This is an aside titled 'What Will Save the Suburbs?' dated 1/13/09

Allison Arieff doesn’t update her NYT blog very often, but when she does it’s always thought-provoking. Her latest post is about the near-permeance of suburban landscapes: “In urban areas, there’s rich precedent for the transformation or reuse of abandoned lots or buildings. Vacant lots have been converted into pocket parks, community gardens and pop-up stores (or they remain vacant, anxiously awaiting recovery and subsequent conversion into high-end office space condos). Old homes get divided into apartments, old factories into lofts, old warehouses into retail… But similar transformation within the carefully delineated form of a subdivision is not so simple. These insta-neighborhoods were not designed or built for flexibility or change… The houses within them are big, but not generally as big as, say, Victorian mansions in San Francisco that can be subdivided into apartments. So they’re not great candidates for transformation into multi-family rental housing.” (Previously.)

Posted by Joanne on Jan. 13, 2009 Tagged: , , ,

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