Comment | Again, that's fine. A successful city is one with more than one healthy and bustling neighbourhood.
If anything, the pandemic showed the value of having shops/restaurants/services close to home, and vice versa, for services to have a local customer base within walking distance.
The point I'm trying to make is that these changes will be positive for the city centre, by making it a more hospitable place for people who either: live there, or are already warm to the idea of spending time there and comfortable using public transport (or even driving and parking at a multistoreys) to do so.
This might not be you. But it will be tens of thousands of other people. Is the alternative to leave the city centre exactly as it is? Not sure what that would accomplish or what you're proposing. |
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