Posts Tagged ‘density’
The wrong track
10Nov23
The idea that if you create more housing near public transportation the masses will give up their cars and flock to the infinitely superior public transit system is an unquestioned article of faith amongst our collectivist cognoscenti. Do these “folks” know any actual Americans?
Filed under: Columns & Essays, Community, Humor, News, Politics, Wakefield | 3 Comments
Tags: 40A, Americans, automobiles, bicycles, bus, business, cars, central planning, Climate Change, collectivism, commuter rail, density, depot, district, downtown, education, Farmland, gridlock, Henry Ford, housing, Humor, Mark Sardella, Massachusetts, MBTA, Model-T, multifamily, Opinion, parking, Politics, public, public transit, Range Rover, school, shopping, station, SUV, traffic, train, transportation, triple decker, Wakefield Daily Item, Wakefield MA, Wakefield Planning Board, walking, zoning
Thickly settled
27Oct23
If there’s one thing the public has made abundantly clear of late, it’s that they hate overdevelopment and especially all the new multifamily housing being built around town. The discussion of overdevelopment dominates conversation in the public square, the local coffee shops and on social media. It’s a far greater concern than potholes or a […]
Filed under: Columns & Essays, News, Opinion, Politics, Wakefield | 1 Comment
Tags: affordable housing, Anne Danehy, building, by right, Chapter 40A, construction, density, development, district, Edward Dombroski, EOHLC, Erin Kokinda, globalism, Greenwood, housing, Jim Hogan, Jonathan Chines, Julie Smith-Galvin, Mark Sardella, Massachusetts, MBTA communities, Michael McLane, multi-family, Opinion, over-development, overdevelopment, Politics, population, residential, units, Wakefield Daily Item, Wakefield MA, West Side, zoning









