I’m noticing more and more of this new type of masterplanned neighborhood popping up in suburbs around the country that seem to be creating a good middle ground for dense neighborhoods that are walkable with good transit access, but are for people who still need a car. Most Americans who live outside a major city still need to own a car in order to be able to do many things, but these neighborhoods are being designed to be walkable, with plenty of retail, grocery stores, transit access, park space, good street walls, and the parking is mostly hidden. Basically its still a suburb so the people still own a car but the built environment around them encourages them to use it as little as possible because most needs are within walking distance.
Edge on Hudson Sleepy hollow NY
Theres a grocery store, its located right next to the tarrytown metro north station, the condos all face the street or shared courtyards, the car parking and garages are hidden in back and on service roads. Theres multiple new parks going in, a river walk, and lots of ground floor retail and some restaurants going in the bigger condo buildings.
Highland Bridge, St Paul (ford plant redevelopment)
Here is pretty similar except theres a massive shared park in the middle of the development with a river. Theres a bus route right across the north of the site and a 7 min walk to the 46th street station for the blue line light rail. These townhouses also have garages but theyre in the back accessible by service roads and the front of the townhouses are right up to the street. The car access means each condo doesnt have its own green-space in the back, but I feel its made up for with the massive shared park space. To the north of the site is a bunch of apartments with lots of ground floor retail, grocery..etc.
I feel like these are a great model for a better way to densify our suburbs without them having to end up looking like low density sprawl and strip malls everywhere designed entirely around the car.