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Just like nobody is building houses like that house that cost our grandparents $8k (insulation was crap, probably not centrally heated, no ducting, definitely less sq ft, fewer windows, etc).
Here is Cripple Creek:
The startup cost is so much higher now because we expect a clean drinking water system, sewage system, roads...and we'd still call it "roughing it" if that's all we had. Most people in the US would not be willing to live 6 months without a public water system or sewer system. This is to say nothing about how much slower it is to build because of regulations.
I suppose my answer is that we have much higher standards/expectations now and are generally not willing to live with less for very long.
102 sats \ 3 replies \ @kr OP 13h
Most people in the US would not be willing to live 6 months without a public water system or sewer system
Many people in the US (in rural areas) already live without these public systems
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10 sats \ 2 replies \ @Scoresby 12h
I've lived in communities where everyone is on septic, but I think this furthers my point: it increases the startup cost.
When people moved to Cripple Creek, the expectation was likely an outhouse and well water. Easier to deliver.
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17 sats \ 1 reply \ @kr OP 12h
I wonder if there's a technology that can cut septic and well costs 10x for new communities, maybe something like incinerating toilets as septic replacements
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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @Scoresby 12h
Composting toilets are cool. Urine diversion toilets make things cheaper (pee is sterile, so you can treat it easier than shit).
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