Neighborhood Strategy
A neighborhood thrives when multiple Architects invest in it. Service coverage, living units, transportation, offices, plants — no single Architect optimises a whole neighborhood alone. This is the most important strategic shift from a single-player city-builder.
What makes a strong neighborhood
- Occupancy rate. How many residents live here?
- Decoration store. How much beautification is done using map assets, structure ornaments, etc.
- Service coverage. A mix of essentials, health, public service, and entertainment.
- Living density. Enough residential capacity for the Uppies your services attract.
- Commerce bonds. Offices placed in other neighborhoods that reciprocate.
- Greenery. Plants and gardens raise Wellbeing and signal a desirable area.
- Transportation. Vehicles parked on properties signal connectivity. Higher-capacity vehicles matter more.
Mayors
Each neighborhood can elect a Mayor. Mayoral functions are expanding — early features set the foundation for deeper local governance over time.