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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: July 2nd, 2023

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  • Hugely subjective and you’re right on cultural differences coming into play, as well as access to/existence of common areas. Are bathrooms communal? Are patios/balconies/outdoor spaces? Are there areas to congregate/socialize/eat nearby? This affects how much internal space is needed.

    It becomes more of an urban planning, zoning, and building code exercise than one to be solved by developers, who will try to maximize revenue on any given plot when given the chance. The problem for developers (and accessible housing) is margin: unless gov heavily subsidizes low end residential, they will prefer to build more lucrative luxury apartments.

    For contentedness, area per occupant would be the best bet. I’d expect an attempt to target median family sizes and working from there. Global household average is around 3.5 people.

    Somewhere in the 20-55 square meter range per occupant is likely the sweet spot, depending on the above factors. You can get away with less space with more amenities nearby.

    Mexico has “mini-casas” of ~325 square feet to provide housing for their working poor which residents had challenges with. Paris and Hong Kong have tiny apartments around 10 square meters, where residents spend a significant amount of time outside the home. But these were developer limitations, mostly, to cram as many units into a footprint as possible - not taking occupant satisfaction into account…




  • It may be, but none of that matters when the so-called “checks and balances” are not being applied expeditiously.

    I’m not here to defend their behavior. It’s important for anyone that chooses to think critically to try and understand motives. It’s easy to armchair quarterback and harder to put yourself in their position and truly evaluate the choice in front of them.

    What options are available to them to “fight for the rule of law”? The executive branch, responsible for enforcing laws, is the offending party. The judicial branch moves too slowly to mitigate the significant damages that would be incurred while that fight is taking place. And the legislative branch has implicitly endorsed this behavior by not serving as a check against overreach.

    Even if the law firm wins the case, their clientele will have moved on and they will likely have laid off a significant portion of their workforce.

    These partners have dedicated their lives to their firms. 3,000+ billable hours each year for their entire careers. I sincerely hope you never have to choose between not only your livelihood, but that of your entire workforce, and your principles because I guarantee you, it won’t be an easy decision.

    There is no relief in sight unless the populace demonstrates that this is all unacceptable. Why would they choose otherwise?