Intru
Intru t1_j9ndhdx wrote
Reply to City of Lebanon plans to open child care center to address growing need by NewEnglandBlueberry
Here's a bit more on the project details so far: City Partnering in Design and Operation of Childcare Facility
Intru t1_j9kmjf4 wrote
Reply to comment by GonzoTheGreat22 in Massholes are moving north to NH at record levels by EgonEggnog
Oh I'm with you on this, with one correction, most of our grandparent, us millennials and boomers, actually did need/use trains to Boston, and pretty much every single town in NH up to the 1950s that how we moved around. Although not in NH my grandfather always complained about that we got rid of trains, trolleys, and train travel, he always lamented how annoying and stressful it is to drive into our state capital, San Juan, with a car and wished the trains were still there. The man was a coffee farmer from the sticks and still could see the value of good public transit.
Intru t1_j9ih022 wrote
Reply to comment by GonzoTheGreat22 in Massholes are moving north to NH at record levels by EgonEggnog
Or you know we can de-center car oriented development and you know prevent sprawl, promote livable density and promote rail down to mass and other work corridors so that less traffic happens. A lot of our community's urban centers and older suburb could use some density and could handle a modest bump-up in it. It's a win win we keep sprawl outside of the woods and we increase housing without going full 10 story towers, not like that was going to ever happen anyways, especially when most recidencial zoned land in the state is reserved for single family which is part of the reason why we can't build more affordably (yes i know there's a lot of other factors as well) just preamting the density means skyscraper crowd.
Intru t1_j9ig0cg wrote
Reply to comment by bonanzapineapple in Massholes are moving north to NH at record levels by EgonEggnog
This is something that doesn't get talked about enough most our towns where denser until suburbanization rolled in and then closed the development gate behind them while also inexplicable not allowing towns and city center to keep it's density. Then we pretend we lived in the woods but most of us live in suburbs and depend on suburban amenities for goods and services.
Intru t1_j9ifh9o wrote
Reply to comment by stonewallmike in Massholes are moving north to NH at record levels by EgonEggnog
I love to read it when your done, this is something I'm also Greatly concerned about.
Intru t1_j8v52bl wrote
Reply to comment by greenglasstree in How Vermont’s Housing Crisis Got So Bad by punkthesystem
I think of that as a symptom not the cause. It's really death by a thousand cuts. We have exclusionary suburban focus zoning of the 1940s and 1950s , that bans or makes it impossible to build anything but single family housing in over 70% of residential zoned land. Preventing things like small mix used, boarding homes, hostels, duplex, triplexes, etc. Economic decline in large portions of the state's municipalities, shifting of job centers, disconnect between available stock and desired areas, car centric tourist development, bizantine building and safety codes. Rise in costs, etc. Speculative real estate markets and Airbnb are just another nail in the coffin of affordability.
Intru t1_j8v3qj2 wrote
Reply to comment by cpujockey in How Vermont’s Housing Crisis Got So Bad by punkthesystem
Density is relatively, most villages and towns in VT have some level of density. Density includes things like duplexes or triplexes, four or five unit apartments buildings. Also a lot of old apartment blocks in small towns are pretty easy to miss you can easily dismiss a three story apartment building in Putney VT or Wilmington with a large single family farm house at first glance. You have the general stores with a unit of housing on top all over the state, that's density. We need to open our minds that we need this type of density everywhere.
Intru t1_j8v2uhv wrote
Reply to comment by cpujockey in How Vermont’s Housing Crisis Got So Bad by punkthesystem
The problem with the suburbs that they are not resilient long term and are restricted to single family housing and car based comercial, single family housing is that it's the only housing typology allowed in a lot of our residential zoned land. That's the problem its zoned out diversity of housing stock. You should be able to get the housing type you want but when you gate keep it so the only housing you can get is only one type then we create the hot mess we are i.
Intru t1_j8v20f6 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in How Vermont’s Housing Crisis Got So Bad by punkthesystem
There's way of stoping suburbs and promoting sustainable communities that grow. Act 250 is a barrier but never trust a developers, lot size maximums and up zoning all single family zones to allow for up to 4 units. Allow soft commercial and edu in all residential zones. Have developers cover the maintenance of road and water infrastructure in developments of given size for up to 10 years so they have to cover the first cycle of maintenance. Remove parking minimums, lot size mins, floor area ratios, allow for single access blocks, ban drive thrus, ban street facing parking lots, require all commercial to have main entries to be street facing, etc, etc.
Intru t1_j2dhy8h wrote
Reply to comment by ptmtp26 in Will business ever return to normal operating procedures? by ptmtp26
Probably a shitty embroidery shop, that's why they are force to pick up the garbage costumers the other shops don't have the need to deal with. Just by your recollection you have to go through a list of businesses before even getting to the one that served you. That says a lot of i had to go down to my fith choice of something it either means i should probably have some patience and call a few time or hold off on doing it till later. But it seems your have some heavy narcissistic tendencies so this will go over your head.
Intru t1_j2dgjmb wrote
Reply to comment by kkpc in Southern NH is feeling like Spring today by margismith1111
The way single family housing zoning mandates force developments to spread farther and farther out. This reality might be difficult to achieve unless your wealthy enough to afford to live that far.
Intru t1_iv0umqh wrote
Reply to comment by Divio42 in Is it just me or do 50% of people always drive high beams on? by aspiringharlequin
We have allowed for our trucks and SUV to get too big for no real reason so now truck grills are much higher up than the use to. We need to regulate the size and weight of our larger vehicles more strictly, they are also the cause of our up tick in car fatalities nation wide.
Intru t1_itabyk4 wrote
Reply to Is there any reason Maine couldn't do this? Oregon's entire coast was declared open to public access in the 1960s. by ppitm
Puerto Rico has it in their state constitutions where the high water mark plus a pretty sizable buffer are public domain. Which dates back to the Spanish crown wanting to control the coastline as a resource. But yeah Oregon isn't the only US jurisdiction that make the coastline public.
Intru t1_j9oy7v7 wrote
Reply to comment by DeerFlyHater in City of Lebanon plans to open child care center to address growing need by NewEnglandBlueberry
>The City will seek grants and donations to fund the capital costs.
>
>For more information or questions, please contact the City Manager's Office at manager@lebanonnh.gov or 603-448-4220.