital conspiracy. A well-intentioned effort to decongest the city streets of Oxford, England, was met with fierce public resistance and online outrage because of proposed restrictions on automobile use. While the wild criticisms are part of the wider culture wars underway in North America and Western Europe, they also pose an existential risk to the redesign of resilient cities and climate action more broadly. After all, cities are major contributors of greenhouse gas emissions. Many suffer from sizable carbon footprints, worsening heat island effects, and an over-reliance on cars. Yet the backlash could sway some political leaders from investing in green solutions both in existing and planned neighborhoods.

What about the 15-minute city made it so susceptible to this vociferous attack from the far right? First, resistance is linked to a general anxiety, in the aftermath of COVID-19, of the encroaching state. When the conspiracy theorists call the 15-minute city a “climate lockdown,” they are appealing to the anti-lockdown sentiment that swept the world almost as fast as the virus did, calling for unfettered personal liberties and railing against lockdowns, masks, and vaccines. As the pandemic recedes, they have trained their suspicion on the climate crisis and any changes it might entail — from emissions monitoring and micro-mobility to paper straws and gas stoves.

The backlash is also a symptom of the persistent anti-urban bias that pervades swathes of North America and Western Europe. Calls for curbing the use of cars, and the emphasis that reliance on fossil fuels and highways is unsustainable, are infuriating to rural dwellers and suburbanites who already resent the power they perceive is disproportionately concentrated in cities.

Yet it is worth pointing out that the vast majority of these critiques are wrong and even dangerous. They derive from legitimate grievances but have been cultivated and disseminated by willful misinterpretations and purposeful deceptions. It is true that a series of autonomous enclaves would not add up to a real city, but that is not what the 15-minute city aspires to. We could even rename it the 15-minute “baseline” to emphasize that such enclaves only aim to capture the essentials, creating the flexibility, and thereby more freedom, to save our long commutes for the trips that count: to the football stadium, the new restaurant, or the family members across town. In short, the original idea is that people should have the “freedom” to access most of what they need on a daily basis within 15 minutes. Conspiracy theories, conversely, falsely claim that people will be “coerced” to live within that area. Change one word and the whole meaning flips.

It is unlikely that rebranding or polemics will ever be enough to convince the detractors. After all, the culture war comes for everything, from gas stoves to M&Ms; mayors, urban planners, and city enthusiasts simply don’t have the tools to win. This is precisely why we need the 15-minute city, to facilitate the meaningful and sustained in-person connections that the Internet cannot. Physical space is endowed with an inevitability of encounter; people whom you might find disagreeable cannot be filtered away. Our research at MIT reveals that when we fail to interact in person, we lose the “weak ties” to casual acquaintances who can pull us out of our echo chambers.

To rescue the 15-minute city from its critics, it is important to show, not tell. With low-cost, light-touch interventions — such as pedestrianizing streets with yellow paint — we can show people what our ideas look like in practice and attract organic public participation and support. It’s also worth making it fun. Climate crisis sustainability austerity talk doesn’t work, street festivals and playgrounds do.

Instead of a battleground, the 15-minute city can become a common ground — for a society that has far too few.

 
Just a reminder that the “conspiracy theory” is actually a conspiracy fact and they did propose charging you an exorbitant amount of money to travel more than 15 minutes walking distance from away from home:

KF Thread

These policies have been sneaking around for a while but ever since the Oxfordshire council accidentally dropped the mask and revealed, without a doubt, what “15 minute cities” actually are, people have started to notice what’s going on and are fighting back. People around the world in Oxford, the rest of Britain, Canada, Australia, and many more places have protested when their cities try to implement similar policies. This article is just whining from an urbanist activist who is angry that people are aware of what they’re doing and are resisting their totalitarian plans.

That sounds awfully familiar "...May I see your pass, comrade."
 
flower pot of thermite
Good thinking with ceramics but a flowerpot will crack too quickly. You really need a good thick refractory material to insulate your container long enough to really get it going. "Playground Sand" is essentially clean, fine-grade sand like you want. Available at major stores. You'll want a 50:50 mixture by mass with Plaster of Paris. There's not really "too much" water you can use but understand it must get completely dry before any heat cycling. I let my castings chill out at ~200F for a couple hours and then outright did a lower-temp fire to dry it. You get a ~10,000x volume expansion on the phase change to steam. Lingering moisture will crack your casting.

Plastic buckets with weights (sand/plaster works) make excellent forms. Steel buckets will work better for anything that really must hold. (Edit: galvanized metal will need to have the nasty bits flashed off, do not breathe the magic smoke) When I made something like a donut-shaped furnace lid, embedding some steel wire and D-bolts/brackets reinforced it enough to make it hold together surprisingly well. A single-use enclosure wouldn't have to be as rugged. You can get away with multiple pours as long as its before the preceding level fully sets. Otherwise stratification/delamination is a concern.
 
Imagine writing this and thinking you're one of the good guys.
Come on, it was totally acceptable to destroy peoples' lives and drive the young to severe mental illness, alcohol and drug addiction and suicide.

Didn't you know the lockdowns made it easier for scientists to measure seismic activity? That's totally worth it!
 
Come on, it was totally acceptable to destroy peoples' lives and drive the young to severe mental illness, alcohol and drug addiction and suicide.

Didn't you know the lockdowns made it easier for scientists to measure seismic activity? That's totally worth it!
Maybe we need to quarantine anyone fat enough to cause an earthquake.
 
I can't help but imagine the OG Time Machine movie; but the Morlocks Elites come out of their cave ivory tower to cannibalize the populace rape the children.
 
View attachment 4713324
But what if, instead of an island, one of these hamlets were to be vaporized in the night?
Funny enough that was touted as a feature of Chat GPT. Looks like that's another message from Johnny Mnemonic that everyone needs to heed. Disconnect.

As for the vaporization, the fucking elites are now ripping off Fate Grand Order as well. Won't be surprised considering the occult shit Fate is into.
 
Yet, with societies increasingly fractured and fragmented, the concept could be the solution to bridging our divides. By creating more open, integrated, and healthy neighborhoods, it is possible to restore the in-person connections that are an antidote to polarization.
There are two meanings to this, the first is the surface level meaning or what the definitions of the words are. The second is the real meaning.

The first meaning is that "integrated" neighborhoods means people will be able to have civil debate and come to compromises.

The second and what the author really means is that "community organizers" will be able to "take note and confront" "fascists'."

Never be under any illusion about what this type of vile creature wants. They want to police your views via holding your family and property hostage to threats of and acts of violence.
 
A few issues I have with 15 minute cities:
  • Captive Market: A car allotment to leave your region is set at less than 30% for Oxford or you have to face huge fines. This limits your ability to leave your area thereby creating a captive market of businesses. The result could be that while you might have a local business to serve your needs the lack of mobility means less competition which could lead to lower quality or higher prices.
  • Employment: With your car allotment being less than 30% of the year if your work is a moderate distance away, 20 miles / 32 km, you will be forced to take public transit unless you want to bear significant financial penalties.
  • Convenience: Once you are financially limited to taking a bike or public transit your options become more limited if you choose to do anything else other work or go to a business outside your travel route. (As an example, I meal prep most of my lunches at work. By limiting me to a bike and/or public transit it would need to lug my meals around with me rather than just leaving time in my car if I want to go to the gym in the morning. No, I don't like going to your community gym because it's going to be fucking crowded.)
  • Limited employment choice: By imposing a severe financial penalty for car use this limits where I can seek employment that might offer pay/benefits than what I currently have unless I want to move. By bike, a 15 minute city limits me to about 6 km.
I can boil this all to a simple one liner: being penned like cattle.
 
Alt title: "The push back to the thing we are doing but are about to tell you we aren't and why it's a good thing!"

First off, they are talking about well founded fears, fears about the kind of totalitarian like power grab this represents. But offer no rebuttable about why we shouldn't fear it. Second. They don't even deny anything, just call it conspiracy theories and "dangerous".

Fuck off, turn your gated communities into prisons all you want but attempts to even fine me over something like this will be met with something second amendment related!

As I said in the other thread about this topic:

Yup no fucking way. freedom of movement is as basic as speech! Sadly nobody could have conceived 300 years ago a need to actually spell it out! I think it's time we do though.. Along with thought/imagination. (to protect against coming tech) A people locked into a small area, while the elites fly around the world at whim, is no different than locking people into their homes! The elites would love it.. No more threat of the people forcing the issue, no more protests, no more threats to their gated communities, miles and miles away from where anyone else is allowed to roam. It is a police state wet dream and something i'm willing to actually suggest second amendment solutions over!

I am so fucking sick of listening to this astroturf propaganda! On nearly every forum or site I visit, there are near weekly threads that look like they were copied right off of "r/fuckcars". Over an over again with the same FUD and utter fallacies! No matter how many times you factually point out to them that having no cars can only work in a handful of big cities, and even then it would take remaking them almost completely, including forcefully moving people around all the time. They come right back with the same bullshit.
Yes, trains used to be heavily used for personal transport. (We use planes for that today but that's not the issue here.) But between population centers NOT around town! Plus they didn't go to every single town and village, only certain ones. Trains are NOT a replacement for cars, they are on a different scale/class of transportation! Neither is a bus! Yes, even if we had 200 buses for each town! Asking which one could, completely misses the question! To understand this you have to realize that cars didn't invent a new "scale/class" of transportation, they replaced an older form! Horse and buggies/wagons, which replaced just horses! It is a fallacy to even think that before cars nobody had, used or needed personal transportation! That was then, now it's 1000 times more important! Even if you redesign towns, and small cities, and ignored the spread out population areas made up of 2 or more interdependent towns/cities, close but not right next to each other. (for which I would guess make up the better part of the US northeast and coasts) A shitload of buses are not going to work for a family or someone who needs to travel for work! Grocery shopping for even a mid size family is done by the bags full, kids have places to go and families have things to do. Not everyone is able to or willing to live like a 20 year old hipster living alone while still in school!

No, just because it "worked" in europe doesn't mean anything. You could LITERALLY fit all of western europe (UK included) into just the northeast with room to spare!
 
Just a reminder that the “conspiracy theory” is actually a conspiracy fact and they did propose charging you an exorbitant amount of money to travel more than 15 minutes walking distance from away from home:

KF Thread

These policies have been sneaking around for a while but ever since the Oxfordshire council accidentally dropped the mask and revealed, without a doubt, what “15 minute cities” actually are, people have started to notice what’s going on and are fighting back. People around the world in Oxford, the rest of Britain, Canada, Australia, and many more places have protested when their cities try to implement similar policies. This article is just whining from an urbanist activist who is angry that people are aware of what they’re doing and are resisting their totalitarian plans.
oh wouldn't you know it, of course the goddamn british are proudly innovahing new, horrid methods by which to foist their tyranny upon the world.
 
The city I live near is like this. It’s ancient and it’s grown up organically. People in the city live mainly in Tenements where the bottom floor is shops. When I lived in the city I had a car but I only needed it for work and getting out into the hills and bog supermarket shops. Everything else I needed I walked for. It was ok as a young single person. I still wanted to car to get out into the hills.
You can’t retrofit a lot of this and it doesn’t work in the burbs. I live in a smaller more semi rural place now and I need a car. It will never work at below a certain density threshold. It can only work in cities and it can only work well in cities that grow up organically or are built to plan it. The coercive aspect is an abomination

Exactly, it has to be organic. If someone tried this synthetically, it would turn out all wrong.
 
I like how they use the term food desert not realizing that it's caused by shoplifters and robberies in that area. That's the reason businesses don't setup shop there.
 
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