News Disney World Earmarks 80 Acres for Affordable Housing

Bullseye1967

Is that who I am?
Premium Member
Where is there an abundance of infrastructure with empty school rooms, extra lanes of hardly-used roads, and other under-utilized utilities such that one can build a dense amount of domiciles in that area and the existing infrastructure can immediately handle it?
This make s no sense.
That infrastructure can be done smartly or poorly. It's up to all of us to demand our government representatives do so smartly.
You don't live there. They did speak up.
And it's up to all of us to understand what "smartly" means. Stroads, car-dependency, and suburban sprawl aren't smart.
again nonsense. You can not pile on a bad system and call it good.
The area is already over run. why add to that?
 

MisterPenguin

President of Animal Kingdom
Premium Member
again nonsense. You can not pile on a bad system and call it good.
The area is already over run. why add to that?
Where will people live that will not cause over run?

Because, almost everywhere, the infrastructure was built to match the number of houses that were built, with no extra give.

This means any new development exceeds the infrastructure and new infrastructure needs to be built.

This prevents areas from becoming more densely populated... which is the plan of suburban homesteaders and the car industry.

The alternative is continuing suburban sprawl until the entire land is nothing but one-bedroom homes; and hundreds of thousands of people need to drive over an hour to and fro every day... in just one county. Repeat everywhere.
 
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Comped

Well-Known Member
Where is there an abundance of infrastructure with empty school rooms, extra lanes of hardly-used roads, and other under-utilized utilities such that one can build a dense amount of domiciles in that area and the existing infrastructure can immediately handle it?
A little place on the other side of the county called Bithlo (or Christmas). They'll protest worse than Horizon West has, but you'll need significantly less infrastructure (just maybe a new school, but it wouldn't have to be terribly big). That's one of the few places you could put it where infrastructure is much less of a concern because barely anyone lives there!
 

LAKid53

Official Member of the Girly Girl Fan Club
Premium Member
A little place on the other side of the county called Bithlo (or Christmas). They'll protest worse than Horizon West has, but you'll need significantly less infrastructure (just maybe a new school, but it wouldn't have to be terribly big). That's one of the few places you could put it where infrastructure is much less of a concern because barely anyone lives there!

Which means there's no public transportation option for those who would be living in such a development.
 

LAKid53

Official Member of the Girly Girl Fan Club
Premium Member
Where will people live that will not cause over run?

Because, almost everywhere, the infrastructure was built to match the number of houses that were built, with no extra give.

This means any new development exceeds the infrastructure and new infrastructure needs to be built.

This prevents areas from becoming more densely populated... which is the plan of suburban homesteaders and the car industry.

The alternative is continuing suburban sprawl until the entire land is nothing but one-bedroom homes; and hundreds of thousands of people need to drive over an hour to and fro every day... in just one county. Repeat everywhere.

Welcome to Florida. Urban sprawl is the state's middle name.
 

LAKid53

Official Member of the Girly Girl Fan Club
Premium Member
That infrastructure can be done smartly or poorly. It's up to all of us to demand our government representatives do so smartly.

We did. We met with our County Commissioner. We attended meetings of the planning board. We provided documentation showing the effect on roads and other infrastructure. We provided occupancy data for the apartment complexes and single family homes in the area. We did everything citizens should do. Didn't matter.

That land will bring in more tax revenue to the County if it's developed. And THAT is what drives many decisions.
 

Comped

Well-Known Member
Which means there's no public transportation option for those who would be living in such a development.
I hate to say it but there's no transportation worth a darn where this development is going to be built anyway! The county saying a bus is enough for everything outside of downtown basically, is incredibly irresponsible but what can you really do when Orlando has the steadiest source of income and the most power, but doesn't want anything to benefit the bits they don't own?
 

heapster411

Well-Known Member
First they build the development, then they build the transportation. They have to create a problem to fix it, Right? I don't see any talk of Section 8, yet. I New Orleans, that how our history went. First development, then available shopping, then transportation, and finally low income and Section 8.
 

Comped

Well-Known Member
First they build the development, then they build the transportation. They have to create a problem to fix it, Right? I don't see any talk of Section 8, yet. I New Orleans, that how our history went. First development, then available shopping, then transportation, and finally low income and Section 8.
The nearby area is built up enough that said transportation (and other things) should already exist.
 

Stripes

Premium Member
Looks like it's in Quadrant 8 of CFTOD map.
View attachment 882529

View attachment 882531

A high school (Horizon's High School) is near it.
View attachment 882530
FYI, that map is outdated. Before Disney donated the land, RCID de-annexed the property from the district.

IMG_0332.jpeg
 

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