• CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      12 hours ago

      Ahh yes the good old days, when there was no urban planning, and empty land to develop on was always there from whatever section of town just burned down.

      Only kinda /s. Obviously fires are bad, but development can be so politicised and dumb now.

    • TheWilliamist@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Eh, it’s not the fact that it’s not on a grid layout. It’s the fact that it is mostly on a grid layout.

      Hünsborn looks lovely and organically developed in a hilly region.

      That area in Florida is flat as fuck and was probably some codger who wouldn’t sell until well after everything else was built up.

    • RBWells@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      May I ask a question about German addresses? Here, they go up and up as you move out from the center of town - we have a zero/zero, so to speak, at one corner, and if you live at 100 N, you are one block north of center. So if you are 100 blocks north of center you live at 10000. I lived at 1500 E on 15th St I’d be 15 blocks away in two directions from that central point.

      Our German addresses are always like 6, never a big number. How?

      • varyingExpertise@feddit.org
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        15 hours ago

        I have marked all homes that belong to one street in one color. The address is Town, Road, House number. So, Hünsborn, Steimelstraße 32, for example.

          • Zabjam@feddit.org
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            12 hours ago

            Had to Google, the highest number in Germany is apparently 1501 in a street in Cologn. But yes, you are right, streets are usually not long enough to reach such high numbers.

      • bstix@feddit.dk
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        1 day ago

        Most American cities use a distance or block system.

        Most European cities use the odd/even system. Each plot increase by two on either side, so one side of the road has 1,3,5… and the other has 2,4,6…

        If a plot is later subdivided or more houses are built on a plot, its new addresses will get post-fixed letters a,b,c,d…