Dubbed the evolutionary happiness function, the equation explains the psychological process that both fuels our desire for bigger homes and ensures the we will be dissatisfied shortly after moving in.
Dubbed the evolutionary happiness function, the equation explains the psychological process that both fuels our desire for bigger homes and ensures the we will be dissatisfied shortly after moving in.
Rather enjoying it so far. The main takeaway seems to be - cars are overrated
This book is not perfect (I especially noticed the pervasive assumption that everyone either lives in cities or suburbs, as though there are no rural dwellers) but it is excellent. I want to send a copy to every local planner and developer. And I'm inspired to make my own suburb a better, happier place to live! The long hold list at my county library system is encouraging 😁
"Sprawl-repair plans turn parking oceans into walkable town centers with parking stacked behind apartments and streets connected to surrounding neighborhoods."
When typing out this quote, I originally typoed "move," and autocorrect suggested "love." Yeah, that too. ?
I like this book a lot so far! To be clear, the speaker is Enrique Peñalosa, the former mayor of Bogotá, not the author.
Thinking about getting this one for the next foray in urban studies. #happycity #urbantheory #urbanstudies #bookref
St. Louis will be electing a new mayor for the first time in 16 years, and my beloved #LeftBankBooks teamed up with a local progressive civic website to give these 4 books to the mayoral candidates--books on making urban areas great. Thought many of you may be interested... https://nextstl.com/2017/01/reading-list-st-louis-city-candidates-mayor-left-ban...