09-09-2016, 07:20 AM
I've been chatting with some friends this week about population density — a very convenient shorthand for working out how many people can comfortably live in a given amount of space (such as a space colony).
Of course it varies a lot, but it looks like in general, a "small town" has a density of 1000 people per square mile or less, while a major city is much higher — Tokyo is 16,000 people per square mile, and New York is a whopping 27,000 people per square mile.
Apparently O'Neill himself looked to Italian hill towns as a model of good living — they are widely renowned as beautiful and pleasant places to live. So I looked some up:
Of course it varies a lot, but it looks like in general, a "small town" has a density of 1000 people per square mile or less, while a major city is much higher — Tokyo is 16,000 people per square mile, and New York is a whopping 27,000 people per square mile.
Apparently O'Neill himself looked to Italian hill towns as a model of good living — they are widely renowned as beautiful and pleasant places to live. So I looked some up:
- Cortona is apparently one of the most famous such towns, but Wikipedia gives its area as 132 sq mi, and density as 170/sq mi
- Perugia, the capital of the Umbria province, has an area of 174 sq mi with a density of 970/sq mi.
- Montepulciano: 64 sq mi area, 220 people/sq mi.
- San Casciano: 42 sq mi area, 400 people/sq mi.
- Sorano: 64 sq mi area, 59 people/sq mi.
Joe Strout
Lead Developer, High Frontier