What we need are communities that aren't built by developers looking to make a quick buck, but rather by the people who are going to live in them
Uh not actually. if you sit people down and get them to vote on improvements a lot of stuff they vote for will backfire due to unforseen consequences. For example, people will say "wider roads" are good, except in practice, road widening is bad.
http://plazaperspective.com/road-widening/And adding extra roads to try and increase capacity can also slow traffic:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braess%27s_paradoxI'll just leave these as examples. We
do need experts and specialists for planning because "what everyone wants" is not the same as "best thing to make everyone happy". You need modelling and complex math to work out what's actually going to happen from all the simple changes.
The point here is that the developers built these places then people
decided to move there. they weren't herded at gunpoint. if you let those same people
vote on improvements they're going to vote for bullshit like the wider roads and adding more roads. Or more sports stadiums. They're not going to vote to spend their rates money on building train stations, or probably public amenities such as a free public library. They'll vote to lay cable for cable TV into their personal houses before they vote for
that.
it's the same with art: things happen in fiction that viewers don't like. but they keep watching. If the creators listened to fan letters and only did "crowd pleasing" things then the show would be off the air within one sesaon.
Hell, you got Trump from giving people a choice.