Daniel Herriges

4.7K posts

Daniel Herriges

Daniel Herriges

@dpherriges

Policy Director @Parking_Reform. Writer @StrongTowns. Co-author, "Escaping the Housing Trap" with @clmarohn: https://t.co/yEDBf5RSDm . Tweets are my own.

Saint Paul, MN شامل ہوئے Kasım 2018
1.1K فالونگ3.5K فالوورز
Daniel Herriges ری ٹویٹ کیا
Devon ☀️
Devon ☀️@devonzuegel·
Great urbanism is about proportions, not specific architectural styles There is a correlation between walkability & traditional architecture, but that's simply because that was the default pattern before the car You can have great urbanism with contemporary architecture, too!
Devon ☀️ tweet mediaDevon ☀️ tweet media
English
5
6
92
6.9K
Daniel Herriges
Daniel Herriges@dpherriges·
@jmassengale @theurbaneist @mattyglesias @the I think there's another tier of cities, including all the big Midwestern and Southern ones, where the pressure-release valve for affordability has so far been greenfield sprawl, and urban zoning reform is necessary for healthy central-city growth w/o pricing huge populations out.
English
0
0
0
61
Daniel Herriges
Daniel Herriges@dpherriges·
@jmassengale @theurbaneist @mattyglesias @the Places where extreme demand for well-located housing (not way out in suburbia) has driven the price of land skyward precisely because the vast majority of lots are *not* legally developable to that missing-middle / mid-rise walkup density you talk about.
English
1
0
1
86
Daniel Herriges ری ٹویٹ کیا
Daniel Kay Hertz
Daniel Kay Hertz@DanielKayHertz·
A lot of discourse problems would be ameliorated by everyone working as some sort of practitioner, preferably at least some of the time in the public sector, in a field relevant to that which they would like to discourse about
English
4
5
49
3.4K
Daniel Herriges
Daniel Herriges@dpherriges·
@jb_reefer I remember the first time I heard about an apartment building having a golf simulator... I asked the speaker to repeat herself in case I'd misheard. But what you're saying about awkward spaces actually makes some sense. Find a way to turn it into a selling point.
English
0
0
0
62
jb reefer 🏗️🌆🚲💻🚇
@dpherriges aren't a lot of those just finding a use for weird spaces? In LIC you see a lot of golf simulators that just happen to be in the part of the building 4 feet from the 7 train
English
1
0
1
75
Daniel Herriges
Daniel Herriges@dpherriges·
It's a common belief that high-end amenities are driving up the price of new apartments. The reality is high rents are driven much more by fundamentals: a low number or available rental units and high construction costs. There's an interesting nuance, though.
Daniel Herriges tweet media
English
4
5
25
1.2K
Daniel Herriges ری ٹویٹ کیا
Austin Tunnell
Austin Tunnell@AustinTunnell·
Debate time! New episode out with Chuck Marohn from @StrongTowns and Nolan Gray with @cayimby. I found them disagreeing here on X—which surprised me as I assumed they’d be on the same side—so I asked them on the podcast to hash out their ideas. It’s a great (and friendly) episode. Though for better or worse, I started out by reading their disagreement on X out loud, which is probably a painful experience to hear your own words in a heated moment repeated back. Nolan said it felt like he just went through a deposition. Having just been through a real life deposition myself the week before, I felt kind of bad. Sorry guys :) but to be fair, it does set the stage for a good convo! And a friendly one at that. Each of these guys have made significant contributions to the built environment via real policy changes and shifting culture and conversation. Thanks for coming on @clmarohn and @mnolangray Check out their latest books Arbitrary Lines and Escaping the Housing Trap. Trailer below:
English
11
12
79
26.5K
Daniel Herriges
Daniel Herriges@dpherriges·
If the only thing you can build profitably is a building whose rents are only affordable to the top 20%, then you will market that building to the lifestyle and expectations of the top 20%. But that's downstream of the basic development cost problem.
English
1
0
8
269
Daniel Herriges
Daniel Herriges@dpherriges·
If we had lower land, construction, and financing costs, it would become more viable to build new apartments targeting modest-income tenants. And the marketing and amenities would also target those tenants.
English
1
0
5
281
Daniel Herriges
Daniel Herriges@dpherriges·
@salimfurth Probably, all else equal. Obviously lots of other things factor into antisocial behavior, but I suspect at a micro level (one block to the next) it becomes pretty determinative. The inverse of the well-known observation that vacant properties are a magnet for drug/crime activity.
English
0
0
2
68
Salim Furth
Salim Furth@salimfurth·
@dpherriges They also *discourage* antisocial behavior by putting more eyes on the street and giving people more of a stake in what happens outdoors, right?
English
1
0
1
92
Daniel Herriges
Daniel Herriges@dpherriges·
Front porches are pro-social but it's important to recognize how. It's not that they encourage you to befriend your neighbors—lots of suburbanites with big front-loading garages will do that anyway. It's that they induce serendipitous, friendly interaction with *strangers*.
Jason,@jasonc_nc

Great article on this from @tomgreenewrites

English
4
2
58
3.6K
Daniel Herriges
Daniel Herriges@dpherriges·
When I've lived in suburbia and driven for all my errands, I could go a week where every interaction I had was either with someone I knew, or a retail / business transaction. Much harder to fall into that when you ride the bus and walk your neighborhood habitually.
English
1
0
6
211
Daniel Herriges
Daniel Herriges@dpherriges·
And the reason it does that is because it generates spontaneous, pleasant, low-stakes interaction with *strangers*. Not with people you've made an effort to befriend and who have made an effort to befriend you, which can happen among neighbors anywhere.
English
1
1
3
255