> But there's abandoned medieval villages (no plumbing or electricity so far...) in hilly rural Italy.
there's small towns with fine electricity and plumbing in rural Italy but they are de-populating anyway, cause most people want to live in/nearby cities as that is where money and opportunity generally is.
The same everywhere I think (bar few cases like the Netherlands which are basically a single sprawl).
Hungary just published their most recent census, and all of the country has depopulated in the last ten years except for Budapest.
The big hope is that the trend will reverse with more remote-ization, but it's, well, a hope.
zoning would not matter to my commute length unless I moved every time I changed jobs and had no dogs or human partners. I have made 30 years of compromises because of partners and pets. I've stayed at shitty jobs because good ones were too far away and I could not move.
building near jobs is either building company towns or embedding classism and environmental injustice into property. would you live next door to a small nuke power plant because it was colocated with your office job? how about a refinery? a bsl3 lab? sewer treatment? or would you force those workers to live near their work and put them and all the dirty parts of civilization far away from the upper class clean places?
I live next to a coal power plant. It's a tradeoff between my ability to pay the rent for a single family home with a garden and living close to a large city in Germany that gives our family the chance of job and education variety.
But there's abandoned medieval villages (no plumbing or electricity so far...) in hilly rural Italy.