Oh sorry, that’s implied.
Row after row, whole neighborhoods of ugly apartment buildings. Many of which are worse than North American apartments, others simular in many ways. You can cherry pick examples on both sides to make an article like this on both sides. I could take you to many tourist areas where you find historical buildings like shown in this article, but it’s not the majority of where people actually live in Europe. The problem that is highlighted is why we don’t make buildings like we used to, which in itself, is flawed.
I dropped four random pins on streets in Köln or surrounding areas. In the fourth I landed on a street with separate houses, so I moved one street over to the apartments there.
Looks alright. Walkable, bike parking is good. Buildings look okay, not fancy, but pleasant enough. I don’t love that cars are allowed to park on the sidewalks, though, that’s foolish.
More separated, basically sets of row houses.
Nice enough. The trash bins should be in the street and not on the sidewalk, but this is okay.
Obviously still pretty car-focused, but a pleasant enough street with the tree canopy. The apartments are not flashy or new, but seem to be solid.
Again, not a flashy set of buildings, but the materials seem solid, the courtyards in between the neighboring buildings are nice. The patios on the top floor are nice features.
In general, these units appear better than the thrown-together rental units they spew out in my city to be flipped and sold in 2-3 years before the worst of the leaks or deferred maintenance are revealed.
Hey, thanks for the pictures! Cologne is certainly a more bike and walking friendly city than America. Although nearly everywhere is better than America (as a whole) for that. This issue is still there though. It’s a classic “the grass is greener on the other side of the fence” problem. That and using absolutes (and only a sith deals in absolutes). For example go to the load screen of the video. The picture on the left (America) - this apartment complex is what is shown in the majority of your photos in cologne. Boring building, economically built. The picture on the right “the rest of the world” is beautiful historical buildings and not representing “the rest of the world” but simply an older style of building.
Oh sorry, that’s implied. Row after row, whole neighborhoods of ugly apartment buildings. Many of which are worse than North American apartments, others simular in many ways. You can cherry pick examples on both sides to make an article like this on both sides. I could take you to many tourist areas where you find historical buildings like shown in this article, but it’s not the majority of where people actually live in Europe. The problem that is highlighted is why we don’t make buildings like we used to, which in itself, is flawed.
I dropped four random pins on streets in Köln or surrounding areas. In the fourth I landed on a street with separate houses, so I moved one street over to the apartments there.
Looks alright. Walkable, bike parking is good. Buildings look okay, not fancy, but pleasant enough. I don’t love that cars are allowed to park on the sidewalks, though, that’s foolish.
More separated, basically sets of row houses. Nice enough. The trash bins should be in the street and not on the sidewalk, but this is okay.
Obviously still pretty car-focused, but a pleasant enough street with the tree canopy. The apartments are not flashy or new, but seem to be solid.
Again, not a flashy set of buildings, but the materials seem solid, the courtyards in between the neighboring buildings are nice. The patios on the top floor are nice features.
In general, these units appear better than the thrown-together rental units they spew out in my city to be flipped and sold in 2-3 years before the worst of the leaks or deferred maintenance are revealed.
Hey, thanks for the pictures! Cologne is certainly a more bike and walking friendly city than America. Although nearly everywhere is better than America (as a whole) for that. This issue is still there though. It’s a classic “the grass is greener on the other side of the fence” problem. That and using absolutes (and only a sith deals in absolutes). For example go to the load screen of the video. The picture on the left (America) - this apartment complex is what is shown in the majority of your photos in cologne. Boring building, economically built. The picture on the right “the rest of the world” is beautiful historical buildings and not representing “the rest of the world” but simply an older style of building.