The coronavirus strikes at New York.
 | Crowds shopping at the Union Square Greenmarket in Manhattan on Saturday.James Sprankle for The New York Times |
|
Whenever you hear someone talking about the “real America” as a place of small towns, bear in mind that these days most of us live in large metropolitan areas. Indeed, around a quarter of us live in the top 10 metro areas, of which the smallest, greater Boston, has almost 5 million people. |
But New York is different. It feels urban in a way other U.S. cities don’t. And the numbers bear out that impression. |
The number to look at here isn’t raw population density, which can be misleading: greater Los Angeles and greater New York have almost the same ratio of people to land area, because L.A. is hemmed in by mountains, while the New York metro area extends all the way into Pennsylvania. But obviously Angelenos don’t have a New York-style urban experience. What you want to look at instead is “population-weighted density,” which asks how dense a neighborhood the average person lives in. |
And this measure shows that New York is in a class of its own, with the average resident living in a census tract with more than 31,000 people per square mile. (My own neighborhood has about 60,000 people per square mile.) That’s two-and-a-half times the density in San Francisco or L.A., four times the density of Chicago. |
High density means that New Yorkers live very differently from other Americans. True, the suburbs look like suburbs anywhere. But those who live or work in or near the city shop and commute differently: they are far more likely to walk or take public transit than the rest of our car-centered nation. |
There are a lot of positives to the dense-city lifestyle. An old line says that New York is a great place to visit, but you wouldn’t want to live there; that’s exactly wrong. I always feel sorry for the heaving crowds of tourists in midtown; meanwhile, if you can afford the real estate — a very big if — daily life in Manhattan is surprisingly easy, with everything you need just a few minutes away. And walkability makes it much easier to get exercise; having moved from the suburbs to the city a few years ago, I’ve been startled by how much healthier my lifestyle has become. |
What about crime? Donald Trump, among others, still has a 1970s vision of “carnage” in crime-ridden big cities, but these days New York is remarkably safe, with homicides only a tiny fraction of their peak in 1990. |
But now, all of a sudden, New York’s density has become a potentially deadly problem. For the moment, at least, the coronavirus is hitting New York much harder than other parts of the country, and density is probably the main reason: the disease spread faster in New York than elsewhere simply because there’s so much human contact. |
This exceptionalism may not last. New York has moved strongly to enforce social distancing, which should pay off in a week or two. I wouldn’t be surprised to see coronavirus cases in other places — such as Miami, which still had packed beaches not long ago, and where the state governor is still refusing to take strong action — overtake New York in the near future. |
In any case, I hope that this experience doesn’t have a long-lasting negative impact on urbanism. We don’t all have to live like New Yorkers, but it’s good for America — which thrives on diversity — that some of us do. And I want my city back. |
If you’re enjoying what you’re reading, please consider recommending it to friends. They can sign up here. If you want to share your thoughts on an item in this week’s newsletter or on the newsletter in general, please email me at krugman-newsletter@nytimes.com. |
Dixie Chicks And Their Unapologetic Comeback |
 | A song for the Trump eraYouTube |
|
歡迎蒞臨:https://ofa588.com/
娛樂推薦:https://www.ofa86.com/
沒有留言:
張貼留言