The plan for a new California city

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
  • A group backed by some of California's richest has purchased some 60,000 acres of farmland in Northern California, as part of an ambitious plan to build a brand-new, walkable city in the nation's most car-centric state, for as many as 400,000 residents. Correspondent Luke Burbank talks with Jan Sramek, a former Goldman Sachs trader-turned-city builder about the "California Forever" initiative, and why the idea is facing some resistance.
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @jazziered142
    @jazziered142 Před 3 měsíci +853

    I think sueing landowners is disgusting. They have a right to their land, and their home.

    • @mattf9076
      @mattf9076 Před 3 měsíci +46

      It was that point of the video where the villains came into the picture.

    • @daintyminnie9270
      @daintyminnie9270 Před 3 měsíci +40

      Sueing landowners who abuse the land is perfectly good.

    • @guyfawkesuThe1
      @guyfawkesuThe1 Před 3 měsíci +20

      Got water?? Silly idea by Pollyanna rich men! They don't want to invest in Oakland or other parts of downtrodden CA????

    • @keonesilva3646
      @keonesilva3646 Před 3 měsíci +9

      Yes. Same in Maui Hawaii after the planned "wildfires" 😢

    • @daintyminnie9270
      @daintyminnie9270 Před 3 měsíci +12

      @@guyfawkesuThe1 Oakland has nothing but animals. I would not spend one coin there.Yuck

  • @Casey-summer
    @Casey-summer Před 2 měsíci +1048

    I think it's time to make it more appealing for potential buyers. Real estate can be quite the rollercoaster! the stress and uncertainty are getting to me. I think I'll cut rents to attract potential buyers and exit the market, but i'm at crossroads if to allocate the entire $680k liquidity value to my stock portfolio?

    • @sloanmarriott5
      @sloanmarriott5 Před 2 měsíci +1

      "Overall, buyers hold a lot of the cards right now, and sellers are having to give out more concessions to close a deal." All the best, buying on sale is actually one of the best ways to invest in stocks, and advisors are ideally suited for such task

    • @mellon-wrigley3
      @mellon-wrigley3 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Until the Fed clamps down even further I think we're going to see hysteria due to rampant inflation. If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now with financial markets will be best you seek a fin-professional with fiduciary responsibilities who knows about mortgage-backed securities for proper guidance.

    • @lilyhershey1
      @lilyhershey1 Před 2 měsíci

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      @mellon-wrigley3 Před 2 měsíci

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      @lilyhershey1 Před 2 měsíci +1

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  • @parrotcracker6629
    @parrotcracker6629 Před 3 měsíci +507

    I was skeptical and now even more so after hearing that they tried to sue the landowners who don't want to sell for supposedly "holding out" to increase their land's market value. Ridiculous. If they don't want to sell California Forever is just going to sue them? Is that what I'm hearing? Billionaire suing people who just want to live peaceably farming their land. I was born and raised in the Bay and totally against this.

    • @mptoast4061
      @mptoast4061 Před 3 měsíci +52

      I know right, how can you trust anything they say. “It’s for the people” but then they sue those exact people lol

    • @realhazel1807
      @realhazel1807 Před 3 měsíci +6

      greedy land owners!!!

    • @10MM-MAGAMAN-420
      @10MM-MAGAMAN-420 Před 3 měsíci +8

      Communism

    • @jacobnapkins1155
      @jacobnapkins1155 Před 3 měsíci

      I mean it's all stolen land anyway.

    • @TeaPea-jq4ib
      @TeaPea-jq4ib Před 3 měsíci

      Agreed. A bunch of billionaires are suddenly so concerned with building an essentially corporate city for the good old middle class and pitch it as some utopian society? Not buying it. This place will be a playground for the uber rich. Follow the money and who’s behind it and that’ll tell you where their interests lie.
      No one that is not filthy rich will be able to near that place. Corporate cities. Owned and run by the well heeled. While destroying farmland just so they can make money and have another playground.

  • @micmac99
    @micmac99 Před 3 měsíci +361

    California already has several cities built in the middle of nowhere and the rents are getting unsustainably high.

    • @aok1425
      @aok1425 Před 3 měsíci +45

      Wouldn’t building even more decrease those rents, according to the “laws” of supply & demand?

    • @yayarea2415
      @yayarea2415 Před 3 měsíci +25

      Only if no one wants to live there, there’s a reason it’s cheaper to live in other states. The weather will always keep California expensive. No matter what fairytale city the try and build.

    • @enagreco3280
      @enagreco3280 Před 3 měsíci +12

      It costs more to "live" in remote new areas. New infrastructure for water, sewer, electrical grid, fuel access, law enforcement, healthcare, wildlife control, the list goes on; all of this requires tax money which does not translate to affordable housing. It will require expensive housing with high tax bills for each house. Not to mention the customer service workers there will not afford to live there. They will need a transit system to outer areas. Interesting that this is near an Air Force Base.

    • @DemPilafian
      @DemPilafian Před 3 měsíci

      @@enagreco3280 How do you explain that humans no longer live in caves?

    • @Sevenfold120
      @Sevenfold120 Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@enagreco3280 Suburbs are also expensive but people rarely see those costs. The city pays to maintain roads, lights and other infrastructure at a far higher cost than urban cities.

  • @Impozalla
    @Impozalla Před 3 měsíci +34

    This project reminds me of Disney's planned city call "celebration" in Florida. The city is celebration is so expensive. Disney too said that it will be an affordable community where the average citizen could afford a house. It's obviously clear that only the rich could afford to live in Celebration, Florida.

    • @muhcharona
      @muhcharona Před 2 měsíci

      Unfortunately after 1965 the price filter is necessary.

  • @julieb750
    @julieb750 Před 3 měsíci +605

    How about turning around downtown Los Angeles and spending those billions renovating existing “walkable” neighborhoods. No, instead eat up the farmland and ruin the actual rural areas. Not a good design plan. The West Village and all of the other walkable neighborhoods exist because they are in metropolitan areas and it all feeds off each other. Creating a city in the middle of nowhere just makes it a place you have to still drive to get anywhere else. It will end up being a weekend getaway for rich people.

    • @mark71565
      @mark71565 Před 3 měsíci +79

      That’s the whole point, even though they are rich they can’t get anything done in an existing municipality so they have to create their own from the ground up.

    • @julieb750
      @julieb750 Před 3 měsíci

      @@mark71565 They’ve got nothing but exorbitant amounts of money and power. If they wanted to use that to rehabilitate essentially abandoned areas, they could. They know all the right people and have the money to influence politicians and other decision makers. How did the original, giant Penn Station get built in the early 1900s? A hugely wealthy railroad baron exercised his considerable money and power to make it happen. This is just another ego-driven Mars shot with no benefit for the state or its cities.

    • @Someone-vj3lj
      @Someone-vj3lj Před 3 měsíci +8

      AGREED!

    • @nancychace8619
      @nancychace8619 Před 3 měsíci +10

      It will end up a quagmire.

    • @SteveBrant55
      @SteveBrant55 Před 3 měsíci +29

      Thank you. To me, this is anti-systemic thinking. The reasons cities "don't work" is that they are part of a larger socio-economic political system that is dysfunctional... driven by Wall Street greed as much as anything else. This is a variation on Elon Musk's "Let's go to Mars" thinking... the desire to leave what doesn't work behind and go someplace where a fresh start is possible. But by being part of California (and of the USA and of the world), this plan will not be able to avoid the macro-systemic dysfunctional reality we currently suffer from. This is a misguided vision built on the desire to "create a better, new system to replace the old" as Buckminster Fuller said we should do. But Bucky's vision acknowledged we are part of a larger system. He sought to transform that system... not escape it.

  • @SolarPowerMyRV
    @SolarPowerMyRV Před 3 měsíci +73

    How will they keep it “affordable” without a 30 year waitlist?

    • @aok1425
      @aok1425 Před 2 měsíci

      I think the only way to achieve both is to build a lot lot lot. But even then, it takes time to build so much that the free-market price for each isn't so crazy, because there's a lot of it.

  • @petergallina1610
    @petergallina1610 Před 3 měsíci +251

    That land looks beautiful as is. Maybe just leave it alone.

    • @chickenskittens2811
      @chickenskittens2811 Před 3 měsíci +15

      It is beautiful...and has been dry farmed for generations....meaning raising crops and animals using only annual precipitation

    • @dgadventures312
      @dgadventures312 Před 3 měsíci +12

      We need more housing. It's time to start building.

    • @mirzaahmed6589
      @mirzaahmed6589 Před 3 měsíci +14

      It's not your land, and it's not your decision.

    • @dgadventures312
      @dgadventures312 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@mirzaahmed6589 I never said that it's my land, but I will support this future project. There's not enough housing in the state of California.

    • @jacobnapkins1155
      @jacobnapkins1155 Před 3 měsíci +10

      Nimby, if you want natural land then get rid of your house

  • @moreanimals6889
    @moreanimals6889 Před 3 měsíci +266

    I don't believe it will be affordable. A. It's in California. Anytime something nice is built, people who need it never get it. Rich people do. B.Land is expensive. That is the number one reason, everything is so expensive. I don't believe it. Rich people are trying to get richer.

    • @erictaylor3897
      @erictaylor3897 Před 3 měsíci +7

      So you are not a capitalist? Do you prefer the wealthy tech workers to gentrify existing suburbs and lower income neighborhoods. How has surrounding cities made it easy for developers to build?

    • @cindymittlesteadt6177
      @cindymittlesteadt6177 Před 3 měsíci +11

      "Relatively affordable". Relative to what?

    • @yo3rdtier128
      @yo3rdtier128 Před 3 měsíci +3

      C. You don’t know what the hell you’re talking about

    • @yvonneplant9434
      @yvonneplant9434 Před 3 měsíci

      So I guess they think they can avoid climate change by hiding in this place. 😮They can't.

    • @yvonneplant9434
      @yvonneplant9434 Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​@@erictaylor3897Yes, if they want to gentrify older cities, which has happened in parts of Phila., let's do that.

  • @gurujr
    @gurujr Před 3 měsíci +65

    If rich people build it don't be surprised it's affordability would only be for the rich as well.

    • @austin7037
      @austin7037 Před 3 měsíci +4

      So we should expect poor people to build the housing of the future? How?

    • @TheTrueOnyxRose
      @TheTrueOnyxRose Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@austin7037:
      No, but cities should grow and develop organically. This will be factory-made.

    • @somerandomguy7458
      @somerandomguy7458 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@TheTrueOnyxRose some of those organic cities are horrendous and cannot be fixed

    • @TheTrueOnyxRose
      @TheTrueOnyxRose Před 2 měsíci

      @@somerandomguy7458:
      …but not every one of them. Are we just going to write them all off as lost causes and create more potential problems by letting the rich build fake towns?

  • @louiswhite805
    @louiswhite805 Před 3 měsíci +183

    Don't sell. Let them redevelop the cities that already exist.

    • @JamesSmith-mo4yt
      @JamesSmith-mo4yt Před 3 měsíci +15

      A task that is inherently difficult to complete, you are definitely someone who hasn't got a clue of what he is talking about…

    • @tenossos
      @tenossos Před 3 měsíci +5

      It would cost twice as much as city land is worth twice as much.

    • @RajDeelish
      @RajDeelish Před 3 měsíci +2

      That's a ridiculous answer. They are not in the business of funding the government.

    • @LyricsQuest
      @LyricsQuest Před 3 měsíci +2

      I believe they're aspiring to that, as well, with the YT rumors about the abolition of single family housing zoning.

    • @louiswhite805
      @louiswhite805 Před 3 měsíci +4

      That's farm and ranch land. It needs to be used to produce food for an ever growing population, not used to create a greater gulf between those with incomes at or below inflation and those fortunate enough to be middle class or rich. And it's really about trying to escape multiculturalism! 😮

  • @rockyroad-hq7hz
    @rockyroad-hq7hz Před 3 měsíci +194

    There's so many dying cities that could use infusion and innovation. Where the land is already there. Without taking natural farmland and migration sanctuary from established protections, or endangered migration species. Just because someone can boost they have a bright ideas. While damaging the eco system.

    • @nancychace8619
      @nancychace8619 Před 3 měsíci +9

      Just because theoretically they can doesn't mean they should. Really a bad idea.

    • @RajDeelish
      @RajDeelish Před 3 měsíci

      Get real. This is not a government project. This is a project by regular citizens. They don't own the government anything.

    • @LyricsQuest
      @LyricsQuest Před 3 měsíci +6

      There's so much red tape in the cities. And the land/real-state is really expensive, too.

    • @aok1425
      @aok1425 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I feel like we've already had our chance to infuse & innovate dying cities, and that's gotten us where we are now. Why not try both approaches to building more housing in the crazy expensive Bay Area?

    • @DaveP-uv1ml
      @DaveP-uv1ml Před 3 měsíci +3

      Look these are venture capitalist. They have a lot of money that they are prepared to invest in this project. But even though they have a lot of money and they are rich, they have a budget. They have a limits as to how much they’re going to pay for property and when you expect them to go into an existing city, like Los Angeles, the cost of buying the amount of land that they are needing to do a project like this would be massively more expensive. It probably would blow the budget and it couldn’t be done.

  • @Numbers_are_my_jam
    @Numbers_are_my_jam Před 2 měsíci +8

    There’s a city near Palmdale called California city. It’s in the desert area. Someone tried to build a grand city there and failed. Streets with names and even fire hydrant are visible. We camped out there a few time. The little city that is there is rundown cause of poverty and crime. Women’s jail near by, so people from L.A go visit family or friends doing time and stay. Check it out. They should try working on that. Half the work is already done.

  • @WynnFX
    @WynnFX Před 3 měsíci +84

    How about putting some money into revitalizing old cities like Detroit.

    • @DivinesLegacy
      @DivinesLegacy Před 3 měsíci +8

      If cities are old and dying, then it’s for a reason. Imagine building up and revitalizing a place with decaying industry. Unless your argument is that pretty aesthetics is the only factor to why people move to certain places. These people are literally doing nothing wrong, But unfortunately they are rich, replace them with a middle class American family and no one would say anything, But unfortunately people are so cynical about anyone with money, while 99% of the products they own and use are made by rich people.

    • @user-bf1li9wf9l
      @user-bf1li9wf9l Před 3 měsíci +4

      Not redeemable, too much diversity.

    • @nl5703
      @nl5703 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Look at the demographics of Detroit. Who wants to move there?

    • @LoisAGrimm
      @LoisAGrimm Před 2 měsíci

      @@DivinesLegacy "If cities are old and dying, then it’s for a reason."
      Yeah, everyone up and left them instead of investing in them.

    • @DivinesLegacy
      @DivinesLegacy Před 2 měsíci

      @@LoisAGrimm they didn’t invest in them because there was no reason to lol. You invest in things that you believe have a future.

  • @travislilienthal1514
    @travislilienthal1514 Před 3 měsíci +60

    Fix the cities that need help. Stop taking the farmland

    • @JailEnforcement
      @JailEnforcement Před 2 měsíci

      If we keep developing and the population is growing this large, how much room do we really have to expand now? Like all of this farm land is getting developed, what if to much gets developed? 100 years down the road, we will be to our max on land use decisions and it’s going to hurt future generations.

  • @Jellybean0009
    @Jellybean0009 Před 3 měsíci +36

    The 80 is already too congested. This is craziness!

    • @Matt-xu3lb
      @Matt-xu3lb Před 3 měsíci +4

      Highway 12 is just as bad and there is no plan to expand it unlike what Forever California claims.

    • @DivinesLegacy
      @DivinesLegacy Před 3 měsíci +5

      It’s a “walkable city” so it’s safe to assume they won’t have a bunch of cars to add to congestion due to diverse transportation options.

    • @MrMarkOlson
      @MrMarkOlson Před 2 měsíci +3

      I80 is indeed too crowded. There needs to be some amount of open land left between SF and Sacramento. Some want to build CA into a hellhole.

    • @Matt-xu3lb
      @Matt-xu3lb Před 2 měsíci

      @@DivinesLegacy a walkable city would have mass transit, there is no plan for BART, the Amtrak Capitol Corridor or SMART to go out there.

    • @Matt-xu3lb
      @Matt-xu3lb Před 2 měsíci

      @@DivinesLegacy without calling names, the owners here are bullies looking for a big payday. I am not a rando and happen to have family in the area, I have made calls to local representatives. The state and local governments have no plans for this community or intentions to support it. Highway 12 expansion is not even on the 20 year plan for the state of California. These pie in the sky tech investors and Wall Street people think they understand community development, which they have no experience doing. Walkable translates to compact multistory housing on small lots that simply does not fit in. In addition there is no water resources unless the developer is planning on building a desalination plant, a sewage plant and more.
      Their supposed concessions to the Air Force base are to move a solar farm there which is actually very anti aviation (nothing like trying to land an airplane next to a field of mirrors pointing the sun back at you.)

  • @yvonneplant9434
    @yvonneplant9434 Před 3 měsíci +418

    Let's fix the cities we already have. Sigh.

    • @RajDeelish
      @RajDeelish Před 3 měsíci

      1) They have too many BS red tape rules. 2) This is not the government. These are private citizens that don't have to fix other people's problems.

    • @oldhickory4686
      @oldhickory4686 Před 3 měsíci

      The homeless and crime is being allowed by gov't. officials to reduce CA. population. The elitists want the State all for themselves, while they call themselves the "servants of the people".

    • @daikon711
      @daikon711 Před 3 měsíci

      cities don't want to fix themselves

    • @aok1425
      @aok1425 Před 3 měsíci +35

      Why not try both? Why does it have to be we do one, and not the other at the same time?

    • @rollericarus
      @rollericarus Před 3 měsíci +4

      Too difficult, people will be displaced from their homes in the process, then what?

  • @RichardKalmanIII
    @RichardKalmanIII Před 3 měsíci +25

    Never give up farming it’s a American tradition

    • @susancuenin2137
      @susancuenin2137 Před 2 měsíci +3

      We do like to eat.

    • @Jdjsjdjdnsj
      @Jdjsjdjdnsj Před 2 měsíci +2

      more like something people do all over the world to eat and not a traditon

  • @RangeMcrangeface
    @RangeMcrangeface Před 3 měsíci +9

    Lower housing costs is not a mystery. This is a self imposed crisis. If you don’t build enough in the places people want to live, you get rising prices. It is insane that existing homeowners who already “got in” on the housing market get to dictate if and how much gets built. The response is always, “I’m not against housing, but this isn’t the place for it or the way to do it”. They are totally unaware that same line is said in EVERY opposed housing development in history.

    • @ZarZar57
      @ZarZar57 Před 2 měsíci +1

      This!!! Austin, Texas is also a good example of a pro housing city

    • @justmelas
      @justmelas Před 2 měsíci

      A pro-housing city that is taking over historically brown and black neighborhoods to “build”. It’s nothing but gentrification wrapped up in a new title.

  • @Someone-vj3lj
    @Someone-vj3lj Před 3 měsíci +70

    Keep farmland!!!

    • @AlmightyDude420
      @AlmightyDude420 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Enjoy homelessness then. All because you don't want to clear out a flat area of dried up grass

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 2 měsíci

      There's plenty of farmland and a shortage of homes.

    • @GDUBLU_Fan
      @GDUBLU_Fan Před 2 měsíci

      @@AlmightyDude420Enjoy foodlessness

  • @dylanstafforini9861
    @dylanstafforini9861 Před 3 měsíci +69

    When a non planning tech elite with no knowledge of logistics and resource allocation and accessibility of the area says “I have a haunch this is a good spot” should tell us all of how much of a bad idea this is.

    • @Fluffybunz779
      @Fluffybunz779 Před 3 měsíci +6

      It’s a fine spot. Practically anywhere is. Logistics? Do you know what roads and railways are? Accessibility? What does that even mean? Accessible to what? An airport? Build an airport. Resource allocation is just nonsense. I’m not even sure what you mean. Whose resources? What resources? Allocation? Do you believe this is the Soviet Union, where officials determine where money is to be spent?

    • @joeysworldsewer
      @joeysworldsewer Před 3 měsíci +6

      ​@Fluffybunz779 youre a chucklehead if youre believing all this vaporware

    • @Fluffybunz779
      @Fluffybunz779 Před 3 měsíci

      @@joeysworldsewer I don’t care if it’s built or not. I just don’t like cliche bullsh*t being used as “criticism.” The #1 thing that would and will likely stop this project is Californian NIMBYism

    • @emdee390
      @emdee390 Před 3 měsíci +4

      add NOT RELATABLE/completely out of touch with the average citizen.

    • @somerandomguy7458
      @somerandomguy7458 Před 2 měsíci

      @@joeysworldsewer you seem blindly narcissitic

  • @MrEffdot
    @MrEffdot Před 3 měsíci +225

    I hate it when farm land gets urbanized.

    • @erictaylor3897
      @erictaylor3897 Před 3 měsíci +17

      Yes Los Angeles and San Francisco were farmland. The southern half of San Francisco use to be orchards. Much of America's large towns and cities were farmland at one point.
      Much of our produce in California are exports, one country that we've placed 100% tariffs on their cars were a larger importer. I don't see them buying large amounts of American goods for the foreseeable future.

    • @yvonnecamperriovista225
      @yvonnecamperriovista225 Před 3 měsíci +6

      What about the water. They haven’t even gone through any studies.

    • @grod805
      @grod805 Před 3 měsíci +18

      ​@@yvonnecamperriovista225 can boomers like you take a break from shutting the door behind them. We deserve the California dream like you old people have

    • @Joe-ij6of
      @Joe-ij6of Před 3 měsíci +9

      If you support farmland (as I do) then this is the perfect project. You should support this project rather than whine about it. The reason is that there is a 1000% guarantee that X number of housing is going to get built in America every year and X number of people with the wherewithal will buy those homes. Currently, 100% of new developments are single family housing sprawling out from establish population centers, which gobbles up lots of land per capita. This project would have lots of housing in a more dense, walkable development that would consume LESS farm acreage on a per capita basis. Unless your position is that they become homeless, the upcoming generation is DEFINITELY going to live somewhere... we're just talking about whether they move into yet more suburban sprawl, or into a medium density town/city.

    • @dt7353
      @dt7353 Před 3 měsíci +6

      ​@yvonnecamperriovista225 If there is water for farms, there is water for a city.

  • @itflint
    @itflint Před 3 měsíci +86

    These old people will really do everything possible to make sure that anyone under the age of 40 is really going to have to suffer well beyond when they are gone.

    • @janicel-h9491
      @janicel-h9491 Před 3 měsíci

      In the 20 years I’ve lived there I have seen so many young people killed while commuting on the surrounding “blood alley” highways that feed this area. The California Forever won’t provide wider safer roads. It wants State to do it. What we have now took 20 years to improve and the cost will fall on taxpayers for the increased traffic (because we all know, there WILL be commuting to jobs and services!

    • @Ponchitograndito
      @Ponchitograndito Před 3 měsíci +1

      Do you actually think we would benefit from this in Solano county

    • @Hashtagcris
      @Hashtagcris Před 3 měsíci +8

      ​@Ponchitograndito yes, you just need to look at the housing stock. Supply and demand is the issue. If you don't build more then housing prices go up. It's 101 economics and you literally see the effect of it all over CA.

    • @adamheuer8502
      @adamheuer8502 Před 3 měsíci

      @@Hashtagcris Yeah so maybe people should focus on ending the self serving housing codes that already exist in places like San Francisco instead of just leaving behind the mess they have made and expecting someone else to move aside so they can take over new areas

    • @Hashtagcris
      @Hashtagcris Před 3 měsíci

      @adamheuer8502 agreed. Even with that we still need more space to build. The population decenty is wild out here. I think they need to fill ever vacant spot with some form of housing in existing cities as well as build more in general.

  • @FloofyMinari
    @FloofyMinari Před 3 měsíci +7

    A walkable city from the ground up sounds like a really good idea.

    • @wtfdidijustwatch1017
      @wtfdidijustwatch1017 Před 2 měsíci +3

      At the cost of farmland.
      We don’t need it

    • @FloofyMinari
      @FloofyMinari Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@wtfdidijustwatch1017 This isn't farmland....it's just land.

    • @wtfdidijustwatch1017
      @wtfdidijustwatch1017 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@FloofyMinari It’s Farmland, lay off

    • @dougules
      @dougules Před 2 měsíci

      A city is a whole social ecosystem. It's hubris to think you can just build that from scratch in a field somewhere. They need to put this money and political effort into retrofitting existing cities to be more walkable and have denser housing.

  • @arykaarmitage9178
    @arykaarmitage9178 Před 3 měsíci +94

    I grew up in that area 50+ years ago and the fact they want to change the whole landscape and they are literally forcing farmers/ranchers to sell is what bothers me the most. I know the McCormacks and they have always been the rocks of our county, as well as Andersons, Hamiltons, Leutholtz, Hansens... This is wrong and I really feel that Fairfield, Suisun, Travis Air Force Base and the surrounding area will not be able to support this type of housing.

    • @laliday
      @laliday Před 3 měsíci +7

      Exactly. There's no need to buy all the land at once and build everything at once. Most cities expand and evolve to fit the needs of residents. They don't have to start big. They don't need a Walmart or Costco. If they think that, they are wrong. The key is to allow mixed use neighborhoods that allow a random distribution of small shops and businesses, homes and 5 story condos of various sizes with shops or the ground floor, and homes that can can legally contain small businesses of all kinds. They can control signage or architecture and fencing to make things pretty, but they should not play the NIMB card. It's the NIMBs that make cities unwalkable, expensive, and increase poverty.

    • @yvonnecamperriovista225
      @yvonnecamperriovista225 Před 3 měsíci +8

      The surrounding cities will be hit hard, with gridlock and chaos.

    • @aok1425
      @aok1425 Před 3 měsíci +1

      As an outsider to that area, I see it like eminent domain to build stuff for the public good, like a railroad back in the day.
      It is bad for the homeowners in the railroads' path, and I feel bad for them. But it would benefit many many people who use the railroad, or in this case can live more affordably by the Bay.

    • @aok1425
      @aok1425 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@laliday I think they do have to buy all the land at once and build everything at once, unfortunately. Bay Area cities have not expanded to fit the needs of residents, which is why housing is so expensive now.
      If the past/present doesn't work, wouldn't a solution need to start big, since smaller solutions haven't worked so far?

    • @arykaarmitage9178
      @arykaarmitage9178 Před 3 měsíci

      @@yvonnecamperriovista225 maybe they could put more roundabouts to slow down some of the traffic... EEEKKKK (I lived in Bird's Landing and that roundabout was the worst thing that could have happened on Hwy 12)

  • @heirloomcottagedesigns9063
    @heirloomcottagedesigns9063 Před 3 měsíci +88

    Sparing no expense and suing people to get their land is two different things!! That’s completely wrong! It’s always the same with billionaires. If we can’t buy it, we’ll just take it!😡

    • @DemPilafian
      @DemPilafian Před 3 měsíci +1

      The landowner holdouts are colluding in ways that may be an illegal shakedown. They were offered well above market prices but they saw a way to profit by obstructing the project. If the holdouts simply wanted to stay on their land, they wouldn't bother colluding.

    • @chickenskittens2811
      @chickenskittens2811 Před 3 měsíci

      @@DemPilafian so you fell for the billionaire lies..... it is all lies and deceit. It will be a 15min city

    • @enagreco3280
      @enagreco3280 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Interesting that this land is near an Air Force Base

    • @DemPilafian
      @DemPilafian Před 3 měsíci

      @@enagreco3280 Nice try at FUD! Well done, comrade.
      California Forever has explicitly expressed their support for the Air Force base, and they will have bylaws specifically to prevent interfering with the base. California Forever has even promised to provide some municipality services to the base.

    • @wtfdidijustwatch1017
      @wtfdidijustwatch1017 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@DemPilafian Funny how their land has been owned before the project even existed. It’s not an obstruction if the family has been their longer than you ever will

  • @OneHungLee
    @OneHungLee Před 3 měsíci +10

    I lived in Solano County for many years in this area. This is A PIPE DREAM; it’s constantly windy and a huge Air Force base right in the middle of it all to add lots of jet noise. Why don’t they redevelop cities that already exist? Paving over more of California is NOT THE ANSWER.

    • @RajDeelish
      @RajDeelish Před 3 měsíci

      Redeveloping cities is a government job. The developers do not work for the government.

  • @judydorfner5417
    @judydorfner5417 Před 3 měsíci +76

    Wow...world's largest HOA.

  • @bedminstereric
    @bedminstereric Před 3 měsíci +86

    Sunday Morning should have used today’s “moment of nature” to show what would be lost once that land is paved over. I wish this group would focus on redeveloping the massive brownfields around our existing cities. There are thousands of acres around Philly that could use their focus.

    • @guyfawkesuThe1
      @guyfawkesuThe1 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Got water?? Silly idea by Pollyanna rich men! They don't want to invest in Oakland or other parts of downtrodden CA????

    • @daisie5940
      @daisie5940 Před 3 měsíci +7

      Build up the inner cities where there are empty lots. Buy up dilapidated building sites and make our towns more walkable and enjoyable for young and old.

    • @nancymcmonarch
      @nancymcmonarch Před 3 měsíci +6

      Yes, I remember when much of Silicon Valley was still farmland and orchards. It was far more pleasant AND far more affordable.

    • @dustywilson5461
      @dustywilson5461 Před 3 měsíci +1

      💯

  • @mandybradley3079
    @mandybradley3079 Před 3 měsíci +104

    Less farming land is dangerous to the rest of us. Just watch.

    • @aok1425
      @aok1425 Před 3 měsíci +2

      how?

    • @TheLordOfNothing
      @TheLordOfNothing Před 3 měsíci +18

      @@aok1425 Where do you get your food? The grocery store? 2/3 vegetables and fruits are grown in CA's Central Valley.
      You do the math.

    • @miles5600
      @miles5600 Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@TheLordOfNothingdo you know how much food is spoiled every day cause of overproduction and portion sizes being too large? While companies are too scared to donate their food cause they might get sued even though it has never happened. 4 square kilometers of land going towards housing more than 400.000 people isn’t a bog deal for our food industry.

    • @Joe-ij6of
      @Joe-ij6of Před 3 měsíci +3

      This is GOOD for farmland, not bad. The REAL problem is that they're trying to build a proper city with some real density.... but if you DO NOT build like this, it'll just shift the housing market towards sprawl of suburban developments near other population centers, which will gobble up much more farmland per capita. It's a lot easier to just tack on a suburban development here and there near existing populations, but if you try and plan out and build a complete city, you run into a gauntlet of red tape. There's a ton of these suburban developments all over the country and they take up a lot of farmland... but this is the first I've heard anyone trying to build up an actual city.

    • @conorreynolds9739
      @conorreynolds9739 Před 3 měsíci +1

      So maybe point your ire at suburban sprawl. This is relatively poor ranch land, and will house people at a much higher density (much less land per person) than the average subdivision.

  • @dante340
    @dante340 Před 2 měsíci +5

    This is essentially how the city of Irvine was established.

  • @ShawnKirch
    @ShawnKirch Před 3 měsíci +4

    Before someone says that we can't renovate existing cities, look at lower Manhatten when they built the Twin Towers. They bought all the existing shops in the Battery and built a thriving financial district. It's not a matter of if, but how much. If these people have that much money, it shouldn't be an issue, especially since they want to advocate for higher taxes.

  • @lalah9481
    @lalah9481 Před 3 měsíci +25

    Yeah. Okay, it’s a really pretty shiny new toy or maybe a tax dodge for these venture capitalists and entrepreneurs…
    However, this is our home. One of the reasons we purchased a home here was because there’s still a sense of community-even in our small cities. We are surrounded by agriculture and have direct access to it.
    The buzz words and slick fantasy renderings are all sales pitch, no granular details.
    There have been issues out here for generations regarding water. We don’t want to end up like SoCal did, nor are we stupid regarding this resource. It is scary to consider one more population having control over the shared resource of water. Yes, we need better systems for delivery. Who will monitor and guarantee continued access?? We saw what the ‘wonderful’ company did to the surrounding communities down south. It was reckless and short sighted.
    Our roads and local infrastructure are not able to service the surge of people already settled here. I really don’t see how the quaint walking town model would alleviate additional overuse and abuse. Would they consider finding a speed rail system to bypass our poorly designed and established routes between cities? We literally use time to explain or plan trips here, not miles to the destinations. Traffic is already a nightmare-now add 400,000 more users?
    What about our ecosystem here? What’s being displaced? Will there be zero emissions (smog, heat, sewage, trash, etc) or low emissions? What contamination will take place? Ground water? Air quality?
    How would these people make their profits? Where does our collateral cost get funds from?
    It really comes down to trust. Transparency and perhaps getting input from surrounding towns and cities could go a long way to getting a genuine welcome.
    Will it be profit over people?

  • @Imjusttryingtotellu
    @Imjusttryingtotellu Před 3 měsíci +26

    Got interns calling the locals… a mess.

    • @RighteousReverendDynamite
      @RighteousReverendDynamite Před 3 měsíci +2

      "Like.....we are, like, having , like, you know, like a vote, on this thingy, like about the new town, like? Can we count on your support, like? - Jaden the Intern from Stanford.

  • @skc6675
    @skc6675 Před 3 měsíci +29

    Nothing new here…I see future urban sprawl. I get we need more housing across the board but developers are critically concerned with their bottom line and this guy is a master at convincing those who will listen he’s doing it “for the better good.”

  • @cityfan2145
    @cityfan2145 Před 3 měsíci +8

    Why not just rebuild San Francisco??

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 2 měsíci +3

      The people in charge of SF won't allow it.

    • @rbk9915
      @rbk9915 Před 2 měsíci +3

      It is too far gone.

  • @michaelmccracken8921
    @michaelmccracken8921 Před 3 měsíci +67

    Where is the water?

    • @guyfawkesuThe1
      @guyfawkesuThe1 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Can you say "white executive hi-tech enclave"???

    • @grod805
      @grod805 Před 3 měsíci +1

      All over. Extra rain everywhere in California

    • @conorreynolds9739
      @conorreynolds9739 Před 3 měsíci +5

      California agriculture is largely corporate, and uses 80% of the water not to grow essential crops, but things like almonds and clementines.

    • @dt7353
      @dt7353 Před 3 měsíci +3

      If there is water for farms there is water for a city

    • @davidarndt9100
      @davidarndt9100 Před 3 měsíci +1

      The delta is right there.

  • @hummersd
    @hummersd Před 3 měsíci +23

    Instead of focusing on the issues of getting the last parcels of land, I wish they focused more on the actual concept; it was touched on, but not really a deep dive. Similar to Apple Park, which would’ve been even larger if the apartment complex nearby didn’t refuse, you work around the holdouts. It’s their right to keep the land they legally own.

    • @user-lp1jw9bo5y
      @user-lp1jw9bo5y Před 3 měsíci +1

      Israel has a ride to oops I mean America has a right to take your land

    • @DemPilafian
      @DemPilafian Před 3 měsíci +3

      The issue is *NOT* that the holdouts want to keep their land -- it's that the holdouts are colluding in ways that may be an illegal form of extortion. The landowners were offered well above market prices but they saw a way to profit by obstructing the project. Maybe that's legal and maybe not.

    • @duckmercy11
      @duckmercy11 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I honestly don't think they have much of a plan. I've seen the renders and it looks piecemeal and thrown together.

  • @indiaandrews6996
    @indiaandrews6996 Před 3 měsíci +10

    How about stopping foreigners who don’t live here from buying up houses in nice parts of California to park their money outside of their home countries before bulldozing more open space, ranches, and farms?
    In other words, people have to occupy the homes they own. Stop seeing houses as an alternative to the stock and bond market. Buy one only if you’re going to live in it or rent it full time to people who are going to live in it (not another Air BNB).

  • @Rallosz
    @Rallosz Před 2 měsíci +2

    I think this is a great idea. There are numerous challenges when it comes to building anything within existing cities. NIMBYs and various roadblocks make new housing developments nearly impossible. For example, in Huntington Beach, Southern California, new housing projects are regularly proposed to meet state housing requirements, but NIMBYs continually obstruct and delay these plans because they don't want new housing in the city. This resistance contributes to the severe housing shortage in California, and these 400,000 new homes would go a long way to helping.
    When it comes to infrastructure, I think many people would prefer to live in walkable, community-centered cities like Savannah, Georgia. If you've never been, Savannah is absolutely beautiful and bustling with life.

  • @Random.ChanneI
    @Random.ChanneI Před 3 měsíci +6

    I’m glad to hear it would be a walkable neighborhood. The suburbs are dead.

  • @AzureRook
    @AzureRook Před 3 měsíci +16

    Ironically, it does sound like what China would do; they’ve built huge urban areas in new places but it’s not like people can suddenly afford to move in so it seems deserted

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Those are completely different problems under completely different systems. In China real estate is one of the few investments available to people so they over invested and outstripped demand. In California housing in underdeveloped and is not meeting demand.

    • @Ac_a
      @Ac_a Před 2 měsíci +1

      In China things actually move forward and get better. Here in america it’s the Opposite.

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Ac_a China is an authoritarian dictatorship with all kinds of problems of its own. Every time they've tried relaxing restrictions on their currency Chinese citizens immediately try to move their savings out to western countries, including the US, in the hopes that they can get out from under Xi Jinping's regime some day and then the Chinese government clamps back down. This is why the yuan has no hope of ever becoming a global currency.

    • @chrissyg55
      @chrissyg55 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Ac_a What's moving forward in china when their people are running from China to other countries 👀

    • @RealConstructor
      @RealConstructor Před 2 měsíci

      These new towns or cities are built all over the world. England has at least one, Milton Keynes, The Netherlands has several, the biggest one Almere has 300,000 residents. The only hope is the SV rich won’t build it for themselves with a high fence around it, but also for well-off, the middle class and the lower incomes. Otherwise you won’t have a vibrant city. And they need a good public transportation system, preferably rail, like metro or tram, and a rail connection to San Francisco.

  • @misterinternational
    @misterinternational Před 3 měsíci +58

    Nothing more American than not understanding how a new city can be built without traffic

    • @NicksDynasty
      @NicksDynasty Před 3 měsíci +8

      So so true.
      You just have to build where other modes of transportation is faster than driving.

    • @Shmancyfancy536
      @Shmancyfancy536 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Plenty of new urbanist developments out there.

    • @jordanjohnson9866
      @jordanjohnson9866 Před 3 měsíci

      Nah. /

    • @chiefenumclaw7960
      @chiefenumclaw7960 Před 3 měsíci

      These boomers have never visited a European city and can't comprehend that young people DON"T want to own a car & would prefer a walkable city instead.

    • @RighteousReverendDynamite
      @RighteousReverendDynamite Před 3 měsíci +1

      It's neato until you need an ambulance and the real hospital is 30 miles away.

  • @Me97202
    @Me97202 Před 3 měsíci +95

    Likely just for the rich and higher income people. Unaffordable for average incomes. No matter _what_ they are promising.

    • @guyfawkesuThe1
      @guyfawkesuThe1 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Ya they want Philly or the NYC West Village? Go move there! There is a reason they do not live in Philly!!

    • @aok1425
      @aok1425 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Even if the first homes are for richer people, wouldn't that additional housing make the other housing around the Bay cheaper, because richer people are moving out of those places?

    • @ciello___8307
      @ciello___8307 Před 3 měsíci +6

      If you dont build any housign, housing wont get cheaper…

    • @guyfawkesuThe1
      @guyfawkesuThe1 Před 3 měsíci

      @@ciello___8307 So build apt towers in Oakland!

    • @bluefungi
      @bluefungi Před 3 měsíci

      @@aok1425 No because the rich don't sell their houses, they just buy more and leave the others empty.

  • @llwil2003
    @llwil2003 Před 3 měsíci +35

    It will be a city which is reachable by 2 lane roads (160, 113, 12). All of these roads are called Blood Alley. Impatient drivers passing on double solid lines just two days ago a mother of 3 children was killed in a head on collision. Also the Rio Vista Bridge, built in 1960, backs up traffic for miles and as long as a 40 minute minute backup. We live there and there is water restrictions now watering 2 days a week. There is NO water available for a proposed 400,000 people the size of Oakland’s population. Their development is to be built with no garages just parking lots. Can you imagine a parent of two kids walking from the parking lot in winter with the cold wind, cold pouring rain, summer with the hot wind, summer with the hot sun beaming down on as they walk home with this ice cream. Homes with no garages is suitable in Europe where the transportation infrastructure has been developed there for centuries. Affordable homes in California is $600,000 up. This is not affordable for the man and woman who are working at J.C. Penneys and McDonalds. Believe me they are not a charitable philanthropic organization they are in it to make huge amounts of money don’t be fooled by their promises. If you are a Solano County resident vote NO in November. They “don’t care about us” as the Michael Jackson song lyrics say!

  • @TheSouthIsHot
    @TheSouthIsHot Před 3 měsíci +26

    He sued the land owners to get their land. He may have paid much more than FMV, but suing doesn't sound friendly and neighborly to me. I don't like him.

  • @appnzllr
    @appnzllr Před 3 měsíci +26

    We've heard a lot of promises from rich people who say they know how to do things. They may know how to get rich (though many got rich through inheritance), but I have problems trusting them with their plan to destroy farmland and build with the environment in mind. We have enough cities that are not environmentally friendly.

    • @RajDeelish
      @RajDeelish Před 3 měsíci

      Whoever said this new city was going to be environmentally unfriendly.

    • @ray6mer03
      @ray6mer03 Před 3 měsíci

      @Raj You missed his point. His point is that there are environmentally unfriendly they can use instead of farmland.

    • @duckmercy11
      @duckmercy11 Před 3 měsíci

      Housing is more important than empty grass dude.

    • @TheTrueOnyxRose
      @TheTrueOnyxRose Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@duckmercy11:
      That empty grass has soil under it, and that soil is needed to grow food.

    • @duckmercy11
      @duckmercy11 Před 3 měsíci

      @@TheTrueOnyxRose A lot of farming isn't for essential domestic production, it's for elective crops sold overseas. CA produces the vast majority of the world's almonds, which take a shitton of water to grow. Housing is more important than supplying almond milk for gluten free sustainable eco friendly plant-based vegan lattes 😂

  • @elisabethpine3420
    @elisabethpine3420 Před 3 měsíci +25

    And don't sell to people who are not citizens.

    • @GDUBLU_Fan
      @GDUBLU_Fan Před 2 měsíci

      Texas should do the same!

  • @danielsoutdoors
    @danielsoutdoors Před 3 měsíci +7

    Walkable cities are the future.

  • @songsong7100
    @songsong7100 Před 3 měsíci +12

    Only real concern is water supply because the delta where they plan to get water from also feeds into a marsh protected by nature reserve laws. Redevelopment of areas in the existing cities in the area for businesses to come in is not possible without displacing many homeowners because the cities are mainly commuter cities; majority of the existing developed land are just suburban homes where the homeowners commute 1-2hours to the capital or deeper bay area for work. The landowners sued according to other interviews I’ve seen from the CEO are multimillionaire asset owners not your small mom and pop farmer and the CEO also said they have proof of collusion where the landowners were trying to price fix their land for sale. Either way Solano County has been a dying county with only retail stores and fast food jobs being created while majority of homes in the area are near 500k+. The majority of young people who can afford to live there as homeowners don’t even work there. Those young people eventually leave when they can afford to move to where they work like in Sac or SF. A county that can’t keep its successful young people in the community eventually becomes a dying county because those successful young people were supposed to be the ones to build new businesses in the community to keep up with the other surrounding counties.

    • @annwood6659
      @annwood6659 Před 3 měsíci

      Blast this ❤

    • @NorCalTrojanman91
      @NorCalTrojanman91 Před 3 měsíci

      You are mostly correct. I purchased a home here 30 years ago for what would be considered a ridiculous sum in other states. it has appreciated a ridiculous amount. My children could not afford to buy into the neighborhood they grew up in. They wanted to raise their children near their parents. Now we have to fly to Texas, Georgia or Washington to see our grandchildren. They wanted to come home and live but it's too expensive.

  • @Sevenfold120
    @Sevenfold120 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I love this idea. Would love it more if there was a rail line connecting directly into the city and extending to Sacramento and the Bay Area.

  • @paulorta8621
    @paulorta8621 Před 3 měsíci +6

    Projects like this are "NOT" affordable to the lower and working classes, and though I like cars, we do need to start walking and using muscle powered mechanisms again.

  • @brushstroke3733
    @brushstroke3733 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Good luck to them. It's about time we tried a new experiment with city design. Smart Towns is probably all over this.

  • @Mrcrazyguy303
    @Mrcrazyguy303 Před 3 měsíci +25

    When the reporter asked, “how do you make sure this place stays affordable for middle-class families?” And the developers answer is “don’t stop building”. That doesn’t make sense. First off you’re going to run out of land and number two you make and rent out housing that is cheap were the main motivator is housing people and not making a huge profit boom problem solved. This has all the traces of a terrible project. Secretive group, turns out to be billionaires, news puff piece, the project has a vague positive corporate feeling name with unrealistic goals. Thankfully, since billionaires are involved, we don’t have to guess what their motives are behind it and if this is going to be a disaster or not. Money and it’s definitely going to be a disaster.

    • @ceecee8826
      @ceecee8826 Před 3 měsíci

      Social housing. If you want housing where profit isn't the motivation then what you want is social housing. That is where the government and tax payer come in. Private citizens can not be expected to risk their own earnings to build charitable housing. If you sell me your home for less than its worth, you are not performing a noble cause. You are simply leaving money on the table.

    • @duckmercy11
      @duckmercy11 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@ceecee8826Non profit groups could build social housing. Imagine a West Coast version of Manhattan with all affordable apartments?

    • @ceecee8826
      @ceecee8826 Před 3 měsíci

      @@duckmercy11 And some do. But government could do the job faster. nonprofits can only do so much.

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 2 měsíci +1

      NIMBYs make sure housing stays expensive because they block residenstial development everywhere they can, even in the city, even near transit hubs or along bus lines or next to other housing developments. They block new homes and they block density and they make housing unaffordable.

    • @ZarZar57
      @ZarZar57 Před 2 měsíci

      Housing is so expensive in California because it has a housing shortage. If you get rid of the regulations that have made it impossible to build dense housing in California (or any housing in general), prices would go down. In addition, if you’re concerned about running out land, you build dense housing like apartments instead of single family homes.

  • @D9P323
    @D9P323 Před dnem +1

    It's NOT the concept or close to what Americans are looking for in a city or neighborhood, it's a 15min city, plain and simple.

  • @marqueishasparkle5977
    @marqueishasparkle5977 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I am a Solano County resident. I live just outside of Vallejo, my hometown, and Solanos largest city, which is crime-ridden, underfunded, and extremely poor. I’ve lived in this area all my life, and after hearing about “California forever”, my honest opinion? It feels like they (the wealthy) are just giving up on us. Instead of redeveloping existing downtown areas, and helping a unique community that has the capacity to support and bring up thousands, they’re running away to the middle of nowheresville to create an entirely new city. A new problem instead of solving the existing one. I get it, the road to creating housing isn’t easy, especially in the area that founded the term “NIMBY”. But fighting for what’s right, even when the road to the solution is fraught with obstacles, and seeded with hardship, is always a fight worth having. That is the most American thing a person can do. Instead of creating an “oasis” from nothing in an area filled with agricultural land and nature, they should instead build upon the foundations of cities and communities that need their support the most to foster a lasting a thriving changes that could better the lives of hundreds of thousands. Not just the middle or upper classes, but all levels of society from every ethnicity, income, and community. THAT is how you can build a better California 💅🏽💅🏽

  • @judithshelton5655
    @judithshelton5655 Před 3 měsíci +51

    Leave the 100 year old farm alone! Revitalize Los Angeles!!

    • @gonzbolt
      @gonzbolt Před 3 měsíci

      Los Angeles is history. You can't get anything done with the city government in place. It's run by woke officials that live in denial with rising crime and homelessness.

    • @Ponchitograndito
      @Ponchitograndito Před 3 měsíci +3

      What does La have to do with this this is Northern California

    • @ray6mer03
      @ray6mer03 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Everything. It is progressives that support these initiatives, and progressives run LA. So use your own area as a testing ground for these ideas instead of seizing land from hard working farmers whose families have lived on the land for generations.

    • @waltchan
      @waltchan Před 3 měsíci

      No, build a Riverside Strip tourist destination in Highgrove, CA, near the UC Riverside campus.

    • @judithshelton5655
      @judithshelton5655 Před 3 měsíci

      @@Ponchitograndito If they need housing, LA is a good place to look. Whole city blocks are empty, no tenants, no business. It could be a win-win because there’s already the infrastructure and once the people come back, the businesses can bounce back. Sure, it’s not exactly like this new development, but a whole lot cheaper and the farmers, who feed our whole nation, can keep their land, their vocation, and their pride. Win-win!

  • @kalenc515
    @kalenc515 Před 3 měsíci +4

    This is my home. I don’t want it. City life is not my thing.
    Our city/county infrastructure is not ready. Water is already a big problem for we don’t have enough.
    Also their reason for suing the landowners who are there already is absolutely horrible.

  • @owenbeharry8478
    @owenbeharry8478 Před 2 měsíci +3

    The place looks so beautiful and peaceful. Why change it?

  • @LM-ch8rh
    @LM-ch8rh Před 3 měsíci +14

    that farmland is gorgeous! please don't destroy it.

  • @ExceptionalLibra
    @ExceptionalLibra Před 3 měsíci +6

    Makes no sense! We're not delusional, it's about money. You can do the same thing in the Czech Republic. Leave the land as it is!

    • @johnsamoilis6379
      @johnsamoilis6379 Před 2 měsíci

      They did already. Everyone of their cities and suburbs are WALKABLE and hooked up to very clean, fast, efficient mass transit. I want to see this guy succeed and become a blueprint for the rest of the United States to modify its cities and suburbs to become pedestrian and bike friendly. I am not a liberal wacko that wants to get rid of highway lanes either, and I am not sold on personal electric vehicles. There are some things we can do better and the guy also makes a great point that cities that stop expanding become expensive. Cities that sprawl also become expensive due to the costs of laying and maintaining utilities. Steady growth of mid to high density housing adjacent to the existent areas is the way to go. LA is too sprawled and the Bay area has like no land left to build. Forever California solves both of these issues.

  • @marvinmartin4692
    @marvinmartin4692 Před 3 měsíci +4

    That money would be better spent on existing cities!!!!

  • @nychris2258
    @nychris2258 Před 2 měsíci +2

    We actually need new cities if people want affordable housing.

  • @theduncanshow8523
    @theduncanshow8523 Před 2 měsíci +1

    As someone who works in the multifamily development industry in CA, Stating the reason that CA cities are unaffordable is because “they have just stopped building” is one of the more uneducated statements someone could make about the affordability of California. It inappropriately simplifies a very complex issue.

  • @jacklyke7731
    @jacklyke7731 Před 3 měsíci +9

    Water and sanitation?

  • @jayyswrld2464
    @jayyswrld2464 Před 3 měsíci +3

    It's sad how so many people fear change even if it's beneficial

    • @JailEnforcement
      @JailEnforcement Před 2 měsíci

      Not when all of our farm land becomes urban sprawl and we have no food.

  • @sandycheeks1580
    @sandycheeks1580 Před 2 měsíci +2

    😱That land is beautiful 🤩 It doesn’t need to be turned into a new city!!!

  • @haloforgeguy453
    @haloforgeguy453 Před 3 měsíci +1

    This is inspiring - a generation of people stopped building to inflate their home prices and finally people are having enough. Building housing is the only way to ensure affordability

  • @lorab1912
    @lorab1912 Před 3 měsíci +3

    "My wife is already designing it in her head." When I toured homes as a realtor the worst unlivable homes were self designed. Use proven builders with experience. My first home was perfection for a young family. United from 1960s. Space Maker floor plan. Two kids a guest room playroom & walk to parks & Microsoft fountain main Redmond campus 1992.

  • @BargSlarg
    @BargSlarg Před 3 měsíci +3

    I wouldn't envy anyone who goes to battle with nimby's

  • @niokascott6647
    @niokascott6647 Před 2 měsíci +1

    A city like this would be phenomenal in Las Vegas, NV.

  • @dgadventures312
    @dgadventures312 Před 3 měsíci +2

    It's time to build more housing. Finally, someone is doing something about it.

  • @SirD1
    @SirD1 Před 3 měsíci +63

    Affordable and California do not go together

    • @guyfawkesuThe1
      @guyfawkesuThe1 Před 3 měsíci

      Got water?? Silly idea by Pollyanna rich men! They don't want to invest in Oakland or other parts of downtrodden CA????

    • @guyfawkesuThe1
      @guyfawkesuThe1 Před 3 měsíci

      This idea should be canceled!

    • @grod805
      @grod805 Před 3 měsíci +4

      They dont go together because of all these baby boomers refusing development. That's disgusting

    • @guyfawkesuThe1
      @guyfawkesuThe1 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@grod805 Disgusting is letting a Czech tell you what is good. Instead of "investing" in well developed Philly and other places, he sounds like he is trying to build a giant gated community!

    • @DaveP-uv1ml
      @DaveP-uv1ml Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@guyfawkesuThe1, why would a company that calls itself “California forever” want to go invest in Philly? I think that one is obvious to figure out.

  • @shredder2588
    @shredder2588 Před 3 měsíci +15

    Where are they going to get the water to support it?

    • @jimfesta8981
      @jimfesta8981 Před 3 měsíci

      Real good question.

    • @L.Spencer
      @L.Spencer Před 3 měsíci

      or the people to run it and take care of it

    • @DaveP-uv1ml
      @DaveP-uv1ml Před 3 měsíci

      They will turn their waste water into drinking water.
      If that makes you squeamish, consider that this is already being done with great success.
      I am in Southern California. I live in Orange County and our county has been early pioneers at this. We are the largest municipality in the world to fully recycle our wastewater, and the expertise of the people in this county are hired all around the world to try to set up similar wastewater treatment plants where they live.
      Los Angeles, the county next-door to us is hiring the county to set up their own system which they are building out. When that thing gets running, LA will immediately become the world’s largest recycler of waste water in the world by population.

    • @jimfesta8981
      @jimfesta8981 Před 3 měsíci

      @@DaveP-uv1ml So what comes first? The plant or the new city? Or do they build them concurrently?

    • @DaveP-uv1ml
      @DaveP-uv1ml Před 3 měsíci

      @@jimfesta8981 , is normally cleaned up, but only enough that it’s safe to release to the environment.
      The sewage treatment plant would be getting a big upgrade so they can actually purify the water.
      And rather than just releasing it, they would reuse it.
      The way it works in my county is that we purify the water. And sell some of that to the local businesses, labs etc. There are a lot of companies that do you have a need for ultra pure water in their production systems so they do sell that make money off of it.
      So the freshwater they produce initially is too pure for consumption. So to make it safe to drink, they then go through a process for the ad additional minerals to the water so that it’s closer to what you get with bottled water.
      Some of that water will go right back into the drinking supply to be immediately used again. The rest will be pumped around the city to special holding pools. These pools are designed to allow this water to quickly seep in and mix in with the existing groundwater.
      We also draw from this groundwater through Wells would we consume water so we’re really using our existing groundwater as a giant storage tank.
      It’s a complicated system and it might sound very strange and you’d be right to wonder why we ever did this well we had a crisis decades ago where we overdrew the freshwater out of our ground. Since we are on the coast and the Pacific Ocean is right next to our freshwater supply, we were creating a situation where we were causing the saltwater from the Pacific to begin to leak in to our freshwater supply, and it was on the verge of contaminating the whole thing. So they came up with this workaround, and it started the whole project and blossomed into what it is now so it’s primary purpose was to replenish the ground supply of our water to maintain positive pressure to keep out the saltwater.
      And then it just kept evolving and it’s become quite a sophisticated system that is highly sought all over around the world for this expertise.
      My guess is they would get their water from the ground, while simultaneously replenishing their groundwater with clean waste water.

  • @iancypes5911
    @iancypes5911 Před 2 měsíci +1

    You look at who wants to build it and where they want to build it, this is how Night City got started

  • @raybod1775
    @raybod1775 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Farmers need a go fund me page so they can fight to keep family land, then sue the lawyers and people who sued them… for billions.

  • @Imjusttryingtotellu
    @Imjusttryingtotellu Před 3 měsíci +12

    There is so much land in this country… why take someone else’s?

  • @outlandereveryday812
    @outlandereveryday812 Před 3 měsíci +30

    I have lived 5 miles from here for 20 years...not happy about this at all.

    • @joechen353
      @joechen353 Před 3 měsíci

      I know in your heart you would let's us 🇺🇸 have the land and good neighbor

    • @nancychace8619
      @nancychace8619 Před 3 měsíci +5

      I'm from an old ranching family that's been a little south of here for generations. This project absolutely stinks. Horrible for the entire region.

    • @joechen353
      @joechen353 Před 3 měsíci

      @@nancychace8619 not sure if you agree what I See ( Vision) Solano needs airport, industrial city and In N OUT

    • @Ponchitograndito
      @Ponchitograndito Před 3 měsíci +1

      Solano has Vacaville airport we have In-N-Outs what are you talking about

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 2 měsíci

      Change is scary.

  • @Cyrus992
    @Cyrus992 Před 3 měsíci +12

    Forget it! Build one here in Las Vegas!

  • @BrianHornak
    @BrianHornak Před 3 měsíci +9

    Leave the farmers alone..

  • @willienelsongonzalez4609
    @willienelsongonzalez4609 Před 3 měsíci +4

    I’m all for progress and someone with a vision to build a new place but this is simply reeks of a rich persons fever dream. Why not invest all that money in inner city areas that sorely need redevelopment and modernisation, novel solutions to improve the quality of the local environment and the economy; that would be real meaningful success!

    • @RajDeelish
      @RajDeelish Před 3 měsíci

      Don't be dumb. This is not government money, so you can't say "why not invest" in this or that. they are private citizens. Why don't YOU invest in the inner city?

    • @willienelsongonzalez4609
      @willienelsongonzalez4609 Před 3 měsíci

      @@RajDeelish Yes, I recognise this is private money, the point is one of benevolence. If I had that kind of cash then I’d be off on my private jet!

  • @brentfisher6484
    @brentfisher6484 Před 3 měsíci +7

    1) This is a classc example of 'white flight'. 2) This is bad news in California. I grew up in Solano County, and the infrastructure to support such a large 'city' is simply not there now, nor is it on the horizon. This is some of the most richly endowed soil in the world, once it is covered with structures it will shift the food supply chain forever. In the meantime we allow cities to become rust states.

    • @nancychace8619
      @nancychace8619 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Absolutely agree. We've already seen the same pattern in the Santa Clara valley, once some of the richest growing land in the world.

  • @kennethmorales5121
    @kennethmorales5121 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Similar things are occurring in the Philippines, where some rice farms have been transformed into homes, which is why there is a shortage of rice produced.

  • @williamwarren1781
    @williamwarren1781 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I grew up there and this gets under my skin big time

  • @PDogB
    @PDogB Před 3 měsíci +10

    Resources? Water? How many people would want to live by an air force base?

    • @user-lp1jw9bo5y
      @user-lp1jw9bo5y Před 3 měsíci

      We have 10,000 a day coming across our border already applied for that federal free housing

    • @PDogB
      @PDogB Před 3 měsíci

      @@user-lp1jw9bo5y They are not attracting "free housing" here.

  • @VictorRook
    @VictorRook Před 3 měsíci +4

    It won't be affordable. You know that. It will be for "special" people only. Destroying all that beautiful land for a parking lot. Say NO.

  • @NorCalTrojanman91
    @NorCalTrojanman91 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I am a resident of Solano County and am absolutely against this speculative land grab. Nobody spends that kind of money for altruistic reasons. They KNOW the people of Vacaville, Fairfield, Suisun, Dixon, Rio Vista, have protected Travis AFB from developers. That is why the push to trick us into changing our laws with the over-saturation of ads and door-to-door campaigns. If the overcrowd the area around Travis AFB and force it to close they will crash the local economy. All of our housing values will collapse and then they will rush in and buy up everything else and have a ready-made airport capable of handling the largest airplanes. There are hundreds of places to "build" their fake city. There is something very sneaky about why here and not further away with much cheaper land.
    There are ads suggesting that our farmers are using too much water and that they are growing unsustainable crops. Their answer is to grow more housing instead. That's a you tube ad.

  • @Loveexpressionmachine
    @Loveexpressionmachine Před 3 měsíci +2

    This sounds like a 15 minute city, forget that.

  • @ensemblist
    @ensemblist Před 3 měsíci +38

    Sound like old fashioned colonialism to me. And we know how that always works out….
    The problem with the super rich is that there’s few barriers in life that force them to do the work of checking their ego and cultivating humility and intrinsic value beyond what their money can do for them.

    • @nancychace8619
      @nancychace8619 Před 3 měsíci +1

      💯👍

    • @birdwife589
      @birdwife589 Před 3 měsíci +2

      they are extremely out of touch

    • @austin7037
      @austin7037 Před 3 měsíci +3

      How is building houses colonialism? Do you wish that everyone was living in the forest?

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 2 měsíci

      @@austin7037 The boomers who bought land in California just expect everyone else to have lower standards of living, even their kids, because they got theirs and that's all that matters to them.

  • @oceanwoods
    @oceanwoods Před 3 měsíci +22

    DON’T LET THEM RUIN YOUR RESOURCES

  • @soliskings7785
    @soliskings7785 Před 2 měsíci +1

    If you build it everyone dealing with tornados will come

  • @jeremybee222
    @jeremybee222 Před 3 měsíci +2

    "Hey, when you edit the interview with the Czech guy, make sure you show my arm tattoo, so people know I'm really cool."

  • @marlostanly6650
    @marlostanly6650 Před 3 měsíci +6

    This show is an absolute delight.

  • @Lora-G
    @Lora-G Před 3 měsíci +21

    How is this different from Disneys private luxury development in Florida ? I think it's called CELEBRATION or something... elite- expensive-exclusive

    • @caroleanne8529
      @caroleanne8529 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I was wondering the same thing. Just how did that work out?

    • @NickL951
      @NickL951 Před 3 měsíci

      Ask Adam the woo!

  • @unconventionalideas5683
    @unconventionalideas5683 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I doubt this will fix the housing affordability crisis in California. The problem is that California has not built enough housing near jobs, and so it gets expensive. Building a new city will not fundamentally fix that unless it is near existing jobs.

  • @ClayShentrup
    @ClayShentrup Před 2 měsíci +1

    godspeed. we need this.

  • @stopsign997
    @stopsign997 Před 3 měsíci +33

    Affordable…….ok yea right

    • @user-lp1jw9bo5y
      @user-lp1jw9bo5y Před 3 měsíci +4

      Affordable to migrants and foreigners we know the rules of this country American second foreigners 1st

    • @Nightbird1914
      @Nightbird1914 Před 3 měsíci

      @@user-lp1jw9bo5yMore like the oligarchs that will be taking over if democracy fails.

  • @JazzyJ-tn9ph
    @JazzyJ-tn9ph Před 3 měsíci +18

    Jan Sramek's Vision, is just that, Jan Sramek's Vision. If he Really Cares he would Involve the Public, not just Rich Investors.
    Oh, you say, he is Involving the Public. Alright.....in Trying to Force Landowners to Sell, Right?
    He will Hold a Town Meeting, where he tries to tell you, how wonderful it will be to Sell your Farmland that's been in your Families for Generations,
    All to Live in a Make - Believe Crowded Walking City. Where Everything is Futuristic, including the Humans.
    Now Wait you say: Jan did say that Middle Class can Live among the Bankers, and Corporate Owners. You can buy a Townhouse with 10'x 20' fenced backyard all for under $500,000. What A Deal that is! BONUS: Jan will Live their Too! (Just Not in a Townhouse)
    Jan's says his Wife is Already Designing their Home. Do you get to Design Yours? I don't think so!
    There's More .......it's Not Just about Jan and his Wealthy Investors wanting a Wonderful Futuristic Walking City, it's about Power, Greed, and Control! If We Haven't Learned that in the last 8 years we're Never Going To!
    Farming, and Owning Land comes with it, a Sense of Pride. Your Living off the Land, working the Land and raising the Animals that the Good Lord put here on this Earth. There is Nothing Better than this.
    No Futuristic, Up-Graded, High-Tech, City Could Ever Top That! We are Here to Live a Godly Life. Man Cannot Serve 2 Gods. You Either Love Money or You Love God!

  • @Zagirus
    @Zagirus Před 3 měsíci

    Once this grand city project is finally completed, we can all look forward to streets beautifully decorated with human feces, used syringes, and a charming array of homeless tents. Of course, this pristine urban paradise will be overseen by the ever-efficient and completely crime-agnostic Democrats, whose policies have done wonders in other places like San Francisco. Truly, their knack for fostering such unique cityscapes, filled with unaddressed social issues and overflowing with urban decay, is something to be marvelled at. Bravo to the stellar governance and their unwavering commitment to such commendable outcomes!

  • @TheLiamster
    @TheLiamster Před 2 měsíci +1

    I think this is a great project and I hope it gets built