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U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

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Page 1: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

U.S. suburbanization and gentrification

Soc 331

Population and Society

07.15.2009

Page 2: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

Factors that influence urban development

Technology Transportation, building construction, communication

Organizational network of the community Realtors, government, citizen associations

Resource availability Energy (fuel), land supply, income levels

Population growth Individual values (U.S. desire for single family

homes) Institutional structure of society

U.S. Capitalist System vs. kinship or familial systems

Page 3: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

Role of transportation

Walking (pre-1880s); 2-3 mph Face to face communication, small but high

density, little separation between home and work Electric Street Car (1880-1920); 10-15 mph

Speeds up travel and focuses activity toward city center, some activities begin to disperse

Automobile (1920-present); 25-40+ mph Lower density, “multiple nuclei” Social class theory

Page 4: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

Where have all the street cars gone?

Increased transportation adds an element of geographic flexibility

The process of suburbanization was sped along by the removal of streetcars in favor of automobiles

Automobile manufacturers and tire companies bought local trail lines, dismantled them and replaced them with gasoline powered buses

Page 5: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

Seattle street car

Page 6: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

The rise of the automobile and demise of public transit

By 1990 in the U.S. 73% of all workers got to work by driving in their automobile while an additional 13% carpooled

More people walked to work (6%) than took public transportation (5%) (1990 Census)

Page 7: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

An accounting of Suburbanization

Thought of as relatively new 1899 - Adna Weber noted than American cities

were beginning to suburbanize Really took off in the 1920s Until 1960s continued unabated

1. American desire for less dense space

2. Ability to obtain that space Increasing wealth Availability of automobile/highway transit

Page 8: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

Trends in U.S. suburbanization

Westward expansion Karsada (1995) - in 1960 25% of all Fortune 500

firms were located in NYC, in 1990 it declined to 8%

Moving to sunbelt cities and not to city centers Near to highways and regional airports More people now commute from suburb to suburb

than commute to the city center Edge cities Center city deterioration?

Page 9: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

A sign of the times?

Page 10: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

Explaining Suburbanization

Natural Evolution Theory (“Pull”) “Natural” working of housing market Preference for large single-family lots Decentralization of the city is followed by employment

decentralization (serves to reinforce suburbanization process) Can have deleterious implications for city residents

Fiscal/Social Problems of Central Cities (“Push”) High taxes, poor quality schools, racial tension, crime,

congestion cause affluent to migrate which leads to further deterioration

Page 11: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

Gentrification

Influx of businesses and individuals with generally higher SES settling in a an area with relatively lower SES Some add “displacement” to the definition - Also elements

of “improvement” Baby boom generation grew up in the suburbs to a greater

extent than any previous cohort Began to purchase and renovate cheap housing in older

parts of central cities White and upwardly mobile so linked to the gentry moving

back to the city

Page 12: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

Impacts of gentrification

Shift of rental property to owned housing Increase in existing rents Decrease in integration “Urban revitalization” Shifting populations Neighborhood turnover

Page 13: U.S. suburbanization and gentrification Soc 331 Population and Society 07.15.2009

Explanations (London, Lee & Lipton 1986)

Demographics Baby Boom Childless couples (less space and more income)

Ecological Industry replaced by corporation

Socio-cultural “pro-urban”, “urbanicity” is hip

Political/Economical Increase in transit, desegregation, market interaction