Ross proposes that there is a demand for urban style living because the suburban commutes are getting worse. The biggest issue with developing more urban communities is the "urban housing crisis", as stated in the book and by Ross there is not enough land area available to build housing in the currently existing urban areas. Ross offers a solution, which includes making suburban areas more urban style. Politics, zoning rules, and policies in the suburbs are making it harder to achieve this in suburban areas. The community has to come together and offer their input if anything is going to be…
Gentrification has been a long topic that has been recently discussed as if effects all across the United States. In the podcast “Mouth to Ear” the Black and Latino communities their were renovations to their community when showed that whites were moving into their community. As a result of this rent increased, the area around them started to become more expensive, and this led to low-income residents moving out because they did not have the money, or was force out. The podcasts gave several examples of low-income residents forced out their homes because they did not have the money the landowners wanted. The podcast gave an example of a women living in Bedford Stuyvesant was forced out of her apartment new building owners bought the building.…
In Flemings City of Rhetoric, he attempts to explain how the geographic landscape impacts and influences us to shape our political beliefs and who we are as people. Fleming first focuses on the ways political ideology developed and how those ideologies effect our relationships. Our political beliefs “group” us together (Fleming, 22). It makes sense. Many of the friend’s people make have similar ideologies, beliefs, values, and morals.…
“Gentrification is a trend in urban neighborhoods, which results in increased property values and the displacing of lower-income families and small businesses.” I don’t think gentrification should spread through communities. Both author’s Jeremiah Moss and Ray Oldenburg show good examples why gentrification will hurt communities and not help them. I don’t gentrification is the right thing to do right now for communities because it wouldn’t help all people in the situation. In “ New Yorkers Need to Take Back Their City” by Jeremiah Moss he explains why gentrification wouldn’t help the communities.…
After World War II, metropolitan sprawl began to take place and a large scale. A number of factors contributed to the phenomenon, such as new more advance forms of communication, wide access to improved forms of transportation, and, most importantly, a boom in population after the conclusion of the war. However, a number of issues emerged from metropolitan growth and sprawl. One issue that arises from metropolitan grow is inequality of services and living in different areas. As more high income families and individuals move to less populated, metropolitan areas, more focus is put on developing these areas by state governments, causing inner cities to fall behind in regards to infrastructure public services offered, such as education.…
After reading The Sprawl Debate and the Principles of New Urbanism the topic that really stood out to me was mixed land uses and its increase in density. In the Sprawl Debate Article it explains how new urbanist communities are meant to be more than subdivisions. Its plans are to have an open organized row of services and workplace locations by only developing a broad mix of land. Now this idea can be viewed as either a Pro or Con. Sprawl Debate:…
In certain states in the United States, there has recently been an influx in the population in some cities. Since there has been an increase in population, low income families are being forced to move out of the city and into more affordable housing. Affordable housing is usually located outside the city limits. In order to solve this problem there has been various solutions implemented to keep affordable housing within city limits. One solution has been federal project-based rental assistance (PBRA).…
He attempts to broadly interpret the American suburban experience, which he views as unique. He states that "the United States has thus far been unique in four important respects that can be summed up in the following sentence: affluent and middle-class Americans live in suburban areas that are far from their work places, in homes that they own, and in the center of yards that by urban standards elsewhere are enormous. This uniqueness thus involves population density, home-ownership, residential status, and journey-to-work. " His working definition of suburbs has four parts: function (non-farm residential), class (middle and upper status), separation (a daily journey-to-work), and density (low relative to older sections). The central idea of his book is how the wealthy began the flight from the city first — something that the middle classes eventually emulated as city tax rates gradually increased to pay for resulting urban problems - as the poorer classes remained in the older central urban areas.…
Gentrification 's Insidious Violence; The Truth about American Cities Ever wonder what will happen if people band together to try to fix whole communities? What would happen if these cities now seen as blackened areas disappeared completely? What would happen to the infrastructure, and most importantly what would happen to those already living there? These very important and current issues are answered in "Gentrification 's Insidious Violence; The Truth about American Cities" written by Daniel Jose Older in order to change the view of the everyday and almost seen as a common American, the "middle-class white republican. " The definition of gentrification is the buying and renovating of houses and stores in broken down neighborhoods by wealthier people, often displacing low income families and small businesses.…
A Consumers Republic talks about mass suburbia with readings about the social and economic status that came with living in the suburbs. The chapter also speaks of keeping people of a certain economic or social class together in the late 1950s, while making sure not to let others in who could disrupt the white suburbia. Two major cities, Atlanta, Georgia and Compton, Los Angeles, were cities that both experienced “ White Flight” and the effects following soon after. In the 1950s, Compton was a white middle class inner city, and almost thirty years later the city was over run by drugs and controlled by many dangerous gangs.…
American families did move into middle-class African American neighborhoods, and, in response, many of these same middle-class families moved from the city to suburbs as well. Michigan’s tradition of home rule also contributes to the fragmentation of the metro Detroit area. Home rule provides a certain degree of autonomous power delegated to sub-units of government by the state, which limits the amount of interference state governments can have in local government matters. Like many municipalities across the America at the time, Michigan municipalities prefered to be independent in their political and economic affairs. This type of political fragmentation meant that some municipalities could overlap or fail to provide services.…
Research has shown that for more than 50 years now, a drastic change in the population transitioning from cities to the suburbs has been occurring. After 1950, this movement originally gained momentum and become the leading demographic style for nearly all-crucial U.S. metropolitan areas. This migration has pushed many more Americans to live in the suburbs now than any other location in the states. Today, a good amount of middle-class African Americans have moved out to the suburbs but the most common people who branch out there consist of upper-middle-class, middle-class, and working-class white people. Class and race separation steady growing more due to this white flight procedure.…
Formerly racially homogenous neighborhoods become diversified with the migration of new-comers. “Data shows that the economic benefits of gentrification spread beyond the white interlopers. In 2008, researchers from University of Colorado at Boulder, University of Pittsburgh and Duke University used census data to measure the total income gain in gentrified neighborhoods over a select period of time. Intriguingly, the demographic group that contributed the largest percentage to that income gain was black residents with high-school diplomas. That group contributed 33 percent of the total income gain, while college-educated whites only brought in 20 percent.”…
Sophia Miana Professor Hitch English 100 3 October 2017 What is Gentrification Mia and her family have lived in the same town since the first time she developed memories. She’s also known her neighbors the same time she’s known her family. One day, she comes home from school, and witnessed a notice taped to the front door of their house. The paper read that there will be reconstructing of old houses and construction of new buildings in her area, and that the price of their house was going to increase. Mia is aware of what’s going to happen to her neighborhood since she is in high school, but she still asked her father what will happen to them.…
What are some of the key factors which have driven and facilitated urban development over time? Referring to examples from New Zealand and other countries, explain some of the different types of contemporary cities. Introduction Urban development is constantly growing in today’s society due to the world’s population growth and many people are wanting to live in Urban areas opposed to rural areas. In the 30 year period between 2000 and 2030 the UN has estimated that the world population will significantly increase and majority of this increase will occur in urban centres (An introduction to human geography, 2012).…