"We're sort of stuck with retrofitting the suburbs," says Scott Bernstein, head of the Center for Neighborhood Technology, which for years has urged that transportation costs be a criterion for mortgage qualification. "That's not all that bad. … There's nothing like a crisis to get people to try something."Incidentally, my neighborhood (Scotts Valley, CA) has a Walk Score of 63/100 ("Somewhat walkable"). I hope that number will increase with the addition of our long awaited Skypark Town Center. It's a literally perfect illustration of this article: the transformation of an empty lot and two ill-placed propane businesses into a real downtown.
Read the entire piece: Gas prices drive push to reinvent America's suburbs
2 comments:
Interesting. Isn't this what urban cities were supposed to be like all along?
My current neighborhood ranked 38. I long for the 98 of my old Brooklyn. (I didn't have to make a concerted effort to exercise then, and my cholesterol was lower.) Sounds like you live in a very good "in between" place.
98? Wow. That must have been amazing.
I'll be interesting to see if Scotts Valley can push its number up, and I'll certainly post results!
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