>>520565296
I will admit that city planning in some of the major cities in The US is pretty brutal. But I will say that we have the same issues over here also and that is with a far smaller population that cant even be compared to The US. We are basically a city block in LA in our biggest cities. So I do understand that it becomes a big challenge in The US when you have these massive populatet places where you have cars stuck in traffic in the middle of the night.
Personally I think that city planning in The US in the big cites are quite good if we look at the amount of people living there. If we look at the bigger cities in Europe, such as Paris, London, Madrid etc, it is much worse getting from A-B than it is in LA or NY in my opinion.
What you have done is quite brilliant considering the grid systems. It is a smart and very simple system to follow making it a lot easier without a GPS.
And yes, there are areas that are getting old and where you have pot holes here and there that are pretty bad, but then when you look at the insane amount of roads over there, I still think its quite amazing that it is at the standard it is. Because its massive. We could never have had it over here the same way because everything would have fallen apart due to the beurocracy and the time it take for people to start.
We had a land slide on one of our main roads outside the city I live in now. It is a two way road with one lane each. It will take about 2 years to fix it. Its more narrow than the roads in an average US suburb.
>>520565337
I agree. I love US architecture. I love the suburb homes, the Target and Walmart ones, the gas stations, everything. Its The US, and its the way it should be. I also love that you have the big American flags many places. I think it should be more of them tho because its a beautiful flag.