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Living In Suburban Nation

Decent Essays

In the communities I grew up in, there were frequent changing circumstances that actually left my family not really as part of the community. From dingy, cheap and tiny places for rent, there has been significant points brought to the attention of the reader in this book that could attribute to the failure and success of neighborhoods. In Suburban Nation, the opening pages give a lot of insight on the issues that can come from these big and fancy, new housing developments. Looking into the first relative community destroying idea, the reading focuses on how roads and droning subdivisions can make it not worth living in these places. On the note of how roads affect our community, it says that “One’s role in this environment is primarily as a motorist competing for asphalt” (41). In this opening, it really proved true to the circumstances I have experienced. Living in Tampa, all I remember is how much time we spent in a car or not outside because it wasn’t safe to really walk anywhere around us so we were …show more content…

A section reads that “in the absence of walkable public places… people of diverse ages, races, and beliefs are unlikely to meet and talk” (60). In my neighborhood, the only place anyone could really go was the park but people mostly drove. The Florida heat and careless drivers made a lot of people avoid walking at all costs, but depending on the area we were in it changed. On the street of my neighborhood, no one even really acknowledged anyone else. In the nearby parks or amusement places, people were a lot more willing to interact with one another because they all wanted to be there and felt comfortable. In creating a safer, more pleasant environment for pedestrians, people’s willingness to interact with people they normally wouldn’t was significantly more

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