Somerville, MA -- Density Without Tall Buildings - by Matthew Yglesias in Slate, June 1, 2013
Read the whole thing here, including a huge number of comments (probably 20 times as much text as Yglesias's story)
...some very dense cities don't have much in the way of very tall buildings. Paris often comes up in this regard, but a better example for the American context is probably Somerville, Massachusetts where I happen to be at this very moment.
Somerville, a highly urbanized "suburb" of Boston contains over 18,000 people per square mile making it somewhat denser than San Francisco. And yet it has few tall buildings and certainly no skyscrapers. The key to that happening is that it's very literally dense. The streets are narrow, there's very little parkland, there are few office buildings or hotels. And most of all, the dwellings themselves are small. It's no coincidence that this town is in the oldest-settled part of the United States. Over the years as America has gotten wealthier people have tended to live in larger and larger spaces, but Somerville is full old structures that fit two or three households into apartments that cost more than the average American dwelling but have less square footage than the average American dwelling.
Read the whole thing here, including a huge number of comments (probably 20 times as much text as Yglesias's story)
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Date: 2013-06-08 05:23 am (UTC)Eeep... colonized =/= "settled."
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Date: 2013-06-08 05:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-06-08 05:49 am (UTC)"A population density of 18,000 per square foot should be perfectly compatible with spacious dwellings, ample parks, sidewalk cafes, at least some broad boulevards, and an office district."
we would set world records with that. and I wouldn't need to take the bus anywhere!
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Date: 2013-06-08 07:51 am (UTC)Taos Pueblo is a good guess, too.
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Date: 2013-06-08 07:57 am (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2013-06-08 01:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-06-08 01:31 pm (UTC)"The streets are narrow"
Well, some of them, I guess, but that's more due to how people park than the streets themselves.
"there's very little parkland"
Aren't we "Tree City USA?" That's what's written on the side of our mulchers. Also, I can think of five or six green spaces in the area right off the top of my head.
"there are few office buildings or hotels..."
Hotels, no, but there are plenty of office buildings.
"Somerville is full old structures that fit two or three households into apartments that cost more than the average American dwelling but have less square footage than the average American dwelling."
Rents in the area aren't inconsistent with your average metro area in a large city, though. Also, the "average American dwelling" is apparently 214 square meters, or 2300 square feet. I can see that being necessary for families, but there's a pretty large mix of families, roommate situations, single people, etc. in Somerville. He seems to be under the impression that everywhere is a suburb.
"So given 21st century construction technology and elevators, a mix of big buildings and single-family buildings makes more sense than a crowd of three-deckers."
...Clarendon Hill?
"This building features small dwellings in its current configuration as a two-unit rental property but as prices continue to rise in Cambridge, I wouldn't be surprised to see it bought by a rich guy and turned into a spacious single-family home."
I'd be surprised, since said rich guys buy homes with yards in Belmont and Waltham. No, Matt, this home's future is to be renovated and turned into condominiums.
I'm a little surprised an article like this is A) so sloppily researched and B) predicated on an idea ("Somerville is a model of how other towns should be constructed") that as far as I can tell is not seriously held by anybody. I love Somerville but this is a town that was built following the pressures of market forces, just like anywhere else.
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Date: 2013-06-08 01:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-06-08 02:16 pm (UTC)Cambridge has Fresh Pond reservation and Danehy Park. Arlington has Robbins Farm, Menotomy Rocks, and Spy Pond. Medford has the Middlesex Fells and the Mystic Lakes. We don't have anything comparable to these.
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Date: 2013-06-08 02:17 pm (UTC)Just how much research did this guy do?
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Date: 2013-06-08 02:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-06-08 03:07 pm (UTC)For public space there's also how wide your sidewalks are (and how many trees fit on them.)
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Date: 2013-06-08 06:23 pm (UTC)Somerville is not what I would classify as a "car-friendly" city. In fact that's part of what I like about it: There are sidewalks, and pedestrian/bike trails, and crosswalks, and parking authorities who make people piss off.
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Date: 2013-06-08 07:06 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2013-06-08 10:35 pm (UTC)This Tufts parking map shows exactly how the city line zigzags through the campus.
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Date: 2013-06-08 11:38 pm (UTC)That would still be wrong as some places in Virginia were settled before New England and remain settled today. As far as oldest presently and continuously settled major population center, that probably is the Boston area. And that was certainly the point.
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Date: 2013-06-09 06:38 pm (UTC)Makes it really tough to help on-campus students who decide to register to vote locally.