Tag Archive: community

That Community Feeling

I live in the suburbs, like a lot of people, The question is can we fix them?  Many ask, “What is wrong?”  The sense of belonging, happiness, loneliness and also the waste factor.  If your downtown is 5-10 minute drive away, you are car bound and miss out on the many opportunities for that happiness and community engagement.

The book “Thrive: Finding Happiness the Blue Zone Way” by Dan Buettner, is trying to point a way to happiness by making life simpler and easier. He points to Mexico, Singapore, Denmark, and San Luis Obispo, CA. His first book The Blue Zone” covers many more countries and shows that the simpler the lifestyle, the happier people tend to be. In happy countries people ride bikes more, eat simpler native foods, sleep more, and are more family oriented. Something Americans are just now rediscovering. “During the past 35 years, while Americans have worked to increase our income by 70 percent and the size of our houses have doubled, we’ve become no happier as a nation.”

Parade Magazine did a nice job of highlighting what is good in San Luis Obispo in the article “You’ll wish you were here.”

So if we take the key parameters apart and understand that many communities could do similar things. It doesn’t take extraordinary measures, but mainly a desire to go do it.

On an individual level, one can focus himself on those things in his control; trying to take more time with family and friends, enjoy and eat real food (not fast food) with family, reduce your debt, take walks in your community, bike more, drive less. When you buy something make sure you need it and buy high qualify so it lasts a long time.

Within the community we can rethink downtown; close off a street or two to create a plaza or walking areas, frequent the interesting local stores and shops and restaurants, set up modest local public transportation, drive the adoption or development of mixed use buildings with parking, retail, restaurants, and residential living, begin to foster green space and parks, gardens sports fields around town inside and on the perimeter of town. And begin to look at the basic services that are offered by the town for the community and for true environmental impact. Also a careful look at the utilities and how the town can help reduce energy and improve water, waste water, and storm water usage.  This is not an individual’s effort; this is for the town political leaders, land and building owners, and the residents at large. There is so much that can be done and the net effect will be a happier, healthier and more prosperous town.

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Transforming the Suburbs

Can we transform the Suburbs to become sustainable communities?

First you must ask, what is a sustainable community?  One that generates its own Energy? Its own Water? Its own Food? Has all its transportation needs met environmentally?   Or is it one that can claim a carbon neutral or negative foot print?

What we have today in the suburbs is a place called home that you can drive to and from your friends and every other activity you need to do.  It is the “drive by” community. This all started in Levittown, NY, a town on Long Island that was built right after WWII.  It was built to house the veterans who were anxious to get a home out side the city and start their new life.  The mass housing development became the template for thousands of sub divisions everywhere.

With the massive shift away from City centers came an explosion of expressways and the downfall of trains and street cars. Strip malls replaced neighborhood city shops.  Uncontrolled, unregulated expansion occurred everywhere, versus deliberate city and community planning.

This led to a suburb that has no sole no character, no sense of community..  The density is not there to allow for efficient public transport systems, infrastructure, and community services.  But the real loss was the closeness of people and community that cares about itself and its residents.

Suburban US has one big problem;  the lack of a center for people. An area where they can shop, dine, entertain, live and experience the neighborhood all on foot. A school system, parks and community services that are all within reach.   All that is walk-able and bike-able. Park the car and walk or use public transport. This is one big first step that is needed to create a  sustainability.  Interesting to note that in the NY Times this weekend, the rating of a town walk-ability index has become a good indicator of potential real estate value.

We know how to generate energy and make more efficient each house.  We know how to collect and use gray water and rain water.  We know how to develop natural waste water systems.  We know how to build electric street car systems.  We know how to grow food locally, and we know how to build very clean energy efficient public transport systems.  Basically there is nothing stopping any developer to build a new sustainable town.

What is missing from the existing suburbs today is the density of housing.   A sustainable community needs the right density. Dense enough so the residents haves easy access to all the businesses, retailers, services, schools, parks, and opportunities.  The public utility infrastructure is also best served by this moderate density.  It can be deployed and maintained at a fraction of the cost of traditional suburban Sprawl.  People feel connected and part of something “the Community.”  Right around the town are parks and agriculture and what ever facilities that require open land such as sports fields recreational parks.  The model small towns of Europe are organized this way.

So how do we go forward to build that community in the suburbs.  Many challenges exist. Some experts say it is not possible, that we must bulldoze many of the suburbs.  But there are a few models that we can follow, that have been tried out in several towns in and around the country. Which I will elaborate on in the coming posts.  These are ideas that need to be flushed out and tried as we get a grip on our energy, water, food  resources and build communities that matter.

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