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Rohit Krishnan's avatar

Good essay! I think small business centrism and mixed use zoning is the default almost everywhere except the US. I've had he same in India, Singapore, much of Europe, seasia and more. The idea of having open regs on opening a shop or whatever, with the neighbours right to complain, creates a pretty nice equilibrium.

I find the zoned corporate strip malls to be the odd one out, the results of a rather weird policy choice.

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Francis Turner's avatar

There are many plus points to Japan's urban development but I think it is worth pointing out that there are tradeoffs (note that I live in Japan and have no plans to not remain in Japan).

First is the danger in a major earthquake etc. All of the Zakkyo, Yokocho etc. are likely to fare very badly when a fire breaks out. Being on, say, the 8th floor of a narrow tower when the fifth floor is on fire and there are (as would likely be the case after a quake) fires all over the place is liable to be fatal. And we know what happens to a Yokocho because there was one that burned to the ground after the Noto Earthquake earlier this year. Luckily the whole place was shut for the NY Day holiday but if the quake had occurred say a couple of days earlier and later at night I imagine there would have been considerable loss of life.

Second the fact that neighborhood associations prefer to not get the police/justice system involved in local disputes is not actually a positive thing for the police. What it says is that the police are arbitrary and capricious and you have no way to predict how they will rule. This is, BTW, one reason I believe rape is severely under-reported in Japan. Japanese rape victims well-founded fears that the cops will take the side of the rapist. The same may well apply to a lot of other crime. The police have a 99% successful conviction rate but I wouldn't assume that means they have a 99% accuracy rate.

Thirdly those neighborhood associations are very much a mixed bunch. Some are good. Some make the worst US Home Owner Associations seem like bastions of tolerant local democracy.

I think on the whole Japan does things well but there's a lot of dark underbelly that visitors don't always notice.

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