The Decline Of Suburbia?
Experts Predict Exodus From Far-Flung Neighborhoods Back To Urban Living
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Play CBS Video Video What Happened To Suburbia? Many of this nation's suburban neighborhoods are facing a state of decline due to rapidly rising gas prices and a troubled housing market. Ben Tracy reports on the potential end of America's utopia.
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It sounds hard to believe, but some experts are now predicting that this could be the beginning of the end of suburbia. (CBS)
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"I mean I think it's everybody's dream to own a home and then have their kids grow up in their home, you know, like they used to so many years ago," Nichole says.
Sixty years ago, cheap gas and new highways helped fuel suburbia's rapid rise, creating a new American utopia. But as CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy reports, the triple threat of falling home values, empty nesters returning to the city and sky-high gas prices is driving suburbia to the brink.
Some developments are left half built while other homes look abandoned. Demand for suburban housing is dropping so fast that a recent study predicts that by 2025 there will be a surplus of 22 million large-lot homes in suburban areas.
Nichole can't afford the $800 in gas she burned each month commuting to her job, so she's selling her house for less than half what she paid for it.
It sounds hard to believe, but some experts are now predicting that this could be the beginning of the end of suburbia -- that far-flung neighborhoods could be tomorrow's slums.
Author James Howard Kunstler has been predicting the decline of the suburbs for more than 15 years.
"I think the project of suburbia is over," he says.
Kunstler says housing far away from job centers won't survive.
"We've put so much of our national wealth and even identity into the idea of suburbia that we can't imagine having to let go of it or substantially change it," he says.
But change is building in Sacramento. The region adopted a back to the future approach known as "smart growth": high-density development in walkable neighborhoods near job centers and transit.
In the past three years, projects with apartments, condos and town homes increased 533 percent, while the number of subdivisions with large homes dropped 21 percent.
"The rapid rise in gas prices over the last six months has made that general direction this region has decided to go look like an especially good decision," says Mike McKeever of the Sacramento Area Council of Governments.
McKeever doesn't believe suburbs will disappear overnight, but says buying on the far edges of a region is now an economic gamble.
"That's a risky bet. It might pay off but it's a risky bet," he says.
Nichole Cinaglia plans to rent near her job. But she still thinks about the life she used to have.
"I don't miss the commute, but I miss the idea," she says. "I miss that it was mine."
A dream abandoned miles away now is beginning to fade.
©MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 118 CommentsWorking remotely should be embraced by managers and staff alike. One thing you can be sure of is that management does not want to outsource themselves, and they can work remotely just as easily as their staff.
The main thing for workers to do is work as efficiently and productively as possible. That is the best way to keep from being outsourced.
In a lot of cases, the most efficient way to work is from a remote office. Remote Office Centers lease individual offices, internet and phone systems to workers from multiple companies in shared centers located around the suburbs. There is a free web site where people can go to find Remote Office Centers near where they live:
http://www.remoteofficecenters.com
It is too expensive to move from the suburbs back to the city. It is easier and more efficient to move the office to the suburbs. That is what Remote Office Centers do.
It is not right they jack every thing up. It is greed. Ye can''t find a rent in Seattle under 650 a month and if so the class of people are drinkers/partyers. We are on fixed incomes and 50+.
not too many people are desiring to have a ''family'' anymore..hence the growth of ''lofts'' and ''condos'' and luxury apartments...
Posted by Element51 at 01:05 PM : Aug 08, 2008
So what you''re saying is, suburbia is disappearing because the MIDDLE CLASS IS DISAPPEARING.
Everyone is getting either VERY RICH ("boatloads of money") or VERY POOR.
BTW, exactly WHERE ARE THOSE BOATLOADS OF MONEY COMING FROM??? The can''t all be outsource managers.
Could it be - - - - DRUGSSSSSSSSS?????????????
Posted by mollydtt at 11:48 AM : Aug 08, 2008
Businesses are not immovable as outsourcing has taught us. Many suburbs may adjust by giving up more land and greenspace and transporting companies and services to the strip mall areas or even park like areas in their midst---in short, suburbia will morph into alternative inner cities away from the original urban areas. Ugly? yes. Necessary--yes--a trade off between what keeps millions of homes viable and stopping the vast tract of homogeneous homes that look like a bad version of the Stepford wives with SUVs.
The Crate and Barrel, Pottery Barn, IKEA, Hobby Lobby era is about to come to a close. LOL
Posted by talkingham at 10:39 AM : Aug 08, 2008
You are of course right...Wal*Mart was smart enough to help the husband of someone who was on their board of directors for six years become President, and they taught corporate America a lesson...and it paid off in "free" (then why is it costing America so much?) trade.
Big Oil used it well...first training Cheney up as CEO of Halliburton, and then finding a puppet with family credentials to serve as a figurehead for Cheney to operate behind...and you will note that Big Oil managed to surpass Wal*Mart''s profits.
Obama does not worry me - any even slightly shady links that have been posited about his dealings appear to be limited to real estate, and anybody who wishes to increase the value of the land that America sits upon would be a nice change.
But who, I wonder, controls McCain? So far it would appear to be Big Oil, once again...
People who expect that technology will somehow rescue the nation so there are no changes to our lifestyle from high gasoline prices give it too much credit. Technology is advancing and may give us some of what we enjoyed with cheap gasoline, but it is a fantasy to think we will have the same huge cars for the same price but with much cheaper energy (whether it''s hybrid, electric, hydrogen, or whatever). That cannot happen overnight, and when they are fully developed there will still be tradeoffs. If these technologies could actually deliver all that people expect, they would have been developed sooner. And I do not just mean transportation: telecommuting is not a technology to save us. We are human and need face time and interaction to do our jobs well. And not everyone has a job that can be done remotely.
People who expect that technology will somehow rescue the nation so there are no changes to our lifestyle from high gasoline prices give it too much credit. Technology is advancing and may give us some of what we enjoyed with cheap gasoline, but it is a fantasy to think we will have the same huge cars for the same price but with much cheaper energy (whether it''s hybrid, electric, hydrogen, or whatever). That cannot happen overnight, and when they are fully developed there will still be tradeoffs. If these technologies could actually deliver all that people expect, they would have been developed sooner. And I do not just mean transportation: telecommuting is not a technology to save us. We are human and need face time and interaction to do our jobs well. And not everyone has a job that can be done remotely.
People who expect that technology will somehow rescue the nation so there are no changes to our lifestyle from high gasoline prices give it too much credit. Technology is advancing and may give us some of what we enjoyed with cheap gasoline, but it is a fantasy to think we will have the same huge cars for the same price but with much cheaper energy (whether it''s hybrid, electric, hydrogen, or whatever). That cannot happen overnight, and when they are fully developed there will still be tradeoffs. If these technologies could actually deliver all that people expect, they would have been developed sooner. And I do not just mean transportation: telecommuting is not a technology to save us. We are human and need face time and interaction to do our jobs well. And not everyone has a job that can be done remotely.
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Posted by talkingham at 10:13 AM : Aug 08, 2008
Yah, Clinton was alright...as long as you are willing to ignore what his short-sighted and inequitable but "free" trade actions did to (roughly in order of the timing of the impact):
- America''s manufacturing jobs
- America''s service jobs
- The flow of investment capital out of America to build factories and service centers in cheaper nations
- The massive increase in global pollution caused by the transfer of light and then heavy manufacturing to places where the phrase "environmental responsibility" is met with a puzzled stare
- The tremendous increase in global energy consumption which will lead to a far faster depletion of the planet''s global petroleum reserves
- The modification of China and India into energy-intensive economies, which places their people at enormous risk of starvation - and thus places the world at risk of resource-motivated war - when the day comes that petroleum supplies become scarce...
In short, if you ignore the fact that Clinton''s actions will probably lead to more human death and destruction that has ever before been seen throughout all of recorded human history, he was alright...
Posted by ibsteve2u
I had the exact same thought when I read casadcoeur''s post. If it can be done a few miles away, it can also be done in India.
You took a surplus and turned it into a half-trillion deficit. Yeah you''re a real conservative aren''t you liar.
Clinton raised taxes on businesses and people who could afford to pay them and the economy boomed. It made the republicans so mad they impeached him for being human and dwelled incessantly on his biology, spending more than $50-million to investigate his *** life. yeah, the "conservatives" won and now we have an economy in shambles, no new energy plan as they promised (except to support big oil), and a trillion dollars poured into Iraq so a bunch of radical Shiites can have a budget surplus.
Yes, Mission Accomplished indeed, Der Decider.
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