Apparently there’s a conspiracy theory that 15-minute cities are urban prisons where residents must wear QR codes that track their restricted movements. As opposed to the reality: mixed-use neighbourhoods so handy that signposts can use walking minutes as the unit of distance to the library, theatres, cafés, community services, museums, parks and shops.
Another sign that a 15-minute city is a lively mixed-use place: a hardware store opened on a main city square in the shadow of the cathedral.
It's the kind of flagship space where you’d usually find a designer bag store. It rents drills, sack trolleys and tools by the hour. That can only make commercial sense when a city centre is not just for businesses and the rich, but for ordinary people living just around the corner in ordinary homes.
@CiaraNi For nogle år siden rykkede Silvan også ind på Kultorvet i KBH, hvor der før havde været en H&M. Jeg tror, du har ret i, at det tyder på beboere. Med streg under.
@Camlarsch Interessant! Hardware versus H&M - meget sigende! Vi har nemlig talt om, at vi håber at det holder her i Aarhus - det er belejligt nu at kunne hente en skrue, at leje værktøj man kun bruger 1 gang om året, osv., lige ved at gå el. cykle tæt på her i midtbyen. At Silvan allerede gjorde det i Kbh tyder på, at konceptet holder og at de faktisk er kommet for at blive. Tak fordi du delte.