Showing posts with label Sprawl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sprawl. Show all posts

Friday, December 26, 2008

Rebuilding the Suburbs

Earlier this month I wrote about suburbs turning into tomorrows slums as the number of foreclosures increase, higher gas prices, and more demand for walkable neighborhoods.

Mesa, Arizona is doing something about this and wants to rebuild their image from a suburb known for sprawl into a livable community.

How do you remake a city of sprawl. That’s exactly what the city of Mesa, Arizona is trying to do, according to The Economist. Mesa has experienced tremendous growth in the past several decades, surging from 7,000 in 1940) to roughly 450,000 today. While many people still haven’t heard of it, Mesa numbers among the nation’s 50 largest cities, bigger than Minneapolis, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, or Miami. It’s a classic “edge city” which, as The Economist writes, consists of: “Mile after mile of strip malls and tract houses, whose evocative names and fanciful architecture cannot disguise the fact that they are large, stucco-covered boxes, dominate the landscape.”

Now Mesa is working hard to turn itself into a more liveable city. To bolster its economy, it’s constructing a new airport downtown (to better connect itself to the world - recall the Phoenix-Tuscon area is one of the world ’s 40 biggest mega-regions) in an effort to remake itself as what University of North Carolina’s John Kasarda calls an “aerotropolis” – the thinking being that air transport today is analogous to what canals, railroads, and cars were to past urban systems. Even more interesting is the city is investing heavily in improving its quality of place - urban design, mixed use development, strict building heights, increased density, warehouse conversions, and an extensive network of urban neighborhood parks in an effort to improve its ability to lure talent and jobs.

Read more here.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

What's Wrong With those Houses?

Yesterday, my 2nd grade class went on a field trip to Des Moines. We had a great time going through the Science Center and the State Historical Building.

One of my students asked an interesting question on our way to Des Moines when we passed a housing development in one of the eastern Suburbs.

What is wrong with those houses? They all look exactly alike. Who would want to live there?
I just shook my head and said I don't know.


Here's a quote to ponder from James Howard Kunstler...
You have to wonder: have Americans forgotten how to build dignified houses, or are we simply not dignified people anymore?