Not Your Mother's Suburb: Remaking Communities for a More Diverse Population.

The urban lawyer Pub Date : 2014-01-01
Amanda C Micklow, Mildred E Warner
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Abstract

The United States is a suburban nation with a majority of Americans living and working in this landscape. But the suburb is more than a physical location; it is also a social production. Built upon a middle class, white, nuclear family ideal, the suburb is now diversifying demographically and economically, yet zoning ordinances and the built environment continue to reflect this outdated ideal. Today's suburb is not your mother's suburb. We argue that these demographic changes create both a point of rupture that challenges traditional land use regulations and actual uses of space, and an opening for communities to embrace and plan for new residents. In order to respond to the needs of a diversifying suburban population, communities need to challenge the underlying assumptions of traditional zoning ordinances - the separation of uses and preference for single-family housing. We present an agenda for the future that includes planning responses that rethink the zoning hierarchy, promote new forms of densification, move beyond restrictive family definitions, and experiment with new forms of service delivery.

不是你母亲的郊区:为更多样化的人口重建社区。
美国是一个郊区国家,大多数美国人生活和工作在郊区。但郊区不仅仅是一个物理位置;它也是一种社会产品。建立在中产阶级,白人,核心家庭的理想基础上,郊区现在在人口和经济上多样化,但分区条例和建筑环境继续反映这种过时的理想。今天的郊区不是你母亲的郊区。我们认为,这些人口变化既创造了一个突破点,挑战了传统的土地使用法规和空间的实际用途,也为社区拥抱和规划新居民提供了一个机会。为了应对郊区人口多样化的需求,社区需要挑战传统分区条例的基本假设-分离用途和优先考虑单户住宅。我们提出了一个未来的议程,其中包括重新思考分区等级,促进新形式的密集化,超越限制性的家庭定义,并尝试新的服务提供形式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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