| Literature DB >> 34778714 |
Abstract
The USA is the leading emitter of greenhouse gases among the developed countries, in part because it is the only developed country with more of its population in suburbs than in cities. Cities produce less greenhouse gas emissions per capita than suburbs. Meanwhile, the US and the world have been wrestling with the public health emergency of the COVID-19 pandemic. But as US cities recover from the pandemic, they are unlikely to add more population than their suburbs because of changes in favor of working from home, online shopping, and the search for more affordable housing and green space, as well as concerns about population density and contagious diseases. So, the challenge is how to design and redevelop suburbs to make them more environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable to address both climate change and the threat of future pandemics. A sustainable suburb scenario offers an alternative to the sprawling development, separation of land uses and income classes, and automobile dependence that characterizes the typical American suburban landscape. This essay reviews the literature on re-designing suburbs and describes and evaluates both a business-as-usual suburb scenario and a sustainable suburb scenario. Though challenges exist, sustainable suburbs will be needed in order to reduce US greenhouse gas emissions, to achieve greater resilience in adapting to the effects of climate change, and to guard against future pandemics while providing economic opportunities and greater equity over the long run.Entities:
Keywords: Business-as-usual; COVID-19; Climate change; Scenarios; Sustainable suburb
Year: 2021 PMID: 34778714 PMCID: PMC8113791 DOI: 10.1007/s42532-021-00084-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Socioecol Pract Res ISSN: 2524-5279
The business-as-usual auto-dependent suburb
| Density | Vehicle miles traveled | Greenhouse gas emissions | Park space | Water quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Low to moderate. Less than 2,500 people per square mile. | High. More than 12,000 miles per household per year. | High. High vehicle miles traveled. Large houses to heat and cool. | Moderate. More park space needed to reach 10 acres per 1,000 residents. | Fair. Stormwater runoff a common problem. |
Fig. 1The cul-de-sac with large single-family homes is a hallmark of the auto-oriented suburb. Note the absence of sidewalks. Cul-de-sacs separate rather than connect neighborhoods and result in awkward street patterns and travel routes
Fig. 2Multi-Use Trail in the City of Milton Georgia, an outer suburb of Atlanta. The signs ask trail users to respect other people and to be environmentally responsible by putting all pets on a leash and cleaning up after the pets, especially horses
Fig. 3Dense, mixed-use development within walking distance of the DC Metro, Bethesda, MD. Making suburbs look and feel more urban while retaining a human scale and allowing for transportation choices also increases their sustainability
The sustainable suburb scenario
| Population density | Vehicle miles traveled | Greenhouse gas emissions | Park space | Water quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A minimum of 2,500 people per square mile | Low to medium. Under 10,000 miles per year. Increased use of electric vehicles. | Low | 10 acres or more per 1,000 residents | Good quality. Little stormwater runoff with use of green infrastructure. |
Obstacles and opportunities in moving toward the sustainable suburb
| Economic | Social | Environmental |
|---|---|---|
The cost of new infrastructure, especially transit. The cost of retrofitting vs new construction on greenfield sites. | Not in My Backyard (NIMBY) sentiment. Political opposition to changing zoning for multi-family and mixed-use developments. | Existing development patterns. Increasing density while maintaining air and water quality, avoiding traffic congestion, and providing more public green space. |
More people working remotely. More online shopping. | Greater diversity. Yes in My Backyard (YIMBY) sentiment. | Connecting with neighboring suburbs and the region for transit, trails, and parks. |