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QUOTE— Author
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Aging in Community |
Retrofitting Existing Communities
Suburban
America is a phenomenon made possible by the automobile and
cheap energy. Post-World War II residential developments, like
Levittown in New York, promised returning GI’s a sense of space,
affordability, family life, and upward mobility. Most Americans
currently live in suburban neighborhoods, and the suburban way
of life — now an integral part of the “American Dream” —has
become deeply embedded in the American consciousness.
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Levittown, PA circa 1958 |
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The underside of suburban life has always been the social
isolation it creates and —for want of a better word — its
blandness. Factor in an impending worldwide energy crisis,
and it becomes clear that the current rate of suburban growth is
also unsustainable.1
But considering the huge investment in infrastructure that the
suburbs represent, can we — even if
we wanted to — simply abandon them?
A hopeful, countervailing view comes from
Dan Chiras and Dave Wann, who believe “most neighborhoods have
the raw ingredients and resources to become sustainable,
resilient, and healthy.” In Superbia!, “a book of
possibilities for reconnecting people with both neighbors and
nature,” they offer concrete recommendations (see inset
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“for social and physical changes to enrich the neighborhoods we
already live in.”
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Superbia! Checklist2
Easy Steps |
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- Sponsor community dinners.
- Establish a community newsletter, bulletin board, and community roster.
- Establish a neighborhood watch program.
- Start neighborhood investment clubs, community sports activities, and restoration projects.
- Form weekly discussion groups.
- Establish neighborhood baby-sitting coop.
- Form an organic food co-op.
- Create car or van pools for commuting to and from work.
- Create a neighborhood work-share program.
- Create a mission statement.
- Create an asset inventory.
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See also
Bolder Steps and Boldest Steps |
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Observing that “many neighborhoods are
currently programmed for dysfunction,” the authors do not
minimize the major barriers that “limit options in the suburbs…
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The physical layout of
suburbs, which results in social isolation and resource
consumption (for example, lots of driving and high fuel
bills).
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The "mold" of suburban
culture, which reinforces extravagant, private lifestyles
that often disregard public values and require expensive,
time-consuming maintenance.
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Government incentives,
municipal zoning laws, and bank lending policies that shaped
suburbia but have become obsolete. American culture has
changed, but the rules haven't."
Falconbridge: A Case Study (In Progress)
Bolton Anthony, Second Journey founder,
and his wife Lisa are currently involved in an effort to create
a new elder cohousing community
in their area. But they are torn
— which is apparently not
uncommon. They love their condominium and its physical setting;
however, they deplore the neighborhood's lack of community.
So they have set about to explore what the possibilities are for
enhancing community in the Falconbridge neighborhood. This has
involved “introducing”
themselves to their neighbors, with a letter that they hoped
would enlist the interest of fellow travelers, and going
door-to-door with the letter. It also involved creating a simple
website where resources and profiles of residents could be
posted.
The exercise is also forcing Bolton and Lisa to think through
the physical renovations required to make their current home
handicapped-accessible (see
universal design) and what
steps to increase energy efficiency are practical.
The website,
Falconbridge.us, is shared to spark ideas for others in
similar situations.
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. Retrofitting Existing Buildings
Casa
Clara is the brain child of
Carol Glassheim, who
parlayed private capital (a small inheritance from the
project's namesake, her mother Clara) into an enduring
legacy for the City of Albuquerque.
Glassheim
and architect
Robert
Strell took a decaying 20-unit apartment complex and
created an altogether new model for aging in community that combines affordable rental
units with the values and ideals of a cooperative structure.
It will appeal to those who value their independence and control over their own lives, but who also want the benefits that come from a community committed to mutual caring.
The facility consists of five fourplexes on an acre and a half of land located within walking distance of the University of New Mexico North Campus area and to grocery stores, bus lines, and the medical center of the University. All 20 garden apartments have been totally renovated, most as two-bedroom. A common house will include a dining area, kitchen, living room, office, craft room, exam room, bath, and laundry area. The beautifully landscaped grounds will include a common garden space, a meditation garden, and places for both sun and shade.
Cohousing projects often present exciting opportunities for retrofitting of existing structures. In Oakland, California two women, Karen Hester and Dianne Ohlsson, heard about property going up for sale behind a building one was renting. They involved friends they thought might be interested, and the group bought the six units and, shortly afterwards, an adjacent house. Within months the original group of five families moved in and began working on the group of duplexes and single-family homes. Now they have a compound of 26 people who share communal meals twice a week, have monthly workdays, and share holiday celebrations. Their four buildings center on shared gardens and a children’s play area, and they have built a common house with an upstairs apartment.3
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Go to
The Retrofit |
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 1The Long Emergency: Surviving the End of Oil, Climate Change, and Other Converging Catastrophes of the 21st Century by James Howard Kunstler (Grove Press, 2005) The Long Emergency is among a spate of recent books and documentary films looking at the dramatic changes in the offing as a result of oil depletion and global warming. For further discussion of the other woes of suburban living, see also Home From Nowhere and The Great Good Place in the section, The New Urbanism.
 2Transforming Suburbia into Superbia” by Dan Chiras and Dave Wann (Terrain.org, Summer/Fall 2003) ) Most suburban neighborhoods are car-dependent, land-hungry, and strictly residential. Isolated from schools, workplaces and civic centers, typically they lack convenient links to parks and mass transportation and discourage casual encounters among residents. These same challenges provide numerous opportunities for positive change! People can reinvent their neighborhoods based on economic, environmental, and social values. In Superbia! 31 Ways to Create Sustainable Neighborhoods, smart-growth activists Chiras and Wann provide action strategies that can lead to safer, friendlier, livelier, healthier, more productive, diverse and vibrant neighborhoods.
Extreme Makeover: Neighborhood Edition” by David Wann (Summer, 2005) )
3Community-Minded Nesting: Cohousing angels work to make potluck dreams come true” by Carol Lloyd (SF Gate, May 15, 2001) )
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