DominusNovus
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- Jun 20, 2010
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I was reading the recent book “Family Unfriendly” by Tim Carney, about how much of society is oriented in such a way to make raising families more difficult than it needs to be. He spent some time discussing how suburbs that are too car-centric are particularly difficult, despite the suburbs being the traditional place for American families for the past century or more. I’ll note that he is particularly right-of-center, so this is not the typical urbanist arguing against sprawl. He was basically arguing in favor of more walkable suburbs with some mixed use.
Around the same time, I came across an interesting juxtaposition. The MBTA’s density mandate (15 units/acre) lines up with a typical density for townhouses. Meanwhile, supposedly the fertility rate for people living in townhouses is almost the same as for people living in detached homes (note that I’m having trouble actually isolating that data, but its supposedly in the 2021 American Community Survey, and I'll note that I found mentions of this data online that showed slightly different but very similar numbers).
It seems that there is an opportunity here for interest groups that do not normally converge to find common ground. There could be a specific focus in urban design (or, more accurately, suburban design) that focused on creating family-centric communities. These would also look about 80% like what urbanists often want communities to look like. I’m not personally certain what would make the most sense. I'm fully aware that we cannot simply assume that correlation means causation - in other words, you can't just assume that a town that gets a bunch of townhouses built will see lots of families, nor can you assume that a young couple that buys a townhouse will start a family.
As a starter, I would suggest just building as many sidewalks as possible, and building as many townhouses (not multi-family developments, but still denser single family developments - mixed use is still certainly an option) as possible. Infill old strip malls, particularly if they're on main drags, would be a good starting point. I know this is nothing revolutionary, but if there's just a simple upgrading of underperforming properties like strip malls (or office complexes or regular malls), I think a lot of popular goals could be achieved. And, quite frankly, I'd suggest that a development of townhouses is more likely to look nice and fitting with the general character of New England towns than your typical 5-over-1.
Around the same time, I came across an interesting juxtaposition. The MBTA’s density mandate (15 units/acre) lines up with a typical density for townhouses. Meanwhile, supposedly the fertility rate for people living in townhouses is almost the same as for people living in detached homes (note that I’m having trouble actually isolating that data, but its supposedly in the 2021 American Community Survey, and I'll note that I found mentions of this data online that showed slightly different but very similar numbers).
It seems that there is an opportunity here for interest groups that do not normally converge to find common ground. There could be a specific focus in urban design (or, more accurately, suburban design) that focused on creating family-centric communities. These would also look about 80% like what urbanists often want communities to look like. I’m not personally certain what would make the most sense. I'm fully aware that we cannot simply assume that correlation means causation - in other words, you can't just assume that a town that gets a bunch of townhouses built will see lots of families, nor can you assume that a young couple that buys a townhouse will start a family.
As a starter, I would suggest just building as many sidewalks as possible, and building as many townhouses (not multi-family developments, but still denser single family developments - mixed use is still certainly an option) as possible. Infill old strip malls, particularly if they're on main drags, would be a good starting point. I know this is nothing revolutionary, but if there's just a simple upgrading of underperforming properties like strip malls (or office complexes or regular malls), I think a lot of popular goals could be achieved. And, quite frankly, I'd suggest that a development of townhouses is more likely to look nice and fitting with the general character of New England towns than your typical 5-over-1.