People Who Live In Suburbs: Classy, Icky, or Dudes?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (4414 of them)

Ooooh max, did you know that I have a copy of this book?

http://cf.geekdo-images.com/images/pic29362_md.jpg

I already promised it to someone, but you could see it if you want?

Octavia Butler's gonna be piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiised (Laurel), Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:38 (twelve years ago) link

whoa cool book!!

max, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:40 (twelve years ago) link

gamers: icky or dudes

mookieproof, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:41 (twelve years ago) link

america could build more places like this:
http://www.welcometosantabarbara.com/Beautiful-Santa-Barbara.jpg

and fewer places like this:
http://media.merchantcircle.com/6263965/mallpic_full.jpeg

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:42 (twelve years ago) link

that's the worst I could find, I couldn't find a pic of the goleta big box stores because who the hell would take pictures of them

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:43 (twelve years ago) link

google streetview?

sarahel, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:44 (twelve years ago) link

That first one looks like an overly-bright approximation of real spanish-roofed cities with bullshit. The second one is ugly but probably more practical, sorry bro

mh, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:45 (twelve years ago) link

places with buses and crosswalks?

sarahel, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:46 (twelve years ago) link

lol the 2nd one isn't more practical unless you like shopping at a total of 6 big box stores and only eating at chain restaurants, maybe you do so idk

http://maps.google.com/maps?q=goleta+home+depot&hl=en&ll=34.428534,-119.8732&spn=0.000009,0.009645&z=17&vpsrc=6&layer=c&cbll=34.428534,-119.8732&panoid=2Fe3eA63EdgxtTsx50Gu7A&cbp=12,350.56,,0,0

it looks like every other off-the-freeway strip mall in ca, could be anywhere today

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:47 (twelve years ago) link

That is disturbingly monoculture, but I don't see any local gardens or such in the first one, either! Meaning both are importing food, presumably, but one has a distribution chain that probably is minimizing the shit out of transportation and packaging costs, wal-mart style. So the one with public transportation and an infrastructure has that locked down, it's just more depressing. Your first one looks like it has ~suburb density~

mh, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:49 (twelve years ago) link

the 1st one looks like a wealthy area on the outskirts of an urban area. like there are definitely parts of Berkeley and Oakland that might as well be suburban. it would take people living in those houses longer to get to the 7-11 or grocery store than some suburbanites

sarahel, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:52 (twelve years ago) link

Also, clay roof stuff is awesome but limited to the southern climates as it's a locally-sourced solar-reflective-and-dissipating material. Which means it is probably awesome in that area, but not everyone is living in SoCal so the aesthetics are kind of a regional affectation.

mh, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:53 (twelve years ago) link

by your logic shouldn't we just have one store per city? the ag in the region is mostly oranges and wine. most of the produce comes from...california. it has a 98 on walkscore, and they're increasing the low-income housing downtown. atm many people *can* walk to work, they just don't cause they're rich and lazy.

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:53 (twelve years ago) link

like there are definitely parts of Berkeley and Oakland that might as well be suburban.

i love berkeley but dude, it is, literally, a suburb.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:55 (twelve years ago) link

population density? you haven't been talking about "what works for a certain community, in a certain clime, in a certain region." You've been talking about what is economical, overall. I understand if you mean to say that all people should move to temperate climates, but that is unreasonable for about eighty other reasons other than housing! And it's a major upset in the American populace, let alone the world populace.

mh, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:55 (twelve years ago) link

berkeley's a suburb but it's also
a. a college town
b. regionally a business district

it's pretty dense (in all senses)

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 04:57 (twelve years ago) link

population density? you haven't been talking about "what works for a certain community, in a certain clime, in a certain region." You've been talking about what is economical, overall. I understand if you mean to say that all people should move to temperate climates, but that is unreasonable for about eighty other reasons other than housing! And it's a major upset in the American populace, let alone the world populace.

people walk to work / take local transit in small towns throughout the world.

I'm not arguing that all (or any) cities should look like santa barbara, I'm saying a fairly dense (currently densifying, actually) well-planned medium-sized city isn't some crazy 'only in europe' idea. ps santa barbara is far from perfect for a million reasons and you couldn't pay me to live there - but european tourists pay large amounts of money to fly across the world to visit santa barbara. they do not pay large amounts of money to fly across the world to visit the big box stores in goleta.

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:04 (twelve years ago) link

tourists fly across the world to play golf; we should build more golf courses

sarahel, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:06 (twelve years ago) link

we should not be encouraging anyone to fly around the world

max, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:06 (twelve years ago) link

planes should be banned

max, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:06 (twelve years ago) link

okay otm

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:06 (twelve years ago) link

if you want to go to europe, theres a rowboat over there *points vaguely toward dock*

max, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:06 (twelve years ago) link

max ur turning into ned *disrobes*

D-40, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:07 (twelve years ago) link

what I'm trying to say is tourists should want to take the future cross-atlantic high-speed rail

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:07 (twelve years ago) link

but you have to admit, a great deal of practical area would have to exist that people wouldn't necessarily want to visit if they didn't have to! you're conflating aesthetic appeal with environmental/economic viability. areas can definitely mix the two, but it is a stretch.

mh, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:07 (twelve years ago) link

would you like to visit "the bridges of madison county"

mh, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:07 (twelve years ago) link

only if there is light rail going over the bridges

max, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:10 (twelve years ago) link

someone link to the part of this thread where jon starts having a tantrum

all shitley (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:11 (twelve years ago) link

People Who Live In Suburbs: Classy, Icky, or Dudes?

k3vin k., Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:13 (twelve years ago) link

but you have to admit, a great deal of practical area would have to exist that people wouldn't necessarily want to visit if they didn't have to! you're conflating aesthetic appeal with environmental/economic viability. areas can definitely mix the two, but it is a stretch.

well I'm on a totally different page right now! not talking about economics or incentives or whatever. I think our nation's current built landscape - 90% concrete, almost no sense of 'place', nothing built to exist 100 years from now - is basically a tragedy, and it was possible to build medium density suburbs w/ a sense of permanence and character without breaking the bank, but we took the cheap fast big route.

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:13 (twelve years ago) link

But we didn't tho

let me save you some time - yes, you are probably sanctimonious (jjjusten), Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:22 (twelve years ago) link

Not to be glib but my house was built in 1948 and isn't going anywhere, many if my neighbors have houses from the 1920s - they turn 100 in the next ten years! Not all suburbs are what you think they are

let me save you some time - yes, you are probably sanctimonious (jjjusten), Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:23 (twelve years ago) link

plz go find the last post I wrote when I said 'streetcar suburbs are generally nice'

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:24 (twelve years ago) link

ppl itt not really getting the whole idea of "generalizations", they tend to have these things called "exceptions"

k3vin k., Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:25 (twelve years ago) link

if you try to build for a 1000 years, you just end up with some ozymandius tragedy bullshit. might as well just make it disposable.

traumatic jarts injury hotline (Hunt3r), Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:25 (twelve years ago) link

the part of this thread where jon starts having a tantrum

wow

mookieproof, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:37 (twelve years ago) link

Not to be glib but my house was built in 1948 and isn't going anywhere, many if my neighbors have houses from the 1920s - they turn 100 in the next ten years! Not all suburbs are what you think they are

my quote: 'streetcar suburbs predate the car, and even today, without the streetcars, are noticeably more pleasant places than post-streetcar suburbs.'

again I have this extremely narrowminded view on suburbs, I mean definitely, as long as you aren't reading any of my posts. suburbs can be a lot of things depending on when they were built and where both within america and within the world, the word can mean different things in different contexts. I live in queens. historically queens was entirely a suburb of manhattan. today, to a large extent it still is, but it is 'complicated' because I live in a part of queens that's denser than san francisco. but there are incredibly 'suburban' parts too. there are detached houses and lawns not particularly far from me. and big box stores. it's not simple, at all. that's why I'm actually really fascinated by the borough.

I've said this like 100 times but again - generally when I talk about suburbs, I'm using the word in the sense of 'low density, car-oriented developed area' not 'area that is outside the downtown area of a city'. the first definition might not ring true for every 'suburb' in the country but it's got a pretty clear meaning.

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:41 (twelve years ago) link

sleeptime

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:42 (twelve years ago) link

agreed on streetcar etc etc

I think the parts where iatee isn't short-sheeting himself, we are giving him short shrift.

mh, Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:45 (twelve years ago) link

hey, I went to that SB board game store a few months ago!

the wheelie king (wk), Thursday, 8 September 2011 05:59 (twelve years ago) link

ppl itt not really getting the whole idea of "generalizations", they tend to have these things called "exceptions"

except that, I don't know the statistics, but it feels like those strawman mcmansion gated community + box store developments are actually the exception in a way, and that large swaths of suburbia are 50 years old or older. At least in California.

the wheelie king (wk), Thursday, 8 September 2011 06:02 (twelve years ago) link

gah now I have to turn on my computer and post one more time

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 06:03 (twelve years ago) link

Btw the area I live in didn't have streetcars

let me save you some time - yes, you are probably sanctimonious (jjjusten), Thursday, 8 September 2011 06:05 (twelve years ago) link

Just to be clear - mainly because I am on the other side of a big old river.

let me save you some time - yes, you are probably sanctimonious (jjjusten), Thursday, 8 September 2011 06:06 (twelve years ago) link

then your area is generally not nice obv.

the wheelie king (wk), Thursday, 8 September 2011 06:08 (twelve years ago) link

a streetcar named derpsire

buzza, Thursday, 8 September 2011 06:11 (twelve years ago) link

except that, I don't know the statistics, but it feels like those strawman mcmansion gated community + box store developments are actually the exception in a way, and that large swaths of suburbia are 50 years old or older. At least in California.

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_payZfX5rZ08/SZT8yMcoJJI/AAAAAAAAADA/gOrL2s-FVus/s1600-h/nat-geo-sprawl-map-2001.jpg

so that was just a decade - the 00s were worse.

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 06:20 (twelve years ago) link

hmm not showing up

http://i.imgur.com/h62Dc.jpg

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 06:24 (twelve years ago) link

note that you're sorta right about LA! we pretty much invented it.

iatee, Thursday, 8 September 2011 06:27 (twelve years ago) link

yeah, I guess I have a skewed view, because the places I've lived are mostly purple on that map

the wheelie king (wk), Thursday, 8 September 2011 06:29 (twelve years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.