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Some recent stuff:
Any way we can up the photo limit from 6??
Element by Matt, on Flickr
Anyone else hopeful that one day Elements and Dallas will be restored to their former glory?
Benton Street by Matt, on Flickr
King East by Matt, on Flickr
Hermie Place by Matt, on Flickr
I wish we had more streets like Hermie Place in town
Kitchener Public Library by Matt, on Flickr
St. George Street by Matt, on Flickr
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Cedar Street by Matt, on Flickr
Cedar will soon be looking much different with the separated bike lane grid
Downtown Kitchener at -20° by Matt, on Flickr
The rinks at Victoria park are looking great this year!
Queen Street by Matt, on Flickr
Can we ban any more painting things black or grey?
Duke Street Skyline by Matt, on Flickr
Hebel Place by Matt, on Flickr
King East by Matt, on Flickr
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Market District Skyline by Matt, on Flickr
Queen Street North by Matt, on Flickr
Charlie West by Matt, on Flickr
Winter Scenes by Matt, on Flickr
Scott Street by Matt, on Flickr
The two precast builds marking a more significant entrance to Downtown
St. George Street by Matt, on Flickr
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East Side Cityscape by Matt, on Flickr
Enjoying the taller buildings making new skyline angles more approachable for me!
Downtown Kitchener at -20° by Matt, on Flickr
St. George Street by Matt, on Flickr
The York by Matt, on Flickr
Market ION Station by Matt, on Flickr
Drewlo coming along now. I'm concerned that we're going to just have a single island house on the corner here with an awkward strip of land right next to the station.
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02-09-2022, 07:17 PM
(This post was last modified: 02-09-2022, 07:19 PM by danbrotherston.)
(01-21-2022, 06:28 PM)plam Wrote: (01-21-2022, 06:02 PM)panamaniac Wrote: I suspect the correlation is strong, although I've not seen any studies on the subject. A smaller floorspace can be, but is not necessarily, a reflection of lower income. That said, it seems a safe bet to think that someone living in 4,000 sq ft is likely to have a higher income than someone living in 1,000 sq ft, all other things being equal.
That is how it works in our society, and it's somewhat unfortunate, though it's true that I have more sqft than I know what to do with, really (but previously I had less sqft than I would have liked). Also: cars SUVs.
I actually disagree with this.
I mean, in theory, I think like most things, floor space is merely a matter of "enough". Once you have enough space, more doesn't add much (and can even hurt).
But if you are talking in practice in our society (because our society prioritizes size), then yeah, there's a lot of examples where people in bigger houses are clearly having a higher quality of life (living in a more expensive home, etc.) But I don't think this is universal, or even accurate most of the time, at least if you control for other factors like rate of pay.
People believe a lot of things which aren't true, a lot comes from advertising, but leaving aside the anti-capitalist point of view, I think that someone living in a smaller house, that has enough space, could easily be living a better life than someone in a bigger home, with more to maintain, more cleaning, more shoveling, more work of all kinds, plus higher costs for owning and maintaining, is likely working more hours. All this means more time working (domestically and for pay) and less time enjoying life. And that's before you even think about the improvements to quality of life when living in a smaller more urban home over a larger suburban home.
I think it's dubious at many levels to suggest bigger = better quality of life, even in our society. We are clearly conditioned to believe that, but I think it's fairly uncontroversial (at least by people who have a broad perspective) that people can have a perfectly good quality of life in smaller housing. We're looking at places in Amersfoort, and rarely do we even see a place over 1350 sq ft., but in NA that would be considered utterly tiny, and the people who live in them are happier than us on average. (FWIW..this lack of perspective goes both ways, I'm told Dutch people often remark how much they'd like to have all the space we have...what they don't consider is what we gave up to have it.)
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Split Personalities by Matt, on Flickr
Far Out Flicks by Matt, on Flickr
The last bastion of old Queen street still hanging in there, but likely closing this year. Stop by and grab some movies!
Black and Blue by Matt, on Flickr
Hong Kong Plaza by Matt, on Flickr
This building should be heritage protected, don't @ me
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(02-09-2022, 07:17 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: (01-21-2022, 06:28 PM)plam Wrote: That is how it works in our society, and it's somewhat unfortunate, though it's true that I have more sqft than I know what to do with, really (but previously I had less sqft than I would have liked). Also: cars SUVs.
I actually disagree with this.
I mean, in theory, I think like most things, floor space is merely a matter of "enough". Once you have enough space, more doesn't add much (and can even hurt).
But if you are talking in practice in our society (because our society prioritizes size), then yeah, there's a lot of examples where people in bigger houses are clearly having a higher quality of life (living in a more expensive home, etc.) But I don't think this is universal, or even accurate most of the time, at least if you control for other factors like rate of pay.
People believe a lot of things which aren't true, a lot comes from advertising, but leaving aside the anti-capitalist point of view, I think that someone living in a smaller house, that has enough space, could easily be living a better life than someone in a bigger home, with more to maintain, more cleaning, more shoveling, more work of all kinds, plus higher costs for owning and maintaining, is likely working more hours. All this means more time working (domestically and for pay) and less time enjoying life. And that's before you even think about the improvements to quality of life when living in a smaller more urban home over a larger suburban home.
I think it's dubious at many levels to suggest bigger = better quality of life, even in our society. We are clearly conditioned to believe that, but I think it's fairly uncontroversial (at least by people who have a broad perspective) that people can have a perfectly good quality of life in smaller housing. We're looking at places in Amersfoort, and rarely do we even see a place over 1350 sq ft., but in NA that would be considered utterly tiny, and the people who live in them are happier than us on average. (FWIW..this lack of perspective goes both ways, I'm told Dutch people often remark how much they'd like to have all the space we have...what they don't consider is what we gave up to have it.)
Well, let me go and put my books back on my bookshelf that I don't really consult that often...
Basically, yes, it comes down to the question of maintenance cost. That can be paid in time or money, which are somewhat interchangeable. For instance I don't shovel (but I end up sweeping the excess salt that gets put onto my steps by the condo-provided contractors into the trash. It's annoying). There is more cleaning burden, sure (also somewhat imposed by society), which could be outsourced. And there is heating costs etc.
On the other hand, I could work less, but it's a fairly high-friction endeavour to change my appointment to, say, 66%. I don't know how true that is for most people. It's true at the margins; you might choose one job over another for quality-of-life issues. But many people are salaried and it's hard to just work more hours and directly get more income.
I think 1000sqft could be fine if properly laid out. My previous place had 1080 sqft but the layout was dominated by corridors and kind of terrible, really.
As you say, I don't think bigger is automatically better. It's complicated.
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(02-10-2022, 01:43 PM)plam Wrote: (02-09-2022, 07:17 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: I actually disagree with this.
I mean, in theory, I think like most things, floor space is merely a matter of "enough". Once you have enough space, more doesn't add much (and can even hurt).
But if you are talking in practice in our society (because our society prioritizes size), then yeah, there's a lot of examples where people in bigger houses are clearly having a higher quality of life (living in a more expensive home, etc.) But I don't think this is universal, or even accurate most of the time, at least if you control for other factors like rate of pay.
People believe a lot of things which aren't true, a lot comes from advertising, but leaving aside the anti-capitalist point of view, I think that someone living in a smaller house, that has enough space, could easily be living a better life than someone in a bigger home, with more to maintain, more cleaning, more shoveling, more work of all kinds, plus higher costs for owning and maintaining, is likely working more hours. All this means more time working (domestically and for pay) and less time enjoying life. And that's before you even think about the improvements to quality of life when living in a smaller more urban home over a larger suburban home.
I think it's dubious at many levels to suggest bigger = better quality of life, even in our society. We are clearly conditioned to believe that, but I think it's fairly uncontroversial (at least by people who have a broad perspective) that people can have a perfectly good quality of life in smaller housing. We're looking at places in Amersfoort, and rarely do we even see a place over 1350 sq ft., but in NA that would be considered utterly tiny, and the people who live in them are happier than us on average. (FWIW..this lack of perspective goes both ways, I'm told Dutch people often remark how much they'd like to have all the space we have...what they don't consider is what we gave up to have it.)
Well, let me go and put my books back on my bookshelf that I don't really consult that often...
Basically, yes, it comes down to the question of maintenance cost. That can be paid in time or money, which are somewhat interchangeable. For instance I don't shovel (but I end up sweeping the excess salt that gets put onto my steps by the condo-provided contractors into the trash. It's annoying). There is more cleaning burden, sure (also somewhat imposed by society), which could be outsourced. And there is heating costs etc.
On the other hand, I could work less, but it's a fairly high-friction endeavour to change my appointment to, say, 66%. I don't know how true that is for most people. It's true at the margins; you might choose one job over another for quality-of-life issues. But many people are salaried and it's hard to just work more hours and directly get more income.
I think 1000sqft could be fine if properly laid out. My previous place had 1080 sqft but the layout was dominated by corridors and kind of terrible, really.
As you say, I don't think bigger is automatically better. It's complicated.
Lol...another thing I've noticed in Europe, most job listings I've seen include an explicit 32 hour 4 day a week option.
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(02-10-2022, 02:03 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: (02-10-2022, 01:43 PM)plam Wrote: Well, let me go and put my books back on my bookshelf that I don't really consult that often...
Basically, yes, it comes down to the question of maintenance cost. That can be paid in time or money, which are somewhat interchangeable. For instance I don't shovel (but I end up sweeping the excess salt that gets put onto my steps by the condo-provided contractors into the trash. It's annoying). There is more cleaning burden, sure (also somewhat imposed by society), which could be outsourced. And there is heating costs etc.
On the other hand, I could work less, but it's a fairly high-friction endeavour to change my appointment to, say, 66%. I don't know how true that is for most people. It's true at the margins; you might choose one job over another for quality-of-life issues. But many people are salaried and it's hard to just work more hours and directly get more income.
I think 1000sqft could be fine if properly laid out. My previous place had 1080 sqft but the layout was dominated by corridors and kind of terrible, really.
As you say, I don't think bigger is automatically better. It's complicated.
Lol...another thing I've noticed in Europe, most job listings I've seen include an explicit 32 hour 4 day a week option.
I would approve that work schedule. Maybe one day.
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04-01-2022, 05:37 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-01-2022, 05:40 PM by dtkvictim.)
I present, tree goose
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The region and GRCA have got to do something about these uncontrolled crossings on the Rail trail, especially during commute hours.
local cambridge weirdo
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(06-17-2022, 12:02 PM)bravado Wrote: The region and GRCA have got to do something about these uncontrolled crossings on the Rail trail, especially during commute hours.
A real problem! Why did the tortoise cross the road...
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Ahh to get to the other side ?..?.
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07-16-2022, 02:02 PM
(This post was last modified: 07-16-2022, 02:03 PM by bravado.)
local cambridge weirdo
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