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Cort Gross's avatar

Crusty Butt 4evah.

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Lee Nellis's avatar

Not to quibble because I think the solutions discussed are in the ballpark.

But eager urbanists often miss some important points about historic development patterns and why they changed. The mining population lived in a walkable town because they had no choice. And people spread out as soon as they could because no one wants to live at that density when sanitation is provided by outhouses and heat by burning coal. I don't know where it is in the Butte, but in the mountain mining towns I know more about, you can always go find the spot where the women and kids left town to camp out all summer because they understood that their children's health depended on getting out of that grid you admire so much. Nor did their living at that density leave the valley and adjoining mountains untouched. There was extensive logging for mine timbers and construction, there was massive grazing of all the draft animals involved. A cloud of coal smoke hung over. There was extensive damage to the watershed by those activities and the town itself. Besides the effluent from the outhouses (CB soils are not suitable for outhouses, but they were the only choice in the beginning), the grid pattern left way too little riparian and wetland area (and that not by intention, but only because of frequent flooding) to maintain water quality in Coal Creek and the river. The verdant valley you see driving from Gunnison these days is not the original. It is a relatively recent restoration, created by [mostly] healthy ranching practices.

I also disagree with the strict division you seem to be positing between the urban and the natural. Our cities are better wherever they are permeated with vegetated open spaces. Leaving corridors of green along drainages and slopes does not preclude providing higher densities and housing choice. It makes the higher densities more livable. The Butte would be a better place with a wide public use corridor along the creek.

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