Steve Wright wrote:

As a planner and planning storyteller, I love walkable places; mixed-use, wide sidewalks; bike paths; premium transit; parks; transit-oriented development; compact development; and the like. But for many years, I wasn’t good at practicing what I preached.

Then COVID hit and I could work from home, so I wasn’t in the car to commute to an office.

...

I took advantage of living between two major urban corridors—Miami’s Calle Ocho and Coral Way—and walked to pharmacies, markets, hardware stores, and other places for daily needs.

...

When we wanted to go someplace outdoors and different, we drove. But we did what planners strive for in 24-7 downtowns and Main Streets: We parked the car once and walked—all over Brickell, Coconut Grove, Miami Beach, Coral Gables, and beyond.

When it was safe to travel to Manhattan for a major project in May (after I got the second dose of the COVID vaccine), I vowed to not take a taxi, car service, or rideshare…even from JFK. I used transit

I stopped in Jackson Heights on the way into Manhattan and walked all over that diverse neighborhood. Instead of using two train connections, I walked further to catch a train that would get me to within five blocks of my destination. I used the ferry to go to Long Island City and I ran along all the relatively-new public spaces and parks on the East River, with spectacular skyline views to the west.

Back home, we are very close to transitioning from a two-car to one-car family. 

The payoff for all of this?

Today, I weigh 175 pounds. I just had a physical and dozens of measures of health are in the upper (good) percentile for a 55+ man.

A year and a half ago, I weighed 310 pounds...

I do the steps now. My joints don’t hurt. I don’t sweat standing still, and I haven’t been sick since I started to take advantage of the urban lifestyle, healthy living plan.

Compact development and investing in existing Main Streets and the city core works.