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Real-Life Decision Making -- Solution

You develop a mixed-use area.

Mixed use was the best option for Siepmann. In his case, it affected the people currently living in the area least. A mixed-use development also could appeal to future occupants of the business park who needed a place to have business lunches, or a place to go shopping during spare time.

Mixed use is a very hot concept right now in planning and development, says Fluke. A neighborhood where people can live, work and be entertained is better for the future and may eliminate urban sprawl, a terrible problem faced by cities that are quickly expanding into the rural areas.

"We have to accommodate growth at densities that make sense. We want people to use the roads and the services, but if we keep plotting big acreage [for living], you get sprawl. And this is unhealthy growth," Fluke explains.


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