Well, thats the thing, we basically threw the suburban experiment from alpha test to full on production widespread all over the place without testing it. Basically this model depends on continuous growth to be sustainable. The problem is, municipalities only have so much space. And when growth slows or stops, you run out of developer money to keep up with your maintenance (or at least be able to stay out of deficit over the long run, over the repair lifecycle) We don't get things to grow organically, we master plan it and build it in pre-planned phases without always thinking about addressing some of the basic needs of the residents.
And yeah, motorcycles shops suck for getting repairs done, esp for a service where i need to leave it all day, or most of the day. I don't have an easy way to get there unless i have a car or i pay for an uber. Should it be like that? Probably not. We should "force" people to own a car (which require insurance and a lot of other costs attached to them), but places should be accessible through other means. A lot of people do NOT enjoy driving. It's a chore. Which means they won't pay as much attention or put in the effort to be as proficient as possible while driving. Making it more dangerous for everybody involved.
Its tough for sure. But whats the better choice, smaller size, more affordable builds to have more affordable housing or we can keep doing the same thing we've been doing non-stop and have super expensive condos or single family homes and increasing car traffic ad naseum.
The big box wasteland design has too much segregation to make it easily accessible to the residents that live around it. It's often fenced out, removing all walkable shortcuts. Or there's no sidewalk to get there, and doesn't feel "safe" to walk to, etc etc etc. The other thing we deal with is that most of those are usually over 2-3km away so people won't consider the walk. It's not like i'm going to change that on a moto forum. But voting ford means taking several steps in the wrong direction.