Coronavirus has emptied public spaces – but it could reinvent the high street | Anna Minton
Business models reliant on maximum footfall are at odds with social distancing, leaving space for local shops and mutual aid
With most local shops shuttered and online sales booming, it's easy to imagine that coronavirus will deal a mortal blow to the high street. The images of empty public spaces that have come to define this crisis could be a warning of what life will be like after the lockdown, when people will fear crowds and social distancing will continue, either through self-policing or government directive.
The decline of public life is one of the biggest casualties of Covid-19. Zoom, Amazon and Netflix are unlikely to replace our human craving for it. Public discourse has shrunk to encompass the virus, while our daily lives have retreated into the private domestic sphere. Streets and public places, high streets in particular, are the physical setting for public life, and the impact of the virus is that life lived outside - socialising, shopping, working - has been almost entirely curtailed.
Social preferences, economic realities and government policy will shape the future of the high street
Related: 'It's really shocking': UK cities refusing to reveal extent of pseudo-public space
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