by MarkJ » Sun 23 Nov 2008, 11:32:22
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hile keeping the poor locked up in cities, the federal government helped lock the poor out of suburbs. In the 1920s, the federal Department of Commerce drafted the State Zoning Enabling Act (SZEA). SZEA, which was quickly enacted by the states, granted municipalities power to regulate the location and use of buildings. Suburbs quickly used their zoning powers to keep out the poor. For example, suburban zoning laws frequently ban apartment construction to keep out "undesirables," or they require minimum lot sizes to keep out less expensive homes. Just as government keeps the poor in cities, it keeps the poor out of suburbs. Either way, cities become the dumping ground for the poor.
Many of our suburban zoning laws in regards to lot size, road frontage, setback and buffer between properties are due to the lot size necessary for well, septic system, perk/evaporation/drainage, snow plowing, spring thaw/run-off etc. The larger the home (bathrooms/occupants), the larger the lot you need. Plus people want more room for parking, privacy, future expansion, garages, decks and gardens. The scale (home size in relation to lot size) has a lot to do with it as well. Many people hate the McMansion look of a very large home on small lot.
The cost of suburban building lots, acreage, recent construction homes and new construction homes has priced many of the income challenged, credit challenged and transportation challenged out of the suburbs, villages and rural areas. Much of the suburban and rural land is owned by developers, builders and investors like myself, family, friends and business associates. Since many homes are built by developers and investors, they're not going to waste valuable land building small low margin homes.
Zoning laws limiting/prohibiting subdivision, maximum subdivision, multi-unit housing, manufactured homes, small homes, small lots etc make living cheaply less possible. Without zoning laws and local codes prohibiting these type of structures, blight etc the countryside would be over populated and/or look like a huge trailer park. Some regions with limited zoning are a good example of a bad example.
Income/Credit/Vehicle challenged people are generally renters, so they remain in, or migrate to the areas with apartment buildings and multi-family homes, which are generally in the cities. When we bought a mobile home park for a future development, many of the residents moved into city apartments.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')igh taxes, high crime, and poor schools are less a cause of suburban sprawl than a result of suburban sprawl. This is so for a variety of reasons.
First, if a city's middle class migrates en masse to suburbia, its tax base will be smaller, and other things being equal, it will have to raise taxes or reduce services. So other things being equal, migration to suburbia actually causes higher taxes and poor services
It's really a vicious cycle. Most cities can't offer their citizens the same quality of life they have in the towns, villages, suburbs and rural areas due to physical & financial limitations necessary for tax base growth. As they raise taxes & cut or eliminate services, more people flee the cities. Many people without sufficient income(s), credit and savings remain behind since they can't sell and/or can't afford to cut & run.
Residential/Commercial/Industrial growth happens outside the cities since that's where the large building lots and large tracts of undeveloped/underdeveloped acreage and farmland exists. Many of our shopping malls, stores, factories and other businesses need and incredible amount of land for the massive single story structures, warehouses, truck/trailer parking, customer parking, employee parking etc. Some industry needs access to roads, rail, water (rivers) as well. Many of our businesses simply outgrew the cities.
Suburban homes, townhouses, housing developments, senior housing etc need acreage as well.
The high property taxes, small lots, close neighbors and cost of demolition, labor, hauling, landfill fees, lead abatement, asbestos abatement etc make building on undeveloped building lots and acreage outside the cites a no-brainer. I've spent more money on lead and asbestos abatement than the cost of demolition on some city structures I've demolished. For the same or less money, I could buy multiple building lots or acreage outside the cities.
Sprawl is free market driven. For example, many of our family, friends and customers want large recent/new construction homes on acreage and/or they want to build a custom home or vacation home on acreage. Many want homes the lakes, on the rivers or in areas with views of the lakes, rivers, fields, wooded land, mountains, valleys etc. They want privacy, low crime/noise/traffic, good school systems, access to four seasons recreation, access to suburban shopping/jobs, reasonable property taxes, room for expansion and room for decks, garages, barns, gardens etc. Most of these features just don't exist in the cities at any cost.
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Cities used to be incredibly nasty places, with homes, mills and factories belching filth into the air, dumping toxic waste onto the ground, into storm sewers, rivers ponds, lakes. Humans and animals used private property, streets and alleys as toilets. Many regions are still cleaning up the industrial nasties left behind by the mills and factories.
Many of the older homes and buildings were unsafe due to the lack of building/fire/safety/mechanical codes, fuse boxes, light gauge wiring, knob & tube wiring, lead paint, lead piping, lead solder, lead valve packings, lead flanges, asbestos shingles, asbestos siding, asbestos pipe insulation, asbestos combustion chambers, asbestos plaster etc. The old balloon framed homes were fire hazards as well. Many of the cities, buildings, homes, streets, sidewalks, water/sewer/drain systems are too old and they're in really bad shape.
To add insult to injury, many older city homes are uninsulated, poorly insulated, poorly ventilated, have single pane windows, grossly oversized, grossly inefficient heating systems and need re-wiring, re-plumbing, improvements to foundations, drainage/waterproofing, structure, roofing etc. Many of the old multi story buildings and mills have upper floors that can't handle loads due to lack of building codes and building knowledge.
Many cities have too many negatives like high property taxes, old houses (see above), small houses, small/nonexistent yards, no parking, limited parking, no off-street parking, no room for expansion, poor school systems, close neighbors, higher crime, blight, vandalism, vacant/abandoned/condemned homes/buildings, noise, traffic, pollution, smells, garbage, poor people, no privacy, lack of views, subsidized housing, apartment buildings, multi-family homes, slumlords, vacant downtown sections...