Why not aggregate the dots? It’s not really telling a story now just shows raw data.
Widderic on
Tokyo and Paris look lit af.
Miss me with Toronto lol.
faceintheblue on
Hey! Toronto made the list. That’s nice to see.
I’ve been to five of the other twenty as well. I’m a little curious what the data is trying to show. If it’s total number of bars/pubs, bakeries/cafes, and restaurants, could that not be done with a simple chart? If it’s about distribution, I think we might need to have something explaining to people that there’s more to it than just how scattered the dots are. Toronto’s, for example, are actually illustrating thriving neighbourhoods where all the commercial properties are on specific streets with residential blocks in between that are not zoned for what this map is showing. You could look at this and think Toronto’s downtown core has food deserts, which it’s really become a foodie city.
I also feel like New York/Manhattan and London are also somehow being downplayed, not because of the nature of their zoning, but because the density of dots has to be exceeding the room available at that map scale.
Some actual metrics written out on these maps would be very helpful. I think the heat map element isn’t doing too much more than providing eye candy.
kriswone on
Montreal please
QuarterTarget on
Why is Brani Island just straight up gone on the Singapore map? Otherwise great maps
HahaItsaGiraffeAgain on
You didn’t even show all of Manhattan in New York, let alone the city
Vevangui on
Missing Madrid.
JacquesHome on
Awesome map, really enjoyed going through all the cities.
1isOneshot1 on
This should have an overlap of residential places to show which cities don’t plan well
ddven15 on
These are great! Would love to see one for Madrid and Manchester.
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Why not aggregate the dots? It’s not really telling a story now just shows raw data.
Tokyo and Paris look lit af.
Miss me with Toronto lol.
Hey! Toronto made the list. That’s nice to see.
I’ve been to five of the other twenty as well. I’m a little curious what the data is trying to show. If it’s total number of bars/pubs, bakeries/cafes, and restaurants, could that not be done with a simple chart? If it’s about distribution, I think we might need to have something explaining to people that there’s more to it than just how scattered the dots are. Toronto’s, for example, are actually illustrating thriving neighbourhoods where all the commercial properties are on specific streets with residential blocks in between that are not zoned for what this map is showing. You could look at this and think Toronto’s downtown core has food deserts, which it’s really become a foodie city.
I also feel like New York/Manhattan and London are also somehow being downplayed, not because of the nature of their zoning, but because the density of dots has to be exceeding the room available at that map scale.
Some actual metrics written out on these maps would be very helpful. I think the heat map element isn’t doing too much more than providing eye candy.
Montreal please
Why is Brani Island just straight up gone on the Singapore map? Otherwise great maps
You didn’t even show all of Manhattan in New York, let alone the city
Missing Madrid.
Awesome map, really enjoyed going through all the cities.
This should have an overlap of residential places to show which cities don’t plan well
These are great! Would love to see one for Madrid and Manchester.