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The Architecture of Loneliness

Modern cities are engineered for efficiency, not connection. We have built an infrastructure of isolation.

Walk through any modern metropolitan center and you will notice a specific design pattern: wide roads, narrow sidewalks, and public squares replaced by private commercial zones. We are building cities that actively discourage spontaneous human interaction.

When we privatize public space, we eliminate the 'third place'—the areas that are neither work nor home where community naturally forms. The loneliness epidemic isn't just a psychological phenomenon; it is an architectural one. We cannot solve isolation with therapy alone when our physical environment is designed to keep us apart.

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