@CoryGiger He wasn’t a great recruiter. But that also requires you to admit that he was a *much* better coach than most people give him credit for, often fielding teams that outperformed their recruiting rankings.
@B1OBEY0ND Absolutely correct. Franklin’s recruiting is why we could never beat Ohio State, and his coaching is why we often outperformed our recruiting. People usually think the opposite, and they’re wrong. He’s a worse recruiter and better coach than given credit for.
@DeselmRyan@HokieRecReport His “premier rosters” averaged #14 since 2016, so of course he can’t beat Ohio State who averaged #2.8. The talent difference is astronomical.
We should absolutely normalise building slim 6-storey blocks next to single-family homes, where there’s good access to public transport
Incremental Density, by Dubbeldam Architecture + Design
I am of the uncontroversial belief that California’s temperate coastal areas should be full of inexpensive multifamily housing, like Spain’s is, rather than reserved for $3,000,000 single family homes.
Family-sized apartment units like those found in Krøyers Plads, Copenhagen, are illegal to build in all of North America due to our outdated building codes.
If you want a large home in America, you are forced to live in car-dependent suburbia. It doesn't have to be this way.
The US is weird about housing.
Study finds minority of Americans believe more housing supply will reduce prices & rents. Supply Skepticism "is specific to housing ... respondents generally gave correct answers to Qs about supply shocks in other markets."
https://t.co/8oYyDkA97U
Five shapes of apartment buildings, each with 60 homes. Top left, a wide block with doors off a long hallway, is the most common type built today in the US.
Top center is common in Europe. Today we'll also look at a few other styles.
Which do you prefer?
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