'People are happier in a walkable neighborhood': the US community that banned cars
If you were to imagine the first car-free neighborhood built from scratch in the modern US, it would be difficult to conceive such a thing sprouting from the environs of Phoenix, Arizona a sprawling, concrete incursion into a brutal desert environment that is sometimes derided as the least sustainable city in the country.
But it is here that such a neighborhood, called Culdesac, has taken root. On a 17-acre site that once contained a car body shop and some largely derelict buildings, an unusual experiment has emerged that invites Americans to live in a way that is rare outside of fleeting experiences of college, Disneyland or trips to Europe: a walkable, human-scale community devoid of cars.
Culdesac ushered in its first 36 residents earlier this year and will eventually house around 1,000 people when the full 760 units, arranged in two and three-story buildings, are completed by 2025. In an almost startling departure from the US norm, residents are provided no parking for cars and are encouraged to get rid of them. The apartments are also mixed in with amenities, such as a grocery store, restaurant, yoga studio and bicycle shop, that are usually separated from housing by strict city zoning laws.
Neighborhoods of this ilk can be found in cities such as New York City and San Francisco but are often prohibitively expensive due to their allure, as well as stiff opposition to new apartment developments. The $170m Culdesac project shows we can build walkable neighborhoods successfully in the US in [the] 2020s, according to Ryan Johnson, the 40-year-old who co-founded the company with Jeff Berens, a former McKinsey consultant.
https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2023/oct/11/culdesac-car-free-neighborhood-tempe-arizona
One similar to this went up on the West End of Richmond when I was living there. It seemed a little pricey though.
Wingus Dingus
(8,408 posts)really like to live in a decent, affordable walkable town for retirement. But "decent" and "affordable" are two words that do not go together.
Jilly_in_VA
(10,989 posts)It was older, but still...nothing was more than 20 minutes away. I walked 5 blocks to my elementary school, 3 to my jr. high/high school. It was 3.5 blocks to the grocery store. There were city buses that ran on the main streets 3 blocks away, plus a commuter route that ran from 6:30 am to 5:30 pm on weekdays at the bottom of our block. Now that's all changed in the name of "progress". The elementary school was combined with another one miles away in the name of "integration" so that kids in K-2 are bused around to the south side, and kids from there are bused to the school near my old one for grades 3-5. The bus company completely changed the routes and I don't know if you can even get from here to there any more. As for the grocery and the neighborhood pharmacy, the last time I was there I don't recall seeing them.
kimbutgar
(23,458 posts)Air conditioned cars and not walk long in that heat to get to it!
I walked 1 block this past summer in Arizona and I was soaking wet and dehydrated horribly. Took me days to recover.