So says noted urbanologist and creator of the term "creative class" Richard Florida from his new perch as Toronto University's Director of the Martin Prosperity Institute. In an article in the Globe and Mail (The Days of Urban Sprawl Are Over...But Not for the Reasons You Think, July 11, 2008) Florida says it isn't rising gas prices that are sealing the end of development in the suburban fringe and driving consumer interest in developing and redeveloping neighborhoods closer to the core but rather its time costs that really matter. Says Florida:
"With the constant pressure to be more efficient and to innovate, it makes little sense to waste countless collective hours commuting. So the most efficient and productive regions are the ones in which people are thinking and working – not sitting in traffic. And, according to detailed research by the Nobel Prize-winning economist Daniel Kahneman, commuting is among the least enjoyable, if not the single least enjoyable, of all human activities."
He goes on to say that in the world's major urban centers the trend is even more pronounced "as talented, ambitious people trade more space for shorter commutes." Hmmm...reminds of the Think Arlington campaign. Regardless, it makes sense that smart people don't want to waste all that time commuting and that places without the long commutes will continue to capture more and more of the creative class and prosper.
Enjoy the article. Mr. Florida is always an interesting read.
Chris Hamilton is the Commuter Services Chief for Arlington County, manager of CommuterPageBlog and The TDM Professional blog and is a biking/Metrorail commuter from Alexandria, Virginia just outside of Washington, D.C.




















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