by kublikhan » Thu 19 Jul 2012, 20:56:30
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'O')ne advantage that the suburbs have is their low density and wood frame/stick construction. It will be pretty easy to re-vision, de-construct, and re-construct a (stupid, poorly sited, poor designed) single family home from its 1/8 acre lot into a larger multi-family, multi-use building. That New Building would then share the advantages of older city structures (more energy efficient, shared multi-purpose spaces, security, community) with the advantages of modern construction (thermal/sound insulation, flexible/creative building material, airiness, lightness).
This process is already underway. Suburbs are increasing in population size, density, and as employment centers. Light rail is making a comeback. Meanwhile, many US cities have shrinking growth rates, sometimes even a declining population. I am not convinced suburbs are going to die off anymore than cities are.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he combined growth rate for cities in the 100 largest metro areas dropped to a little more than half that from the prior decade. The aggregate picture obscures the continued strong relationship between city and suburban growth within metropolitan areas. cities and suburbs increasingly share common attributes, both across and within our major metro areas.
Traditional downtowns account for only one in five jobs in metro areas. By contrast, more than 45 percent of metropolitan jobs now lie at least 10 miles from the downtown core—outside the Beltway, if you will. Employment decentralization blurred the traditional economic distinctions between cities and suburbs; in doing that, it helped blur their demographic distinctions as more groups settled close to where the jobs are.
Affordable housing is suburbanizing, too. A mixture of policy changes like fair housing laws and subsidies for low-income homeownership, combined with the aging of suburban infrastructure, has made suburban housing more accommodating of racial and ethnic diversity. Nearly half of all voucher holders, and more than half of all rental units priced below HUD’s Fair Market Rents, are located in suburbs.
We need not an exclusively city or suburban perspective on the census, but rather a metropolitan approach to managing America’s continuing demographic transformation.To conclude, there’s not only an economic imperative to think and act more metropolitan in America, but also an emerging demographic basis for doing so. The 2010 Census shows that suburbs and cities share increasingly common attributes and associated challenges.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')reas with the fastest growth included suburbs of metropolitan areas in the South and West, such as the region around Orlando, Fla.; the "Research Triangle" area of North Carolina; the northern Virginia exurbs of Washington, D.C.; and the areas surrounding such cities as Las Vegas, Atlanta, and several cities in Texas (Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, San Antonio, and Austin). As in previous decades, many rural areas lost population, including much of the Great Plains and northern and central Appalachia
Within metropolitan areas, most U.S. population growth during the past century has taken place in suburban areas, rather than central cities.