Why Rural America is Slowly Disappearing

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  • Опубліковано 29 тра 2024
  • Check out our sponsor Brilliant for a fun and easy way to interactively learn new things with a 30-day free trial and 20% off an annual premium membership:
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    It's time to rethink how we build the suburbs in the US. Learn more about how suburbs impact road safety, sense of community, and convenience in this next video: • We Might Be Able to Fi...
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    References & More Info:
    Cost of Suburbs:
    www.urbanthree.com/
    www.strongtowns.org/
    Protecting Rural Sarasota:
    sarasotacountry.net/
    Mixed Use Development Location in Sarasota:
    maps.app.goo.gl/DwW81wHjC8dYW...
    Sarasota 2050 Plan:
    www.scgov.net/government/plan...
    Chapters:
    0:00 Old Miakka
    2:18 Financial Problem
    3:15 Housing Design
    6:11 Lack of Options
    7:41 Reimagining
    10:47 Brilliant
    11:59 Original Plan
    14:36 Existing Infrastructure
    15:49 Local Elections
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 869

  • @Streetcraft
    @Streetcraft  Місяць тому +41

    Check out our sponsor Brilliant for a fun and easy way to interactively learn new things with a 30-day free trial and 20% off an annual premium membership:
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    • @AMPProf
      @AMPProf Місяць тому

      It was Pretty once

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Місяць тому

      Soviet mikrodistric vs USA suburbia

    • @Cyrus992
      @Cyrus992 Місяць тому

      @@carkawalakhatulistiwa tell me about it.

    • @1800GetCash
      @1800GetCash 29 днів тому

      *YOU TALK ABOUT SUBURBS LIKE THEY ARE BAD, BUT NEVER POINT OUT THE CAUSE OF SUBURBS BEING BUILT, MAYBE JUST MAYBE FOCUS ON THE IMMIGRATION NUMBERS AND PEOPLE FLEEING OTHER AREAS TO OTHER CERTAIN AREAS, THEN I'LL ENTERTAIN YOUR NOTION SUBURBS ARE BAD UNTIL THEN, YOU ARE JUST WRONG.*

    • @thesinister4624
      @thesinister4624 18 днів тому

      Look into state road 60 in Tampa,Florida area

  • @FBWalshyFTW
    @FBWalshyFTW Місяць тому +780

    This video is a great example of how suburban-style development doesn't have to suck. The sad thing about the US is that it equates suburbs with sprawl and anti-human car-centric design: This doesn't have to be the case!
    I actually like the suburbs (I just bought a home in one). But whenever I ask for more pedestrian and cycling infrastructure, so many Americans look at me like I want every city to be NYC with 20-story high-rises. Now I can show them this video to explain what I want, so thank you for making it.

    • @Ok-lu8gx
      @Ok-lu8gx Місяць тому

      ok

    • @Cyrus992
      @Cyrus992 Місяць тому +6

      This channel lost me at interviewing the woman who made this issue so partisan. It shouldn’t be. Are Dems are better?

    • @edipires15
      @edipires15 Місяць тому +53

      ⁠​⁠@@Cyrus992The woman highlighted that local policies have a direct impact on people's lives, but many people tend to overlook this fact. This should not be viewed as a partisan issue.

    • @churblefurbles
      @churblefurbles Місяць тому +10

      @@Cyrus992 ​ suburbs exist to avoid the consequences of the civil rights act, so it is partisan just not in the way they will talk about.

    • @hesham8
      @hesham8 Місяць тому +5

      I do live in NYC.
      And I so wish I could move to a walkable / cyclable suburb with public transit. There’s parts of Westchester, which is effectively an extension of NYC, but has a cost of entry over $1M for a home (plus ~$3,000/mo in taxes).
      There aren’t really any suburban areas that fit that bill without also being ludicrously expensive. I don’t want to own a car.

  • @AlexTurpin
    @AlexTurpin Місяць тому +301

    I _need_ the "reimagining" chapter as a UA-cam short, I always try to explain what it would look like to friends

    • @kailahmann1823
      @kailahmann1823 Місяць тому +25

      Yep. Just throwing that as a short into any conversation about a new development.

    • @realtissaye
      @realtissaye Місяць тому +15

      please please make this happen

    • @tshirtphilosophers
      @tshirtphilosophers Місяць тому +8

      I hope he does this; it would be such a great and concise rebuttal to the knee-jerk "what abbout muh freedom" reactions

    • @xenotiic8356
      @xenotiic8356 23 дні тому +2

      I really hope he can edit that section down into a youtube short! I did my best with UA-cam's "clips" feature, but it's pretty limited. Hope this helps someone!
      ua-cam.com/users/clipUgkxuW8DvKSX803beOhais0-nUneLeczEtMI

    • @DinoCon
      @DinoCon 21 день тому

      ​@@tshirtphilosophers"You're not free. You're dependent on your car."

  • @cletuswa
    @cletuswa Місяць тому +210

    9:31 Ngl, this neighborhood looks like an absolute dream, although mindbogglingly rare (and as a result, expensive) in the US.

    • @milanlatona7363
      @milanlatona7363 Місяць тому +3

      I know it’s not the exact same but Perkins Rowe in Baton Rouge tried to build a block with apartments on top of stores. You had food, movie theater, book stores, cafes, etc right by your apartment but for some reason they never rented out the apartments. The stores are there but the apartments are empty. It’s worth a visit for anyone in the area.
      If only Baton Rouge copied this design for mid-high density.

    • @prod.jup1t3r
      @prod.jup1t3r Місяць тому

      @@milanlatona7363these videos are literally the reason why im reconsidering going to college to study meteorology and go to college to study engineering or whatever they get a degree in so i can go to a town like sarasota and do this exact plan

    • @Janet_Quillen_DE07
      @Janet_Quillen_DE07 Місяць тому

      It looks like a prison. Where are your kids and dogs gonna play.

    • @phamnhuhien6758
      @phamnhuhien6758 Місяць тому +15

      @@Janet_Quillen_DE07 the many public parks this place encourage, not to count the wildlife park that this development saves from the traditional car-centric surburb

    • @cletuswa
      @cletuswa 29 днів тому +7

      ​@@Janet_Quillen_DE07Plus if that's a priority for you, the whole point of the video is there's still single family homes with yards to choose from. But at least there are choices. And everyone's within walking distance of the parks, grocery store, and other amenities.

  • @SeanA099
    @SeanA099 Місяць тому +298

    I’ve probably left a comment before, but this is basically the ideal argument for zoning reform. It won’t force you to change your lifestyle, but it’ll open up new lifestyle opportunities for those looking for something different. This is something that I think is much more practical in America without going full Netherlands bike and train network

    • @ttopero
      @ttopero Місяць тому +44

      I’d like the option of full Netherlands bike & train in North America!

    • @ronernestborres2597
      @ronernestborres2597 Місяць тому +5

      true, sure you can have what you want, but don't expect everybody else to follow what you want. the part of the video showing a suburb with diverse zoning option in one space and with amenities at a walking distance represents this sentiment best!

    • @Cyrus992
      @Cyrus992 Місяць тому +3

      This channel lost me at interviewing the woman who made this issue so partisan. It shouldn’t be. Are Dems are better?

    • @chickennoodle6620
      @chickennoodle6620 Місяць тому +35

      @@Cyrus992 Yes. When the conservatives literally interprets efforts to improve walkability and mixed use zoning as imposing lockdowns on people in 15 minute zones, how can you take them seriously? If they had libertarian principles and live in the same reality where we should let people build businesses and homes where it makes sense rather than in a Euclidiean manner, we could find common ground.

    • @Coffeepanda294
      @Coffeepanda294 Місяць тому +17

      @@Cyrus992 Why are you spamming that comment in every single thread here?

  • @travisrose
    @travisrose Місяць тому +191

    Another absolute banger from Streetcraft, this will be my new intro video to "orange-pill" my friends on why suburban development is so unsustainable. Your motion graphic design in the videos makes it SO CLEAR on alternative solutions to the land-use issues we face.
    Thank you for your work! Keep up the great content!
    PS - the "walkable & bikeable & liveable" sticker on your Etsy shop is straight 🔥

    • @nasifsiddiquey8867
      @nasifsiddiquey8867 Місяць тому +4

      @@Cyrus992 You got nothing better to do than spamming this same reply on every comment?

    • @skurinski
      @skurinski 4 дні тому

      ok democrat

  • @BrysonTheTomato
    @BrysonTheTomato Місяць тому +75

    streetcraft has to be my favorite urbanism channel right now. Channels like not just bikes seems to just complain, but this channel actually talks about real solutions. Good work guys!

    • @mrowlbert
      @mrowlbert Місяць тому +10

      Exactly. That complaining tone can turn a lot of people off.

    • @kailahmann1823
      @kailahmann1823 Місяць тому +11

      NJB does show solutions - but those are more applicable to places, where the basics already exist. Just saw a video by @CityNerd about streetcar-suburbs in Portland, OR. Those are places, where Dutch road design ideas are relevant. A car dependent suburb however is like 50 steps (and sadly years of changes) away from this.

  • @YouPube_X
    @YouPube_X Місяць тому +77

    This is normal in 🇬🇧. I find it weird here in 🇺🇸 i cant walk to a corner shop to go buy milk eggs etc. Instead i have to get in a car n drive 10 mins.

    • @larryroyovitz7829
      @larryroyovitz7829 Місяць тому +1

      That's a bit of a myth. I live in rural Canada, and so nothing is close. BUT, I've been everywhere in the US. Just spent time in Dallas and I could walk to several locations to get milk, food, booze you name it. AND I was in what would be a considered a suburb.

    • @YouPube_X
      @YouPube_X Місяць тому +22

      @@larryroyovitz7829 “everywhere in the US”. Clearly not.

    • @larryroyovitz7829
      @larryroyovitz7829 Місяць тому

      @@YouPube_X That's the point you'll hang your argument on? Okay...

    • @_cls90
      @_cls90 Місяць тому +17

      @@larryroyovitz7829 Where in Dallas was this? Not trying to be confrontational but Texas barley has any sidewalks.

    • @larryroyovitz7829
      @larryroyovitz7829 Місяць тому

      @@_cls90 Rowlett, so a suburb, I suppose, of Dallas?

  • @kookamunga2458
    @kookamunga2458 Місяць тому +124

    I live in the suburbs. I can't go for long walks because there are very few sidewalks and there are too many bicycle -haters . Riding bicycle is scary in the suburbs because suburbanites thinks bicycles and cyclists are stupid. I plan on moving closer to city limits .

    • @zekeperson9892
      @zekeperson9892 Місяць тому +7

      same !!! there are many of us and we hate it here !!!!!!

    • @eric2500
      @eric2500 Місяць тому

      Welcome!

    • @TexMarque
      @TexMarque Місяць тому

      @@zekeperson9892 You are free to move and make yourself happy.

    • @zekeperson9892
      @zekeperson9892 Місяць тому +6

      @@TexMarque that’s the plan lmao I’m still in high school

    • @TexMarque
      @TexMarque Місяць тому

      @@zekeperson9892 Good for you. Just don't expect the grass to be greener; often it is not, but opportunity abounds.

  • @cabbagenut
    @cabbagenut Місяць тому +90

    I've seen so many suburban homes that are run down and poorly maintained by the overworked people who bought them. Most of us don't need that space, and in fact cannot take care of a big yard and an expensive car. Why should we all have to live like that?

    • @la-go-xy
      @la-go-xy 17 днів тому +1

      So many single homes hardly have any garden, just driveway: Seems like the worst of both, somehow.

    • @mikeydude750
      @mikeydude750 3 дні тому +1

      @@la-go-xy I want a garage and a driveway, I don't want a lawn!

    • @la-go-xy
      @la-go-xy 3 дні тому +2

      @@mikeydude750 So, a terraced house or a semi detached might be a good option? What about a midrise with an underground garage??

    • @mikeydude750
      @mikeydude750 3 дні тому

      @@la-go-xy I want a place I can wash my car and keep it looking nice. Every apartment complex has rules against that.

  • @Urban_Man
    @Urban_Man Місяць тому +1057

    do not stop building suburbs,stop building car centric suburbs

    • @kylesmith7437
      @kylesmith7437 Місяць тому +50

      Well said

    • @talesfromunderthemoon
      @talesfromunderthemoon Місяць тому +138

      And throw the single-family residential-only zone away, and pave the way for mixed zone.

    • @MAL1GNANT
      @MAL1GNANT Місяць тому +22

      Nah. All suburbs need to go.

    • @justaguy5384
      @justaguy5384 Місяць тому +24

      @@MAL1GNANTand replace it with what

    • @CrAzYnAdEz
      @CrAzYnAdEz Місяць тому +11

      ​​@@MAL1GNANThell no

  • @wallegamecube
    @wallegamecube Місяць тому +632

    it's simple. delete all the zoning laws, throw HOAs in the garbage, and open businesses without parking lots directly inside the suburbs. vote me for US president 2036

    • @wallegamecube
      @wallegamecube Місяць тому +66

      ok now i will watch the video

    • @mrowlbert
      @mrowlbert Місяць тому +34

      Run in the Playstation Party and you got my vote! lol

    • @Mateo-ll8kr
      @Mateo-ll8kr Місяць тому

      😂

    • @micosstar
      @micosstar Місяць тому +2

      bruh bruh this comment section is so cool!

    • @AndyGneiss
      @AndyGneiss Місяць тому +9

      I'd consider voting for you. Robots are definitely under-represented. We need you to step up and be the first.

  • @glio1337
    @glio1337 Місяць тому +18

    I can't get over how good your graphics are for explaining concepts. The two versions of a new development on empty land were fantastic. I also appreciated how you went to a real place in person and heard from people there. That goes a long way to making these concepts land.

  • @yaycupcake
    @yaycupcake Місяць тому +21

    I don't own and can't afford a car. I currently live in Manhattan in NYC because I'm disabled and I need to have things like groceries and doctors nearby and walkable. I would never move to a stereotypical suburb, but I'd love to move to a suburb that has the type of things you need at a reasonable and safe walking distance.

  • @Okada404
    @Okada404 Місяць тому +16

    I love these videos. As a civil engineer I have some influence on how the neighborhoods are designed, but not enough to completely make these pedestrian friendly. It takes more people, especially voters to know what they’re missing out on. In America, car is the only way they know how to get around, so it’s viewed as a symbol of freedom. What they don’t know is that they have a lack of freedom because they are restricted to cars, so when you mentioned public transportation It’s viewed as an attack on freedom. When I fully explain why alternatives are needed, they finally realize what they’re missing out on.

  • @murdelabop
    @murdelabop Місяць тому +136

    The real problem with car dependent suburbs is that they have the disadvantages of both urban and rural areas and the advantages of neither.

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod Місяць тому +1

      Suburbs generally have the best schools. Better than urban or rural.

    • @asmodon
      @asmodon Місяць тому +32

      @@NovusodThat’s because rich people are living there. It has nothing to do with rural of urban.

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod Місяць тому +2

      @@asmodon There are a lot of rich people in urban areas too but they send their kids to private school because the inner city public schools are beyond terrible.

    • @asmodon
      @asmodon Місяць тому +14

      @@Novusod private schools would still exist without suburbs.

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod Місяць тому +2

      @@asmodon The point is suburbs have good public schools and kids living there don't have to pay extra for private school to get a good education.

  • @LHSNottingham
    @LHSNottingham Місяць тому +10

    That cute little mixed-used neighborhood with multiple housing densities seems like an impossible dream gazing out on seemingly endless seas of tract homes :(

  • @ClementinesmWTF
    @ClementinesmWTF Місяць тому +9

    Thank you for being one of the only urbanists on UA-cam you doesn’t ignore rural people. I know for some of our community, there is no sympathy for the latter because of politics or living style, but urbanism doesn’t just require thinking *about* cities. Rural and suburban areas are also affected and there is a huge untapped market of ideas about how those areas are also affected. If we do not think about those in those areas in urbanism, they will only come to loathe the ideology (and rightfully so if it doesn’t consider them). There are positives to thoughtful urbanism for rural lives, but we need to acknowledge them and advocate for them as well.

  • @paulrobbins4879
    @paulrobbins4879 Місяць тому +8

    You've earned a sub, these are some of the best videos I've ever seen exploring this topic. I get tired of the snarky, self-righeous tone of a lot of the UA-cam urbanists, so your very balanced, sensible, easy to understand explanation of these things is a real breath of fresh air. The animations and presentations are really helpful to, you've done a great job making urban planning and zoning reform understandable, and I love how your whole vibe is wanting to suggest solutions to make improvements to our towns and cities instead of just criticizing how they've been built or the lifestyles of people living in them. Keep up the great work!

  • @illhaveawtrplz
    @illhaveawtrplz Місяць тому +20

    This is an incredible video. The balance you strike between educational infographics, storytelling, and actionable advice is fantastic. Keep doing what you’re doing, Streetcraft. If you’re a viewer like me, write to your local governments about these issues, it’s better for everyone!

  • @agrud
    @agrud Місяць тому +57

    7:00 "just because you might want to live in a single family suburban home, doesn't mean that building other housing types is gonna take away your single family suburban home. Instead it opens up more options for more people."
    Ugh, so obvious. So perfectly said.

    • @CodyMoore74
      @CodyMoore74 Місяць тому +8

      And makes single family suburban homes cheaper in the process…

    • @SlapStyleAnims
      @SlapStyleAnims Місяць тому +4

      IKR! I’m all about options for people. It’s ridiculous that it’s so hard for people to avoid black and white thinking and instead realize people want options on how to live

    • @FoCoBuzz
      @FoCoBuzz Місяць тому

      @@CodyMoore74Or it could push the prices of them up as the supply drops. These houses don’t go unsold so there is demand for them. Do some people really what something smaller? Probably. As many of the urbanists think? Doubtful. If there was that much demand for that, developers would be rushing to build it to make a profit. But they don’t. So, demand for full size single family homes drops a little but perhaps - probabaly? - less than the supply drops. Voila…more housing price increases or people have to settle for density and undersized home they don’t really want. Rather than have activists try to tell us what we want, let’s let the people tell us what they want via the free market.

    • @CodyMoore74
      @CodyMoore74 Місяць тому +6

      @@FoCoBuzz Good point but the free market isn’t much “free” anymore in the US. Due to racism/classism/similar issues in the middle and late 1900’s local communities of baby boomers lobbied under general NIMBYism to make zoning for missing middle illegal. We don’t even let the free market decide because as the video explains, the only options are available are the two extremes-single family large detached homes and cramped apartments. That in itself you may argue is government overreach that goes against the majority in favor of only the rich. Asserting that the demand isn’t there for the missing middle is a bit on the nose when it literally cannot exist, or where it does it is always expensive (because it is in such high demand). I believe Californians would love a cheaper option that allows communities to be tighter-knit yet also diverse and walkable. Most of my friends and family have been in traumatic car crashes and hate driving. Most of my friends and family wish they could see each other more often even though they live in the same place. Most of them feel isolated. Most of them cripple under a housing market that forces them to buy too much. ALL of them have car payments. No one wants this lifestyle anymore, but there are no other options. We want options. Making the options legal will actually let the free market decide.

    • @FoCoBuzz
      @FoCoBuzz Місяць тому

      @@CodyMoore74 I don’t think there any rational reason to think “racism” impacts the development decisions of a developer in 2024. It’s time to retire the group identity mindsets of 1964. As a strong support of property rights, I take a dim view of most zoning. But most people aren’t motivated by racism.

  • @Arjay404
    @Arjay404 Місяць тому +42

    "People like living in the suburbs"
    Well no, not exactly. People like living in their own home. Now where that home is or what form that home takes that varies a lot, yeah a good chunk of people like living in detached homes with yards, but not all of them. If there were also a lot of duplex, triplex, rowhomes, 2, 3 and 4 story multifamily homes and apartments built, then the people that don't feel like they NEED to live in a detached home with it's own separate yard, would choose to live in those homes instead, especially since those homes are cheaper.
    There isn't anything inherently wrong with single family homes, the issue arises when it essentially is the only choice for someone that wants a home.

    • @MAL1GNANT
      @MAL1GNANT Місяць тому +6

      There actually is something inherently wrong with single family houses. They're a waste of space. NOBODY needs that much.

    • @ttopero
      @ttopero Місяць тому +1

      Some people just want a new house for their new car & can’t afford the $million infill McMansion.

    • @bchristian85
      @bchristian85 Місяць тому +8

      @@MAL1GNANT it's ingrained in the American psyche though that people do need it. The ideal 1950s suburban lifestyle is still considered the quintessential American lifestyle. There were signs this perception was changing prior to the pandemic, but the past four years have seen a significant regression on this issue. It's going to take generational change and a generation that demands something different for this to ever change.

    • @stormer7502
      @stormer7502 Місяць тому +4

      The preference is somewhat cultural. We'd be able to measure a less biased preference if America hadn't absolutely destroyed its cities for the sake of the car. People here simply don't know what living in a proper city is like, and after decades of suburbs being heavily glorified it's only natural that such a preference exists.
      I personally never questioned car centrism before I found out about urbanism and naturally assumed that the typical consumerist suburban lifestyle was the best life one could have. I suffered the effects of car centrism but I never thought of it as anything more than the struggle before becoming a driver. Now imagine if I'd been the all too common arrogant, selfish, and closed minded American. The negative response urbanism receives here is largely an emotional gut reaction in defence of a culturally engrained worldview.

    • @JesusManera
      @JesusManera Місяць тому +3

      @@bchristian85 I live in a small terrace (row) house in inner-Melbourne, Australia and we have a child and often people ask whether we feel like we need a bigger house & a yard because we have a child and a dog. But I look at their houses & lifestyles. Ok, they have a bigger yard, but it's still not big enough to kick a football, or big enough for a large playground, big enough to let the dog have a good run, as most suburban backyards aren't. However, because they have a big house that isn't walking distance from a whole lot, they don't leave it much. Whereas we may not have a proper yard, but literally a 30 second walk away we have a park with a big playground. Another 5 minutes walk away is a big off-leash dog park, with an even bigger playground and a sports field. We actually have 8 great parks, and the beach, and an amusement park, within a 15 minute walk of our house. Who needs a backyard when you have that?
      So I agree it is in the psyche even for a lot of Australians where the dream was the "quarter-acre suburban home", and without really thinking about it properly just have an automatic association that family/kids/pets = you need to move to the 'burbs and have a backyard. I completely disagree with that.

  • @heinwlod3895
    @heinwlod3895 Місяць тому +64

    The only thing I wonder as a non-American when I see those video: why are people who call themselves "conservatives" in America sometimes against this kind of development? Having strong, walkable and human-sized communities ist the most traditional kind of development structure I could think of. People have built like this for hundreds of years, being for this kind of structure is the most conservative/traditionalist I could think of. Why are some American conservatives against this? 😅

    • @SlapStyleAnims
      @SlapStyleAnims Місяць тому +22

      I’m not sure, it’s very weird. I myself am a very conservative American and would LOVE nothing more than the solutions from this video to be implemented. You’re absolutely right on traditional and strong communities. There’s no feeling of community in this country because of the soulless cookie cutter suburbs constantly built. Nobody knows or cares for eachother and small business struggle to take off because everyone has to drive to them. It’s probably because of boomer propaganda thinking that changing zoning and how suburbia is built means socialism, which couldn’t be further from the truth. The same people scared of government overreach fail to realize how much more efficient governance could be in better built suburbs.

    • @namedtruman
      @namedtruman Місяць тому +5

      @@SlapStyleAnimsamen

    • @warmike
      @warmike Місяць тому +8

      They have likely never heard of this. This is the first time I'm hearing about this type of development, with mostly single-family residential but also commercial spaces around and good biking connectivity.

    • @Janet_Quillen_DE07
      @Janet_Quillen_DE07 Місяць тому +2

      I'm a conservative. It's because most of us live in rural areas, and our communities are getting taken over by overdevelopment like this. The land and areas are being destroyed. The development is causing deforestation, environmental pollution, air pollution, and noise pollution. It's also causing more people, more traffick/pedestrians, and bikers. The cost of living increases, our wililfe is dying, their homes are being destroyed, theres increased crime most of the time and overall the quality of life and community is getting destroyed. Speaking on community. No community is as good as the ones you'll find in rural America. It's believed that the more people there are, the better sense of community there will be. It's wrong, though. When you have a lot more people, you tend to just walk by more and feel indifferent. In smaller communities, when you see someone, you're more willing to talk and connect with them. They have a mindset of helping each other out and always coming together in times of need (such as if your car breaks down, usually the first car you see will come and help). It's the difference between coastal areas, suburban areas, and New York City. Nothing is like rural America, and we see how this will end up. With this being said, I dont see my point of view as being right or wrong. But this is the lens that conservatives see it through.

    • @Janet_Quillen_DE07
      @Janet_Quillen_DE07 Місяць тому +2

      Also, I understand there's a need for more housing, but I don't think like this. There's hundreds and hundreds of sitting houses in my area with no one to buy them cuz the prices are too high. Coorperations own them and there not going to drop the price.

  • @chrisbartolini1508
    @chrisbartolini1508 Місяць тому +24

    Put a hold on sprawl, force developers to densify what we have. Economic output would increase.

    • @Cyrus992
      @Cyrus992 Місяць тому

      Prices can rise unless if restrictions on height and density are removed

  • @stinkywizzleteets4740
    @stinkywizzleteets4740 Місяць тому +48

    I live in a new urbanist neighborhood that is very similar to the reimagining you beautifully demonstrated with your great graphics. It's mostly single family homes but they don't have a front yard and a front facing garage. Instead the homes have garages in the back facing alleys which cut through the blocks. There are also town homes, cottage courts, apartments, mixed use development, a school, a church, and some public parks. The neighborhood also has a much more walkable street layout with better connectivity and no cul-des-acs and it even has direct access to lovely open space with walking and biking trails that can take you pretty far. In a not so large piece of land they've managed to fit so much more and create an overall way more pleasant place to live and walk around. Unfortunately it all ends abruptly once you leave the neighborhood and it devolves into the typical suburban nonsense we're all too familiar with. It's a shame that my neighborhood isn't the standard because despite the design differences it still has the suburban feel that many people like while also being free of many of the typical flaws in standard American suburban development. If all neighborhoods were designed more like that, we abandoned the strip mall for a more main street style of commercial development, and if we had way better transit everywhere American surburbs wouldn't be so bad, in fact they would be pretty great places to live.

    • @ttopero
      @ttopero Місяць тому +7

      How many residents are able to work in the subdivision (not WFH or coworkers)? This is a fundamental flaw in new urbanist subdivisions that were less common in pre-war neighborhoods where many residents were also the neighborhood service providers & could afford the nice homes while their workers could afford the rentals in duplexes, small SFH & small multiplexes.

  • @quadcorelatte8217
    @quadcorelatte8217 Місяць тому +94

    It’s also worth noting that many Americans have been propagandized to hate apartments. So the desire for single family housing may be somewhat artificial

    • @justaguy5384
      @justaguy5384 Місяць тому +18

      Having lived in an apartment before moving into the suburbs, it’s not a great place to live. Loud neighbors, had crackheads living downstairs throwing garbage everywhere and broken stuff all the damn time that the owners wouldn’t fix.

    • @CrAzYnAdEz
      @CrAzYnAdEz Місяць тому +11

      ​@justaguy5384 I hated living in apartments too. You're spending thousands every month to a landlord, have to deal with drugged neighbors, thieves, thr smell of weed, noise, no private driveway, etc. Thank God I bought my single family home back in 2012 when they were cheap. I never looked back.

    • @CrAzYnAdEz
      @CrAzYnAdEz Місяць тому +13

      It's not propaganda. Its life experience and personal choice. More than 80% of homeowners used to rent apartments before buying homes.

    • @jtcali2086
      @jtcali2086 Місяць тому +12

      Almost NO ONE wants an apartment. Its whereyou end up, due to costs, proximity, or lack of other options.
      Lets just be honest, many people dont wantto live all on top of each other...and given the chance, almost always choose to move to lower density areas. Now smarter suburbs Im all for, as demonstrated, but mindless urbanity is just as bad.

    • @CrAzYnAdEz
      @CrAzYnAdEz Місяць тому +1

      @@jtcali2086 agreed 👍

  • @johnlabus7359
    @johnlabus7359 Місяць тому +19

    "Gentle" density for infill within existing single family home neighborhoods may be fine, but new development and infill that's not fully within a single family neighborhood needs to be much denser. It's not about whether or not something is or isn't suburban. It's more about how car dependent a place is. We have to reduce our dependency on cars. It's unrealistic for most places to completely toss the car, but we can do a lot to enable more people to be less dependent on them for literally everything.

    • @warmike
      @warmike Місяць тому

      The place described would not be car-dependent. Within the community it supports walking and biking, and connection to outside centers can be maintained by a bus route or maybe even a train station, justified by an increase in density.

    • @railroadforest30
      @railroadforest30 27 днів тому +1

      There needs to be mixed use shops at the bottom of some buildings and at least one grocery store or market in the neighborhood

  • @MichaelSheaAudio
    @MichaelSheaAudio Місяць тому +10

    A lot of us are really getting screwed by housing restrictions. There's a little building outside the baseball diamond at the school across the street. It used to just have a couple washrooms, a counter where they served hotdogs, and a little storage area, I would assume. It's probably like 12ft wide by 20ft long. a couple years ago, they added an upper level to it. I look at that little building and think "I could live in something like that". I'm just one guy. All I need is a kitchen, washroom, and an open space upstairs. I'm a musician, I make noise, so being detached from others is important. I don't need a backyard, I don't need a front yard, just gimme the little house and a place to park my car (that I may not need if the neighborhood is diverse enough), and I'd be happy. small homes like that aren't in the cards around here though.

    • @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago
      @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago Місяць тому +2

      It's because of political corruption. There's not as much money to be made in efficient, pleasant affordable housing. We have to fight to change this. It's going to be a struggle though because the big money owns our political process at every level that's the problem. They want to make big money, and you only get that from forcing people into expensive unsustainable lifestyles, and chief among these is buying a big house that puts you in debt for decades. Now I'm not against home ownership and beautiful homes, but one the cost is increasingly out of control and two that's just not what everyone wants. We need a diversity of housing because the human population is diverse in their needs and means.

  • @Marconius6
    @Marconius6 Місяць тому +4

    You didn't even mention public transit in this: traditional suburbs have basically no place to put a bus, but in the new layout presented, that town square would be a perfect place to have a bus stop. And if you have multiple neighborhoods like this right next to each other, you could eventually connect them with a tram quite easily as well; allowing people to visit places other than just their own little community, which makes room for even more diversity.

  • @BBGOnYT
    @BBGOnYT Місяць тому +34

    Videos like this are the reason why I subscribed to him when he had less than 1k subscribers. A lot of channels just love to assume that everyone will live in an apartment and cars are the worst thing ever invented. This channel takes into account how real people wanna live and knows that people don't wanna just give up their cars for nothing.

    • @Cyrus992
      @Cyrus992 Місяць тому +2

      This channel lost me at interviewing the woman who made this issue so partisan. It shouldn’t be. Are Dems are better?

    • @BBGOnYT
      @BBGOnYT Місяць тому +2

      @@Cyrus992 Yea I'm not sure why he left that part in. I think the lady is forgetting who the mayor of Carmel, IN is.

    • @Cyrus992
      @Cyrus992 Місяць тому

      @@BBGOnYT Tell me about it.
      It seems that the GOP side seem to admire the traditionalism and deregulation while the Dems come at an environmental and affordability/transit angle.

    • @BIGBLUBLUR
      @BIGBLUBLUR Місяць тому +2

      ​@@Cyrus992 So I just watched the video and got to that part, and this is a huge misrepresentation of what she actually said
      She wasn't saying "Republican bad", she was basically just saying that voters tend to make assumptions about policy based purely on party, and those assumptions are wrong sometimes

    • @Cyrus992
      @Cyrus992 Місяць тому

      @@BIGBLUBLUR ok cool

  • @stevieinselby
    @stevieinselby Місяць тому +11

    As a Brit, it's baffling to me how a country has become so fixated on the idea that suburbs = large single family homes ... we have plenty of suburbs in the UK, but the most common type of property in them is semi-detached (duplex), and pretty much everyone will have a local grocery store and a school and a few other facilities within 15 minutes walk (and often much less!). The model of development that you sketched out with a mix of low-rise apartments, town houses, small detached homes and large detached homes, a few shops, a school and a park is basically the standard pattern for any large development. Even smaller developments that aren't big enough to warrant shops and a school will have a mix of housing types. It makes life so much more convenient!

  • @ratsorizzo2497
    @ratsorizzo2497 Місяць тому +7

    There are already countless urbanist channels that pretty much preach the same thing (Allan Fisher, City Nerd, Not Just Bikes, etc.). However, this is the only channel that is not entirely condescending towards the concept of suburban living. The fact of the matter is that suburban living (regrettably) is the most practical and financially attainable mode of decent living for the American middle class whether we like it or not. This channel seems genuine in its attempt to educate its viewers that we can at least make suburban living more enriching through design, but all the while not alienating the people (suburban dwellers) that probably need to hear it the most.
    Thank you Streetcraft for making these videos. Can't wait for the next one!

    • @skurinski
      @skurinski 4 дні тому

      he still added the democrat propaganda towards the end of the video though...

  • @patriot9487
    @patriot9487 Місяць тому +66

    Seeing nature be destroyed by suburban subdivisions saddens me greatly.

    • @realtissaye
      @realtissaye Місяць тому +10

      some of the most productive farmland in north america being paved over for single family homes...

    • @micosstar
      @micosstar Місяць тому +1

      exactly ​@@realtissaye

    • @andrewzheng4038
      @andrewzheng4038 Місяць тому +7

      And it’s all the more frustrating that NIMBYs often use the environment as an excuse. They’ll say shit like “oh but look at how much green there is around our house!” and how there’s still deer that come to munch on their rosebushes. In reality that greenbelt “forest” is a shrinking island 100m deep, and the only reason they can see deer is there’s nothing else to eat and nowhere left to hide. People look townhouses, 5+1s, and streets without hedgerows and think it’s bad for nature just because there’s less green in their immediate field of vision; in reality every sq foot worth of concrete stacked up on a building is a floor worth of nature left untouched, and worth far more to the wildlife than that same square foot isolated in a greenbelt or fenced into a backyard
      A real environmentalist should know that increasing density is the only real way to reduce humanity’s footprint, and supporting mass transit is a far more efficient way to reduce emissions than attempting a 1:1 replacement with EVs. Anything else is purely performative, and I daresay, deeply hypocritical.

    • @a.j.santiago303
      @a.j.santiago303 Місяць тому

      @@andrewzheng4038 Great comment. 👍

    • @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago
      @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago Місяць тому

      @@andrewzheng4038 yeah! I know that's right.

  • @Mateo-ll8kr
    @Mateo-ll8kr Місяць тому +8

    I honestly don’t mind living in the suburbs, but I live in DC where the suburbs are easily connected to the city via transit if you don’t want to drive. I currently live in a more urban area, but I wouldn’t mind living further out if I could get a single family home with some land. The suburban areas should be a bit more diverse so everyone could live how they like. Every suburb doesn’t need to be densely built/populated, but some should be.

  • @ramiroini9504
    @ramiroini9504 Місяць тому +5

    In the rest of the world we build wall-to-wall houses with a patio and 5 people families live perfectly fine. You could use the English high density house layouts.

  • @user-ie1hg5ov1m
    @user-ie1hg5ov1m Місяць тому +12

    As someone in Florida we are terrible at saving land

    • @ttopero
      @ttopero Місяць тому +1

      Saving land for what?we have a distorted view of “savings” as for a future use other than the natural, undeveloped uses it has.

    • @Coffeepanda294
      @Coffeepanda294 Місяць тому

      Pretty natural when you live in a huge country, I suppose. Still sad, though, I agree.

    • @railroadforest30
      @railroadforest30 28 днів тому +1

      All of the Southeast is

    • @railroadforest30
      @railroadforest30 28 днів тому +3

      @@ttoperonature should stay nature. Florida is highly developed already so what’s left of nature should be preserved

  • @piercehicks1144
    @piercehicks1144 29 днів тому +4

    This is one of the best balanced how to improve suburbs video I’ve seen.

  • @ttopero
    @ttopero Місяць тому +15

    Unfortunately, anyone proposing these new urbanism suburb subdivisions haven’t solved the affordability problem for the people who work in the shops that are allowed to exist (no six-figure salaries are moving in without office buildings with parking lots-exceptions apply). Even the apartments are built for people who typically get paid at least twice what the shop workers do!

    • @SvenRenas
      @SvenRenas Місяць тому +4

      1. Where do the people live who work at the big shops? Also: a small shop can be worked be the owner - with their home being around the corner or even upstairs.
      2. Start with small changes. Allow a drug store and one small apartment building both near the edge of a suburb. How bad can it be?

    • @ttopero
      @ttopero Місяць тому +1

      @@SvenRenas yes, if allowed. It typically isn’t on the minds of the policy makers though. To only allow a few people in each subdivision will get us nowhere. Look at the streetcar suburbs to see how many corners or blocks had small commercial and/or live-work areas to see how far we have to go! It won’t be identical but the gap is YUGE!

    • @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago
      @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago Місяць тому +1

      Well we need to talk about that too. Why can't we approach both problems at the same time?

    • @railroadforest30
      @railroadforest30 28 днів тому

      Unfortunately nobody is building affordable housing now

    • @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago
      @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago 28 днів тому +1

      @@railroadforest30 ethical political leadership could change this but not going to hold my breath for that

  • @whatsthat9408
    @whatsthat9408 11 днів тому +2

    There’s a development in Utah called Daybreak that attempted this kind of development and failed dramatically. They basically just managed to cram more people into a smaller space. No extra places to shop or work really. So it’s not too walkable either. They got the “put more houses in” part right, but completely flopped on the “make it easy for residents” part by not putting businesses or offices in. As a result, everyone needed multiple cara and the skinny roadways could not handle that kind of street parking.

  • @hananas2
    @hananas2 5 днів тому +3

    Man as a European, I gotta say those overly clean suburbs with hundreds of identical homes look like the most horrible place on earth..

  • @loganstans1692
    @loganstans1692 Місяць тому +9

    Such a good channel. Love how all the logic in this video is presented, the way the visuals flow makes it so much easier to understand to the untrained eye. I've been looking at quite a bit of similar content for the past few months; the portion about tax revenue wasn't even something I heard or considered when thinking about the downsides of current suburban design, along with the partial solution of cottage developments. Currently a civil engineer undergrad, but this is definitely convincing me to go for the urban design minor I've been thinking about recently. Will definitely be sharing this with friends in order to get them hooked on city planning like I am (in a healthy way of course)!

  • @BrokeredHeart
    @BrokeredHeart 29 днів тому +3

    I'm a housing designer, and the common thing that really drives the entire design of new developments is car storage. People don't necessarily want long driveways and sprawling parking, but for a family of 4-5, that typically entails at least 1 car, often 2, which really screws up the lot for livable space at grade, unless you begin making these homes even larger to accommodate more vehicles. A 1600 sq. ft home built in the 1960s was considered palatial, but now, homes on average range between 2200-2600 sq. ft for a single family dwelling. And purchasers don't seem to be willing to give that up, even as the average household size has been decreasing over the decades. I am a big proponent of the architectural movement for selective urban infill, where a single family dwelling in an urban or suburban setting gets remodeled into a semi-detached or duplex, or larger lots add a secondary dwelling unit to them or even a standalone private business. Imagine living in the 'burbs, and you want to get a haircut, or you need to pick up a loaf of bread for breakfast. Normally you get in your car and drive at least 10 minutes away to the nearest grocery store or strip mall to get the goods and services you need. But imagine instead that there's a house on the corner that just converted their ground floor into a bakery, and 2 blocks away, someone opened a barber shop in their basement to cater to the neighborhood. Instead of moving an elderly person out of their home and away from familiar settings, they can downsize to a flat on the same property where they can live comfortably and still be close to family and friends.
    The entirety of North America is designed around car movements and placement, designing whole cities around roads, highways and parking lots. Instead of forcing people to rely on purchasing a vehicle, our cities and suburbs should be designed around the movement of people, and the facilitation of healthy living habits and comfortable environs that encourage people to engage with nature, not build over top of it. We vastly waste the land we already have in use, and it has not only exacerbated inequality and economic instability, it has damaged our ecosystems and natural resources too. It's also reinforced antiquated notions of "districts" that not only divide up cities according to building occupancy, but by age, income, and race as well. I love the concepts of intentional urban planning, designing spaces and interiors that support people where they live and work and play, because it fosters connection between community members, and contributes to better psychological health. There's a better balance to be struck between urban development and humane design, and I'm glad to see more places and forums discussing what that could look like for their communities.

    • @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago
      @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago 29 днів тому +1

      Wow you're so on top of it. you totally need to get involved in your local community. Your attitude is the right one and the one all planners should have.

    • @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago
      @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago 29 днів тому +1

      Since the 1920s, both oil and gas and the automaking industry have owned our politicians in seemingly every zip code, with predictable disastrous results. 100 years of this bullshit and look at where we are. The shit that's been pulverized and destroyed and paved over for the goddamn vehicle astounds me. Parking minimums are a peculiar form of torture only Satan could love inflicting upon us.
      I hate waste too, waste of potential, waste of space, waste of resources, waste of everything. It's unacceptable. I want to stop it in my home state and county and repair what can be repaired but I'll need a lot more clout for that. I'm just a random nobody right now.

  • @MirsTrip
    @MirsTrip 18 днів тому +2

    I like how your channel also provides solutions to the problems we have 👏

  • @Cyrus992
    @Cyrus992 Місяць тому +5

    Heart of the problems:
    Stroads/traffic flow, large scale single use developments and building/parking layouts

  • @Justinforsure
    @Justinforsure Місяць тому +15

    Would we see neighborhoods like this become more affordable as they build more? They tend to be very expensive because of the demand.

    • @kailahmann1823
      @kailahmann1823 Місяць тому +12

      building a lot of THIS would solve that problem too - because you basically need only one third (!) of the space (including the reduced need for commercial, road and parking space), while still having mostly single-family homes.

    • @Demopans5990
      @Demopans5990 Місяць тому +4

      There is a reason for such a demand. People like convenience. Not needing to drive for everything when you can just send the kid on a fetch quest is convenient

  • @savannah4439
    @savannah4439 Місяць тому +3

    I love those colorful houses at 3:42! They’re so cute and you’re telling me they have minimal yards too? Sign me up!

  • @thndr_5468
    @thndr_5468 Місяць тому +13

    Instead of creating denser communities where people actually want to live they just make more soulless corporate housing.

    • @Coffeepanda294
      @Coffeepanda294 Місяць тому +6

      With houses made out of plywood where you can hear someone breathing from the other side of the house.

    • @Demopans5990
      @Demopans5990 Місяць тому +1

      @@Coffeepanda294
      That crumble in the slightest breeze
      And no. The houses are made of paper

  • @MrChilili
    @MrChilili Місяць тому +36

    We need zoning that allows shops and houses on the same street yet leaves skyscrapers, factories, and large supermarkets away. Thank you for showing us examples of what’s good rather than what’s wrong

    • @JesusManera
      @JesusManera Місяць тому +8

      Spot on. Zoning as a principle clearly has a place. Don't put houses next to polluting factories, keep truck routes separate, etc. The issue isn't the existence of zoning but the restrictive overreach of US "single family home" zoning specifically. It's unfathomable to me even as an Australian - a similarly sprawling, low density country - that it could be illegal to have local businesses scattered among houses because that's the norm here. Nobody would complain about a cafe, florist or fish & chip shop on their corner, everyone wants that!

    • @Demopans5990
      @Demopans5990 Місяць тому +7

      Japanese zoning in a nutshell. Skyscrapers and such are classed as "light industry", and therefore, are prohibited from being built in the by our standards, loosely defined "residential". Stuff like konbini and 5-over-1s are classed as "residential".

    • @georgerogers1166
      @georgerogers1166 Місяць тому

      That's called covenents.

    • @Arjay404
      @Arjay404 Місяць тому +1

      @@georgerogers1166 The are the same thing, only difference is zoning laws are determined by the government whereas covenants are by private parties.

    • @georgerogers1166
      @georgerogers1166 Місяць тому

      @@Arjay404 which is a big difference.

  • @Ilia_Karamfilov
    @Ilia_Karamfilov 18 днів тому +1

    14:50 A year ago, few abonded warehouses were demolished and a park and shops were built in my town.

  • @PilotVBall
    @PilotVBall Місяць тому +6

    It is time to end the annual housing tax. Housing should not be taxed. The regime calls it "property taxes". But it's a housing tax.

  • @kerby132
    @kerby132 Місяць тому +2

    I literally grew up in Myakka and moved to the Netherlands for a walkable suburban life because it’s just available in America. The suburban sprawl in manatee county and Florida is just the worst.

  • @zuluhyena305
    @zuluhyena305 Місяць тому +2

    This is how suburbs tend to be built in the uk. Tbh, they still sprawl. I think were're at a point where we need to focus on increasing density in already urbanised areas. There's lots of places where density could increase but the same detatched or semi-detached houses keep being built. I'm a big fan of row homes as you can fit alot more houses into the same space. Developers don't like building them though as they can't charge as much for them

  • @smileyeagle1021
    @smileyeagle1021 Місяць тому +3

    Something that absolutely shocked me watching the section on your hypothetical suburb for 1,000 people was just how much parking you were able to include. One of the things that I hear from so many people who are against this type of development is that it will force people to walk, bike, and use transit because it will be impossible to use a car... and yet, you just demonstrated a community where walking, biking, and presumably if it were scaled, transit are all completely viable options while still providing ample room for people who want to drive. If anything, I can predict a lot of urbanists being outraged at just how much parking you included.

    • @Streetcraft
      @Streetcraft  Місяць тому +6

      Eliminating people's option to own a car eliminates tons of people from the conversation entirely. Meeting people in the middle can sometimes be much more impactful than an all-or-nothing approach.

    • @Coffeepanda294
      @Coffeepanda294 Місяць тому +1

      To be fair, the idea that new urbanism means it'll be impossible to have a car is mostly a strawman anyway.

  • @mrowlbert
    @mrowlbert Місяць тому +6

    This is a fantastic video! I'll be sharing it far and wide!

  • @IndesliciveMelon
    @IndesliciveMelon Місяць тому +1

    Top notch. Thank you for continuing to lean into the storytelling that makes your videos stand out (and the graphics of course)

  • @Rebasepoiss
    @Rebasepoiss Місяць тому +1

    What I love about this channel is that the solutions shown are attainable. The graphics are also great and the interview at the beginning adds a nice personal touch!

  • @whatsthat9408
    @whatsthat9408 11 днів тому

    Here’s an observation I noticed today, but have thought about before:
    The construction on I-75 over the Manatee River. The government is performing construction to combat traffic that builds in the area, but instead of fixing the issue itself, they are just moving it to the other side of the river! The same thing happened on the Apollo Beach exit just north of that. They were having traffic build up onto Big Bend Road, so instead of addressing the issue and redirecting or lowering traffic, they just made the on-ramp literally more than a half-mile long.

  • @deanorr5378
    @deanorr5378 Місяць тому +1

    That was a brilliant animation and clear description when you reworked the single zoning suburb into a more dense, mixed use neighbourhood. That needs to be made into a short to be shared! I think that would reach a very wide audience!

  • @jdp486
    @jdp486 Місяць тому +2

    There's a development a little like this being built near me, on what was previously a cattle farm. I think it's very exciting. I do have to chuckle a little though: It's being advertised as a "20 minute city", but every house has a 2-car or 3-car garage, and the parking lots will be huge. Until the commercial space is built in 5-10 years, people will have to drive 20+ minutes to work (plus people around here seem to fill up their garages with junk instead of parking their cars inside.)

    • @Streetcraft
      @Streetcraft  Місяць тому +1

      Interesting, where is it if you don't mind sharing? I'd love to check it out.

  • @JuneNafziger
    @JuneNafziger 2 дні тому

    I think my greatest problem with American style suburban sprawl is it leaves the land stuck like that unless you fully redevelop the whole area. Your urban core can’t expand any further because you can’t just buy up a few plots and turn them into more dense places.
    Also yes SERVICE ALLEYS!!! They’re so good and it’s wild that we have to rediscover this when places like Minneapolis have had service alleys for well over a century.

  • @jKLa
    @jKLa 3 дні тому +1

    Being slowly turned into exurbia in large parts of the country, especially the majority of the eastern third of the US, -often far beyond official metropolitan area bounderies. Most of these areas are predominately working to lower middle class and full of people from urban/suburban as well as rural backgrounds.

  • @AriesT1
    @AriesT1 Місяць тому +1

    Another great video. I always love the part where you show your own better solution graphically, which is quite rare among city planning UA-camrs. It's true, if the US built more developments like densely built European towns, with mixed use almost everywhere, you'd need less than half the space for housing and parking across the entire country.

  • @EdowythIndowyl
    @EdowythIndowyl Місяць тому +2

    Some of this is starting to change. Most developments around Houston now require schools to be built by the developers, parks and retention-pond usage areas are becoming more popular, and in larger developments sets of apartment buildings, duplexes, townhomes, and occasionally cottages are appearing. They're still very bad at including commercial and mixed-use spaces, and most middle-scale or small-scale developments don't do any of this.
    (An example is the massive, ridiculously-sized development south of I-10 between the Katy Love's and eastward. There's probably still too many single-family homes, but other kinds of development are sprinkled throughout.)
    Personally, I want to live in the countryside and for it to remain rural for the rest of my time there, but the current urban sprawl is removing those spaces. Hopefully, developers see that this way of building a whole community, instead of just houses, will pay off for them in the long run. If they do, they'll start emphasizing this kind of development, and our rural areas can remain rural.
    I really don't want what's left of the piney-woods and prairies of Texas to disappear. It's beautiful as is, and something entirely different when "developed" into cookie-cutter homes.

  • @politicalhorizon2000
    @politicalhorizon2000 4 дні тому

    Thank you for another really good video. The whole Sarasota-Bradenton developments are completely destroying all the agricultural land. Also traffic around the whole Lakewood Ranch is way worse despite being like 80 lanes wide.

  • @erick-gmz
    @erick-gmz Місяць тому +2

    You did a FANTASTIC job with this video. I live in Orlando and have been preaching this since forever. We need to be more like her to have a fiscally sustainable Orlando.

  • @gizmocat11
    @gizmocat11 Місяць тому +1

    Just stumbled upon your videos and decided to sub here. I think you’re one of the few channels that gives a fair and balanced view while actually giving realistic solutions

  • @JordanRunge14
    @JordanRunge14 Місяць тому +2

    I love your channel so much. And your graphics are TOP TIER! The graphic at 9:10 is what I see in my brain all day long, and now it's on a video for me to enjoy

  • @KalebPeters99
    @KalebPeters99 Місяць тому +3

    I LOVE that icecream shop analogy, I'm definitely stealing that one for any NIMBY encounters 😅😅

  • @anthonybanchero3072
    @anthonybanchero3072 4 дні тому

    I was just down in Olympia yesterday, and took a bus to a portion of Lacey called Hawkes Prairie. 30 years ago, it was just a restaurant that catered to people traveling along I-5 between Portland and Puget Sound. Today the restaurant is gone, and it’s sprawling big box stores and other stores, and fast food joints. Went by There to see Washington’s first Diverging Diamond Interchange.

    • @jKLa
      @jKLa 3 дні тому

      It's sad when that happens! It's far too often. On the other hand many older shopping centers that were once chain dominated now have small local businesses and suburban infill is begining to boom in much of the US.

  • @flippypie1120
    @flippypie1120 Місяць тому

    Beautiful graphics! They complemented the provided information without seeming cluttered. Really well done 😊

  • @ryanevans2655
    @ryanevans2655 28 днів тому +2

    I think the U.S. could emulate pre-war suburbs - maintain suburban comforts while restoring financial sustainability and the community & health benefits of walkability & density. Could look something like suburbs around the UK or other Northwestern European countries.

  • @tangomango2353
    @tangomango2353 Місяць тому +1

    The animations and explanations in this video make it so good. Ive been following urbanism for a while but have struggled to comprehend how a walkable suburb might look. Your video has helped me understand. I will definitely be showing this to whoever I can❤❤

    • @Streetcraft
      @Streetcraft  Місяць тому +1

      So glad it could bring some clarity to the topic!

  • @mateusebozek-cj2em
    @mateusebozek-cj2em Місяць тому +4

    this video is great because I live in Sarasota.

  • @Madimonster64
    @Madimonster64 22 дні тому +3

    5:16
    I would just walk through the trees. IDC if its against the rules or whatever, I'm not walking all the way around.

  • @car_tar3882
    @car_tar3882 2 дні тому

    I appreciate how you didn’t use a soulless grid in your denser suburb really helps with way finding as a pedestrian or cyclist I would love to live in a suburb like the one you designed by current ones only benefit is a metro station who’s parking lot you must trek through to ride. There are plans to redevelop but I don’t think it’ll go over well nor is it a good idea as it would leave us with station then towers then single family homes with near zero missing middle.

  • @robbydelplain8950
    @robbydelplain8950 Місяць тому +1

    This was beautiful. I hope more developers can see this and will start building this way.

  • @MillanSingh
    @MillanSingh Місяць тому

    Your videos are fantastic my dude! Here's hoping this is the next NJB or CityNerd!

  • @Elenesski
    @Elenesski 3 дні тому +1

    2:00 nice picture of Calgary :)

    • @jasonng301
      @jasonng301 2 дні тому

      I was looking for this comment

  • @Petalflipper
    @Petalflipper День тому

    Austin is a prime example of learning how to do things right

  • @Ziggster625
    @Ziggster625 Місяць тому +1

    Great Video!!! Very Informative!!!!

  • @daneolson1483
    @daneolson1483 Місяць тому +1

    not to mention that the new layouts would also make public transportation more viable with the entire area within walking distance of one or to pick up/drop off locations.

  • @Killersanchez256
    @Killersanchez256 Місяць тому +3

    This is the perfect all in one video explaining the problem with suburbia and had a solution too

  • @TheFranknat
    @TheFranknat 15 днів тому

    Waterside is one of the highest demand neighborhood in Sarasota/LWR it's amazing they didn't replicate it in more of the new developments

  • @zephaniahgreenwell8151
    @zephaniahgreenwell8151 Місяць тому +3

    You know it is a suburban American hellscape when you see every house having a larger garage than it has living space.

    • @Coffeepanda294
      @Coffeepanda294 Місяць тому

      IKR. They don't need living space. Today's North America is built for cars. Humans are an afterthought. It's sad.

  • @benjaminlehman3221
    @benjaminlehman3221 Місяць тому +2

    Co-op apartments are also a compromise. I would live in apartment if I owned it.

  • @lyonsmind
    @lyonsmind 20 днів тому +1

    Maaaaaaannnn I absolutely LOVE your content & your editing!! I relate to your content as a Mexican who migrated to the US and continues to be annoyed and shocked by how anti-pedestrian the infrastructure and culture is here :( I've followed you on Instagram for a while and only just clicked on your UA-cam channel for the first time! Gold mine. Hope you continue to grow and create awesome things!

  • @spencer4732
    @spencer4732 Місяць тому +2

    many suburban cities continue to annex land to continue low density development, rather than increasing density within existing city limits

  • @GeorgeP-uj8xc
    @GeorgeP-uj8xc Місяць тому +2

    I love your videos man! Can I ask what type of program you use?

  • @virtuous-sloth
    @virtuous-sloth Місяць тому +2

    Heh, the downtown of my home city of Calgary is the video stand-in for "dense urban area" and around here it is considered sprawl country.

  • @JesterHorse
    @JesterHorse Місяць тому

    Essentially you are describing more master plan communities. I for instance live in nocatee Florida. It has many of the design ideas your speaking of but with more of a focus of golf carts as the primary mode of transport

  • @Ithirahad
    @Ithirahad Місяць тому +10

    My question is just, why do people WANT this? They wouldn't build it if there were no demand, but to me living somewhere so heavily controlled and isolated from everything, where you are shut out from both human life and nature if your car breaks down, is unthinkable. I love the idea of suburban towns and villages like your demo (I'm situated near Pinecraft now, which has been pretty nice), but not single-family wastelands.
    ...Though, I question your choice of putting your notional family houses' backyards right in alligator territory. The gators might thank you, but little Billy's parents and Mr. Fluffins' owner definitely will not :P

    • @Coffeepanda294
      @Coffeepanda294 Місяць тому +8

      Part xenophobia, part ignorance. North America is so insular that a lot of Americans genuenely seem to think it's either North American style suburbs or living in a condo tower in the city, with no other possibilities inbetween.
      At least things are changing even in North America wrt car-centric planning and single-family home deserts.

    • @kailahmann1823
      @kailahmann1823 Місяць тому +11

      Because many Americans only know two types of housing: Highrises and detached single-family homes and only know "commercial" as big-box stores with giant parking lots and more traffic than a freeway. So they think "change zoning" means a skyscraper on one side and a Walmart on the other.

    • @Ithirahad
      @Ithirahad Місяць тому

      @@kailahmann1823 Around here, probably half the commercial usage is small shopping strips with small lots. Most of 17th Street, all of Gulf Gate, a large stretch of Cattlemen Rd., all of Pinecraft, half of Bee Ridge Rd. west of the highway, and so on and so forth. These types of installations would be entirely inoffensive up against a housing block. But yet the insane SFH developments, with tiny or no mixed/commercial zones, continue to march on up those very roads once you get further from town. I doubt it's just a basic failure to understand what commercial zoning is.

  • @Regene4239
    @Regene4239 Місяць тому +1

    Excellent video. It’s so important that we imagine a better future, and obviously we need to be able to live in it too

  • @MathieuTechMoto
    @MathieuTechMoto Місяць тому

    Great channel, thanks for the content !

  • @quentinmangel2265
    @quentinmangel2265 Місяць тому

    Very inspiring ! Thanks !

  • @user-ie1hg5ov1m
    @user-ie1hg5ov1m Місяць тому +4

    Growing up in the Suburbs is the worst. I wish my parents never moved us from NYC.

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod Місяць тому

      New York City is a terrible place to raise children. There are lot of gangs, drugs, and violence on the streets. It is not a safe place even for adults.

  • @JustinJamesJeep
    @JustinJamesJeep Місяць тому +1

    I love the way you approach urbanism

  • @afrophoenix3111
    @afrophoenix3111 Місяць тому

    The supporting graphics are sublime, dude. Very clearly demonstrates the aspects of optimal (sub)urban planning. Great video overall.

  • @eggballo4490
    @eggballo4490 Місяць тому +9

    What about converting rail trails back into railway lines for better connectivity?

    • @ssquints8056
      @ssquints8056 Місяць тому +9

      I have always loved rail trails, until it dawned on me that these were actually once railroads to everywhere, and now everyone needs a car instead. What a huge lack of foresight when the railroads were decommissioned :(

    • @MAL1GNANT
      @MAL1GNANT Місяць тому

      W character development​@@ssquints8056

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod Місяць тому

      Trains are a thing of the past. The cost of running a railroad became too high and ticket prices could not cover expenses so they went out of business. They went bankrupt.

    • @eggballo4490
      @eggballo4490 Місяць тому +1

      @@Novusod Nothing could be further from the truth. Passenger trains have never been profitable, but we still need them.

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod Місяць тому

      @@eggballo4490 There were dozens of profitable railroads 100 years ago. Before air travel and the highway system they could charge whatever they wanted and get away with it. But as soon as competition from cars and jets came about the railroads went bankrupt. It is still possible to run a profitable passenger rail system such as Brightline but that serves a very niche market. Overall trains are a thing of the past that will never be able to bring in the kind of money they used to.

  • @SubatomicLaundry
    @SubatomicLaundry Місяць тому +2

    Thanks!

  • @stereocilia
    @stereocilia Місяць тому +1

    I grew up in rural FL and left when I saw it being torn down for yet another Lakewood Ranch style development. Everyone jokes that "our state is full, go away" but it definitely feels like rural FL isn't going to exist much longer