>you cunt
>take a picture of the view from your window or your street
34°C, and the sun is a deadly laser
>you cunt
>take a picture of the view from your window or your street
34°C, and the sun is a deadly laser
no thank you, i dont want to get doxxed
no thank you, i dont want to get doxxed
whats the point of that kind of pavement? its doesnt look like some ancient place
Cringe and bluepilled
It's dark and the window is closed. A picture from a few days ago.
>Japan is not third wor-
Make you shake when riding a bike
Now it's winter here and I miss 34°C
If I were born in Japan I would sleep all day, everything in Japan looks comfy
What part of that picture is third world?
Right now it's dark outside
~5 hours ago
I wish i knew why phoneposting makes pictures do this
Setagaya-ku is one of the comfiest neighborhoods in japan. Pic unrelated.
Walking home, too bloody cold
This was yesterday, now it's dark outside
-15°C now
Don't have one but that's basically the view I have
used to be cheaper than asphalt back in the day, and may still be in some cases, it's also super low maintenance
it also requires less waterworks, if you use asphalt or concrete, you need to build a drain system in case you get flooding or heavy rain, while cobble streets just let the water permeate
that road might be old as fuck too, even if the buildings around look somewhat new
>the buildings around look somewhat new
lmfao
He's not kidding. It's third world architecture, very common throughout Latin America.
Can you tell exactly when those buildings were built by just their look? They're clearly super utilitarian, a warehouse built in 1960 and one built today look the same. There are new buildings being built all over the world that intentionally use old-looking aesthetics, and some others built 50 years ago with the intention of doing some groundbreaking appearance.
Also, cobblestone streets are a staple of pre-industrialization infrastructure, so comparatively, those buildings are "new"
Paraná?
MG farm
Parece a mata de araucárias
Cute, I like how everything in Japan is so compact. I wish we had some of that here.
Why's the pavement so narrow?
>What part of that picture is third world?
- Corrugated plastic sheets
- Uncoated concrete wall
- Messy street wiring
- Windows with security bars
Sorry nothing personal, but this is literally 3rd world tier.
COMFY KINO
>and the window is closed
nigga like open the window, is not hard kek
a couple weeks ago but it looks exactly the same
Is it common to have security bars on windows? This is something I associate with dangerous third world countries like Brazil, or black neighborhoods in the US. You don't see it here in Canada.
>You don't see it here in Canada
Not true. It just depends on where in the city you are. I know a few areas in Vancouver that has them.
>I know a few areas in Vancouver that has them.
Such as? And are they on businesses or homes? I sometimes see see them on high-risk businesses like pharmacies, but never on a home, not even in north end Winnipeg