• @tias@discuss.tchncs.de
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    3 months ago

    But why is it human nature to put a bench right where people are walking. It’s like people in charge get off on creating obstacles for the common man just to feel powerful.

      • @nesc@lemmy.cafe
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        1163 months ago

        Well, don’t design park the brain-dead way and try to actually think about visitors and their needs. As in make a straight route to a damn crosswalk instead of making it an obstacle course.

        • .Donuts
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          3 months ago

          What? No! You should be happy to even get any green to begin with.

          - Capitalism

      • Rob Bos
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        383 months ago

        A field of monoculture grass is already destroyed.

        • @Markus29@feddit.nl
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          103 months ago

          Ackchyually, grass is almost always a mixture of different species (ryegrass, fescue and bluegrass) and therefore not a monoculture.

          A lawn has its uses in parks, for example to have a Picknick. If you trow in some clover, daisies and ribwort, don’t spray and patches are left to grow to provide shelter it’s not that bad for biodiversity, depending on the climate of course.

          Example of patch of long grass

          • Rob Bos
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            93 months ago

            Yeah, there’s grass and then there’s grass. Sure. I got no beef with a field of mixed grass that’s left to grow, especially if there’s mixed native wildflowers etc.

            It’s the fields of monoculture non-native grass that the Suburban White Dude[tm] wants to obsessively cultivate and that seems to be the goal of parks departments everywhere that’s the problem.

            My partner ranted to me the other day that she couldn’t get a 10m^2 area from a local municipal parks department recently for a Miyawaki forest plot. No reasons, just “no.” Very frustrating group of fuckin’ boomers.

    • Einar
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      3 months ago

      People weren’t supposed to create that shortcut in the first place, thus disrespecting the park.

      • Neshura
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        533 months ago

        The park design should have accounted for the crosswalk on the top intersection from the get go or, alternatively, once the people made their desire for a path there obvious. The park isn’t some sentient thing with its own opinion, it got made by people with 2 main functions: enhancing the environment and serving as a foot path. It is obviously failing at the second until the designers finally relented and put a proper path down to the crosswalk.

        Note: you will always get people not using the path but when it’s enough people to form a permanent trail then the park design obviously did not account for a rather popular destination and should be revised.

      • Kichae
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        413 months ago

        Green spaces: Just for viewing.

        What kind of dystopian hellscape do you want the world to be, exactly?

      • @huppakee@feddit.nl
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        203 months ago

        weren’t supposed to

        As if walking on grass in an emtpy park is comparable to driving a red light on a busy street.

  • @Fifrok@discuss.tchncs.de
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    863 months ago

    To everybody acting like the desire path is the problem:

    1. If the problem for you is that it’s ‘bad’ or ‘illegal’, grow a spine so that when you need to break the law, for something that matters, you can do it with dry pants.
    2. If the design doesn’t take into account how people will interact with it, it’s bad and lazy. Only time it would be acceptable to ‘force’ a way to interact with something is when there are safety concerns, and there are none here.
    3. You are traped in a cage of your own making, break free or perish like the dog you are.
    • @Klear@lemmy.world
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      273 months ago

      I wanted to say that surely nobody is complaining about desire paths and then I scrolled just a little bit… yikes!

    • @slaacaa@lemmy.world
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      223 months ago

      Today, I’m astonished to learn about the existence of anti-desire path people based on the comments here

    • Seriously. The rabidly boot licking deference obedience and weird conflation if the constructed with the natural/universal is like the worst thing we get from the mostly-christian (anti)intellectual tradition.

      These people are not fit to be adults in a built environment. Their states if mind should not be allowed in a world with such feats of artifice as concrete and movable type.

      • @CoffeeVector@lemmy.world
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        113 months ago

        Ok being real dude, I don’t think this behavior is a product of “mostly-christian (anti)intellectual tradition,” it’s just the type of people who never grew out of the color-in-the-lines and follow-your-line-buddy stuff from grade school. I don’t think there’s any spectacular political statement to be made here.

        • @outhouseperilous@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 months ago

          I’ll accept that the corellation is higher up the cognitive chain than that. You may be correct. There’s still a political statement here, but that one may have been off the mark.

    • AwesomeLowlander
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      23 months ago

      Not that I have a particular problem with desire paths, but what’s shown in the comic here is an example of how the design changed to take into account how people are interacting with it, and yet it didn’t work out.

      • sqw
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        123 months ago

        right, it was changed specifically to deny the most popular use. so thats why it doesnt work.

      • @marcos@lemmy.world
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        113 months ago

        The only time where the design actually changed, the designer made the point of moving the path away from whhere the desire path was pointing.

        That comic captures it so incredibly well. It’s almost perfect.

      • @Fifrok@discuss.tchncs.de
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        103 months ago

        It didn’t work out because the design didn’t change, it was reinforced. Each attempt failed because there was no actual effort to understand why it’s not working. Like wraping a leaky rusted pipe in ducktape.

          • @Fifrok@discuss.tchncs.de
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            73 months ago

            Yes? The new path is there because it’s still shorter, people don’t walk in straight lines and sharp angles. That design is still lazy and not thought out

            • @TheFogan@programming.dev
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              -13 months ago

              I mean what is a “thought out” path, besides just saying fuck it and paving whole plot. I mean maybe a funnel or something, but again kind of seems likely that we’d wind up with more desire paths forming just differently, maybe people coming from different starting points etc…

      • Victor
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        3 months ago

        Yeah, that person you replied to missed the point entirely, and all the people who up-voted them.

          • Victor
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            13 months ago

            For me, it was heavy on the “you can’t please everyone” aspect. You try and try, first at enforcing the solution you thought was best, but people have their own problems and their own agenda. Then you try to accommodate that. But you’ll find that there’s always someone whom you can’t please.

            That was my personal take-away.

  • @kameecoding@lemmy.world
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    713 months ago

    I think it was a US uni campus, that redid the lawn and didn’t put down any walking paths and waited for the desire paths to form and then paved those

      • @Gonzako@lemmy.world
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        83 months ago

        Nah, I like it. It clearly shows the intent of movement of people and it basically minimises trail around time.

    • @tamman2000@lemmy.world
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      133 months ago

      I was coming here to say that! It’s possibly apocryphal, but the way I heard it was that the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign did this when they did their main quad (I still remember them telling me this when I got a tour before applying there 30 years ago). And they didn’t just look for where the plants were dead, but they also looked for broadleaf weeds, which sustain trampling better than grasses (it’s a land grant university in the midwest. Of course there’s an agriculture angle).

  • ViatorOmnium
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    463 months ago

    This specific case would be super predictable, notice how the desire path becomes wider at the end. Pedestrian path should always do that because that’s how people walk.

  • I love how almost every comment talks as if the pedestrians were the problem, and not designers.

    Just made the footpath in box 2 the actual path, and slap additional stuff anywhere not-on-top-of-where-peiople-walk.

    • Kichae
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      173 months ago

      The Internet is populated by people who think English grammar is cosmic law, so it doesn’t surprise me that they think you should bend over for dogshit urban planning.

      Ironically, none of them follow the rule of shutting up if they don’t know shit about shit.

  • @rustydrd@sh.itjust.works
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    343 months ago

    I love how the third and second to last panel are the same, as if nature paused briefly before it decided to open another path.

    • @huppakee@feddit.nl
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      183 months ago

      An early documented example is Broadway in New York City, which follows the Wecquaesgeek trail which predates American colonization.

      Nice

  • RaivoKulli
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    243 months ago

    I like how upset people are in the comments. Even has random ass comments about capitalism. This is great lol

    • @REDACTED@infosec.pub
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      3 months ago

      Isn’t that normal on lemmy? It’s also fully expected to see some comments about Israel under every post no matter how unrelated it is. People made fun of political obsession on reddit, but to me lemmy has always felt much worse in this regard

  • @cholesterol@lemmy.world
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    213 months ago

    I wonder if the experience of ‘shortcut’ is part of the motivation, so that as soon as you’ve established a path, what constitutes ‘shortcut’ also changes. I’d be interested to know if curved paths were more desire path-resistant, because they appeal to an intuition about adjusting (and therefore optimizing) course.

    • sqw
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      3 months ago

      seems to me its the entire motivation. but whether the shortcuts have impact on the grass depends on how popular they are. people shortcut randomly all the time but it only makes a desire path when a large number of them go the same way regularly

      • @cholesterol@lemmy.world
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        13 months ago

        Note that my (implied) emphasis is on experience. If the experience is what is important, convenience isn’t actually what creates desire paths. Instead it’s the experience of making a personal choice to increase efficiency, of joining a club of renegades who brave the path less traveled, etc… So maybe allowing for that experience in the managed environment is another way of limiting desire paths.

        • sqw
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          13 months ago

          yes that makes sense. i think the degree of desire for that experience is always there, but the more rigid the built environment is, the more frustrated that desire becomes.

  • @hsdkfr734r@feddit.nl
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    3 months ago

    Sometimes it is just carelessness of the people. Being blind to your fellow people’s needs. Dropping trash where they stand. Refusing to walk two extra steps on the pathway and kill the grass instead.

    In this case the requirements analysis of the parks and recreations dept was just bad and they are the asshole.

  • queermunist she/her
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    3 months ago

    You say this is human nature, but I see this comments section filled with good little doggies that follow master’s rules.

      • queermunist she/her
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        83 months ago

        In the comic, the desire path happened because they wouldn’t just connect to the crosswalk. Even in the end, the constructed path connects to the sidewalk slightly to the side instead of going straight to the crosswalk.

        Desire paths happen because of poor, antihuman design choices.

  • @Tudsamfa@lemmy.world
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    113 months ago

    “desire paths” well and good, but who (above the age of 15) is jumping a hedge to save 3 second walk time? Must be next to a school.

    • @Uruanna@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I’m more concerned about the city planner who was so strongly against the idea that the path should be coming right out of that crosswalk. That’s just insulting, like they WANT everyone to waste just 3 more seconds.

    • Krudler
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      33 months ago

      I’m 50 and in great shape. I’m squeezing between fences and leaping small barricades on my walk to get bananas at grocery. Walk life is so different than eating-while-sitting-and-driving-but-still-somehow-sweating life of cars.