If it causes traffic problems or a public nuisance, yes.
Extremely bad, in towns and between towns.
Some problems that came with the growth of towns and cities include overcrowding, increased pollution, inadequate infrastructure (such as water supply and sanitation), traffic congestion, social inequality, and strain on public services like education and healthcare.
People moving into them.
Poor infrastructure.
One problem of modern towns that comes to mind is motorized vehicular traffic, which require attention to paved streets, parking, traffic lights, signs, and ways to deal with accidents. Citizens of modern towns also demand a higher level of service from the towns. Modern towns have more integrated organization of sewage and drainage systems. Medieval towns used separation of human waste from graywater, with the human waste being used for fertilizer and the graywater running off in gutters. Modern towns provide more education, where in the Middle Ages it tended to be provided by Church organizations, though there were medieval state run schools, which some people fail to remember. Modern towns also provided emergency services such as hospitals, which were provided by the Church in medieval society, where they were provided at all.
the main diseases caused by pollution are such as lung and skin cancers
The growth of trade in europe caused towns to grow by markets
Increased Growth Of Towns And Cities ....
Cities were built(most places in medieval Europe was towns)
Increased Growth Of Towns And Cities ....
Major towns in Canada, such as Toronto, are cosmopolitan, and quite busy. Larger cities have more pollution, as well as traffic and people in general.