The cul-de-sac did this
Postwar America rebuilt itself around the car and called it progress. We zoned homes away from shops, shops away from work, and wrapped the whole thing in a commute. The man in Ohio isn’t weak. He lives in a landscape engineered so that seeing another human requires a vehicle and a reason. Strip the reasons and the seeing stops.
Ray Oldenburg named the missing piece in 1989: the third place, neither home nor work — the pub, the barbershop, the corner café where you’re known by face if not by name. America bulldozed them for parking. Every walkable old neighborhood with a stoop and a square still produces contact for free; every subdivision designed for privacy manufactures isolation as a side effect no one chose.
So we don’t reach first for the clinic or the choir. We reach for the zoning code. Legalize the corner store. Build the library, the plaza, the bench. Shorten the workweek so people have hours left to spend on a porch. The faith communities are right that the congregation gathered people — but it gathered them in a building, on a street, that you could walk to. Take away the walkable street and even the church empties.
We know structure isn’t sufficient. You can build the plaza and watch it sit empty if no one has a habit or a reason to fill it. Design makes contact possible. It does not make it happen.
Where we concede ground: Build the perfect walkable square and it can still sit empty — design makes contact possible, never certain.
What would change our mind: If walkable, mixed-use towns are no less lonely than car-dependent sprawl once income is controlled for.
Read the full synthesis: How do we fix the loneliness epidemic?