Suburb
- "Suburbia" redirects here. For other uses, see Suburbia (disambiguation).
Suburbs are inhabited districts located either inside a town or city's outer rim or just outside its official limits (the term varies from country to country), or the outer elements of a conurbation.
The presence of certain elements (whose definition varies amongst urbanists, but usually refers to some basic services and to the territorial contiguity) identifies a suburb as a peripheral populated area with a certain autonomy, where the density of habitation is usually lower than in an inner city area, though state or municipal house building will often cause departures from that organic gradation. Suburbs have typically grown in areas with an abundance of flat land near a large urban zone, usually with minimal traditions of citizens clustering together for defence behind fortified city walls, and with transport systems that allow commuting into more densely populated areas with higher levels of commerce.
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Etymology
The word "suburb" is derived from the Old French "subb urbe" and ultimately from the Latin "suburbium," formed from "sub," meaning "under," and "urbis," meaning "wall" or "walled city." The first recorded usage, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, comes from Wycliffe in 1380, where the form "subarbis" is used.
In the United States, Canada and most of Western Europe the word "suburb" usually refers to a separate municipality, borough or unincorporated area outside a central town or city. This definition is evident, for example, in the title of David Rusk's book Cities Without Suburbs (ISBN 0-943875-73-0 ), which promotes metropolitan government; in the UK, much of this pattern dates to Margaret Thatcher's reforms of 1985. US colloquial usage sometimes shortens the term to "'burb" (with or without the apostrophe), and "The Burbs" first appeared as a term for the suburbs of Chicagoland.
This division is not as prevalent in Ireland and the United Kingdom, where "suburb" refers to residential neighbourhoods outside of the city centre.
In the United States, the word "suburb" is often used to refer to a "bedroom community" where most of the residents do not work in their own town, i.e. they commute to a nearby city for work.
In Australia and New Zealand, "suburbs" are official postal and addressing subdivisions of a city. The term can refer to "inner suburbs" such as Te Aro in Wellington, Prahran in Melbourne or Ultimo in Sydney. In more unusual cases, such as Melbourne (suburb), it may even refer to the postcodes of the central areas representing a small part of the larger metropolis. "Outer suburbs" are the postal divisions found in the outer rings of the metropolitan areas, and usually lie within the boundaries of a separate municipality, such as the City of Fairfield. In Australia, the key commercial element - commuting to work - was not present in the initial rise of suburbs, although it would appear during the 20th century. The term "suburb" as used in Australia reflects this, and thus has an ambiguous meaning to non-Australians.
Inhabitants of these areas generally identify with the central city, and often consider themselves to be inhabitants of the central city. Indeed, neighbourhoods within a city proper that share physical and social characteristics with the suburbs as already described -- such as a relatively low residential density and a scarcity of industrial properties -- are also often called suburbs.
History
- As long as there have been cities, there have been suburbs. Some urban activities have always been located outside the city. Even in ancient Mesopotamia, such activities as slaughterhouses, furnaces, and other undesirable enterprises were located outside the defensive walls, away from the masses of citizens. Additionally, citizens of a classical city often chose to build homes outside the city, sacrificing the protection of the walls for less expensive land and more space and privacy. The ancient Romans called these areas suburbium, or “under or outside the wall.” [citation needed] A second form of suburb found near the ancient or classical city was the port or dockyard. These communities were often located away from the central walled city, yet totally dependent on that city. Ancient Athens had Piraeus while ancient Rome had Ostia, and similar examples are found in classical China. [citation needed] A final classical example of a suburb was Rome’s suburb of Tivoli, a sort of classical version of the Hamptons or Westchester County outside New York City. In Tivoli, many of Rome’s wealthy elite owned large estates where they would escape the urban crowds. A permanent population developed to support these estates, yet Tivoli was completely dependent on Rome and many wealthy elite commuted to Rome for business or politics.
Throughout the classical, medieval, and Renaissance worlds, whenever a suburb would grow sufficiently dense and populated, new walls were built around the area, an old-fashioned version of annexation. A common practice found in 16th to 19th century Europe was for a wealthy suburb of large mansions to develop on one side of the central city, while an industrial, working-class suburb would develop on the other side. An example of this would be London, where the wealthy Westminster was to the west of the City of London while the working-class suburbs and docklands were on the east. [citation needed] London is also illustrative of how suburban, over time, becomes urban. No one would now call Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, Piccadilly Circus, and the West End Theater district, a suburb; yet that is precisely what it was in the 18th century.
Many sociologists see suburbs as a post-urban area which develops in response to worsening conditions within a city with a communication and transport system which allows citizens to live outside the city while doing business inside. [citation needed]
The suburbs and more distinct settlements around a town or city may look towards the urban area for goods, services and employment opportunities. That wider area may be called the hinterland of the town or a "city region". In the era before motorised travel, the radius of the hinterland roughly coincided with the distance that livestock could be herded to and from a market during daylight hours. In lowland areas, without severe geographic barriers to movement, a spacing of towns between 15 and 20 miles (24 and 32 km) is therefore quite common. Suburbs with a healthier environment are often found upwind of those parts of a town or city where heavy industry was first established. [citation needed] Naturally, the suburbs suffering air pollution tended to be cheaper and hence tend to be occupied by those with lower incomes.
The growth of suburbs was further facilitated by the development of zoning laws and more effective and accessible means of transport. In the older cities of the northeast U.S., suburbs originally developed along train or trolley lines that could shuttle workers into and out of city centers where the jobs were located. This practice gave rise to the term bedroom community or dormitory, meaning that most daytime business activity took place in the city, with the working population leaving the city at night for the purpose of going home to sleep.
The growth in the use of trains, and later automobiles and highways, increased the ease with which workers could have a job in the city while commuting in from the suburbs. In the United Kingdom, railways stimulated the first mass exodus to the suburbs. The Metropolitan Railway, for example, was active in building and promoting its own housing estates in the north-west of London - consisting mostly of detached houses on large plots - which it then marketed as "Metroland". [citation needed] As car ownership rose and wider roads were built, the commuting trend accelerated as in North America. This trend towards living away from towns and cities has been termed the urban exodus.
Zoning laws also contributed to the location of residential areas outside of the city center by creating wide areas or "zones" where only residential buildings were permitted. These suburban residences are built on larger lots of land than in the urban city. For example, the lot size for a residence in Chicago is usually 125 feet (38 m) deep, while the width can vary from 14 feet (4 m) wide for a row house to 45 feet (14 m) wide for a large standalone house. [citation needed] In the suburbs, where standalone houses are the rule, lots may be 85 feet (26 m) wide by 115 feet (35 m) deep, as in the Chicago suburb of Naperville. [citation needed] Manufacturing and commercial buildings were segregated in other areas of the city.
Increasingly, due to the congestion and pollution experienced in many city centers (accentuated by the commuters' vehicles), more people moved out to the suburbs. Moving along with the population, many companies also located their offices and other facilities in the outer areas of the cities. This has resulted in increased density in older suburbs and, often, the growth of lower density suburbs even further from city centers. An alternative strategy is the deliberate design of "new towns" and the protection of green belts around cities. Some social reformers attempted to combine the best of both concepts in the Garden City movement. [citation needed]
In the United States, urban areas have often grown faster than city boundaries since the 18th century. Until the 1900s, new neighborhoods usually sought or accepted annexation to the central city to obtain city services. In the 20th century, however, many suburban areas began to see independence from the central city as an asset. In some cases, suburbanites saw self-government as a means to keep out people they considered undesirable, such as immigrants and African Americans. [citation needed] Cleveland, Ohio is typical of many American central cities; its municipal borders have changed little since 1922, even though the Cleveland urbanized area has grown many times over.[citation needed] Several layers of suburban municipalities now surround cities like Cleveland, Chicago and Philadelphia.
While suburbs had originated far earlier, the suburban population in North America exploded after World War II. Returning veterans wishing to start a settled life moved en masse to the suburbs. Between 1950 and 1956 the resident population of all US suburbs increased by 46%. [citation needed] During the same period of time, African-Americans were rapidly moving north for better jobs and educational opportunities than they could get in the segregated South, and their arrival in Northern cities en masse further stimulated white suburban migration, a phenomenon known as white flight. [citation needed]
In the U.S., 1970 was the first year that more people lived in suburbs than elsewhere. (1) In the U.S, the development of the skyscraper and the sharp inflation of downtown real estate prices also led to downtowns being more fully dedicated to businesses, thus pushing residents outside the city centre. By 1980 this was often perceived as undesirable, extending travel times and adding to people's sense of isolation and fear in central areas outside trading hours. [citation needed]
Suburbs today
United States
Typically, many post-World War II American suburbs have been characterized by:
- Lower densities than central cities, with single-family homes predominating.
- Zoning patterns that separate residential and commercial development, as well as different intensities and densities of development.
- Shopping malls and strip shopping centers instead of a downtown shopping district.
- Streets lined by off-street car parking or vegetation instead of buildings.
- A predominantly white or middle- or upper-class population, with a few exceptions (e.g., Ford Heights, Illinois, a predominantly black working-class suburb of Chicago).
- A road network designed to conform to a hierarchy, including residential streets that curve and often end in cul-de-sacs, in place of the grid pattern common to most central cities and pre-World War II suburbs.
- Ready access to freeways or tollways.
- Limited access to public transit.
- The importance of public space reduced in favor of private property.
- Low crime rate.
- Schools considered "better" than inner-city schools
However, suburbs come in many types. Some, such as Compton, California, are predominantly non-white and known for its extreme gang violence. As metropolitan areas grow, high-density development can spread outside of the central city into nearby suburbs.
Some suburban areas have developed their own large clusters of office and retail buildings, usually in a business park setting. These areas, such as Tysons Corner, Virginia and Parsippany, New Jersey, are sometimes referred to as "edge cities", a term invented by journalist Joel Garreau. Edge cities differ from traditional downtowns in that they are automobile-centric rather than reliant on public transportation.
Controversy
Suburbs became popular as an opportunity for families to seek an alternative to crowding of central cities. Few families could attain the ideal known as the "American Dream," frequently associated with homeownership, if all metropolitan residents were confined to central-city boundaries. Development activity outside central cities was enabled by innovations in transportation as well as public subsidies that bore the cost of infrastructure such as roads, water, and electricity. The trend toward deconcentrated urban form was further advanced by the advent of automobile culture and the availability of unprecedented amounts of energy in the form of carbon fuels.
But the trend toward suburban living is not without a large group of detractors. In recent years, suburban "sprawl", a derisive term for poorly planned suburban growth, has become an increasingly hot-button issue in American politics.
Critics of suburbanization say suburban growth will:
- Lead to the decay of central cities and their downtowns, which are left without a base of nearby middle-class residents.
- Quickly destroy cropland, displace nature, and consume attractive countryside.
- Increase traffic at the central area.
- Cause a decline in the public's health, since buildings in suburbs are often so far apart that driving is the only way to get from one place to another[citation needed].
- Be costly, due to the new infrastructure required for development, paid by the existing urban area.
- Provide a limited set of housing choices.
- Build more soul-less places with no distinct identity or feeling of community.
- Increase ethnic violence in the inner-city[citation needed].
In response to these concerns, a socio-political movement called "New Urbanism" or "Smart Growth" is currently in vogue in the U.S. This movement among some city planners, builders, and architects holds that denser, more city-like communities with zoning laws designed to encourage mixed-use buildings are desirable and may foster a better sense of community among residents. Some of these communities seek to reduce car-dependency (and thus the use of personal automobiles) wherever possible, since residents ideally would not need to commute as far, or at least not need perform every errand by car. This movement has resulted in both the construction of new developments that embody these principles, and renovation of areas in existing city centers for new residential and commercial activities.
However, automobile-dependent suburbs remain the norm. Indeed, many of the fastest-growing communities in the U.S. are exurbs—communities even farther away and lower-density than suburbs.
Some people have criticized not only the character of suburbs but the framework of local government and state and federal laws that encourage them to proliferate. Metropolitanism is the idea that entire metro areas should work together, instead of being divided into many competing municipalities. One American metro area often cited as an example of metropolitanism at work is Portland, Oregon, which has the country's only directly elected metropolitan government. Some other cities, notably Indianapolis, Indiana and Jacksonville, Florida, have merged with some of their suburbs to form consolidated local governments.
Canada
Urban development in Canada has largely paralleled development in the United States. After World War II, large bedroom communities of single-family homes and shopping centers sprouted on the outskirts of Canadian cities.
However, Canada has far fewer suburban municipalities than the U.S. does. Many large cities, such as Winnipeg, Calgary and Ottawa, extend all the way to the countryside. Canadian provincial governments often take the question of municipal boundaries into their own hands and impose city-suburb mergers. The Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver areas still have suburban municipalities, although their suburban areas are generally grouped into fewer cities than is typical in the U.S. Ontario created a "metropolitan" government for the Toronto area in 1954, but the urbanized area has since grown well beyond it. [citation needed]
Today, Toronto has some of the largest suburban municipalities in North America, with more than three quarters of a million people living in Mississauga alone. Many Toronto suburbs have significantly improved on the suburban philosophy, adding a downtown to many suburban centres (Markham, Mississauga, Brampton, Scarborough, North York etc.) Canadian suburbs are generally more ethnically diverse than American suburbs, adding more uniqueness to each sub-city. [citation needed]
Other countries
In many parts of the globe, however, suburbs are economically poor areas, inhabited by people sometimes in real misery, keeping them at the limit of the city borders for economic or social reasons like the impossibility of affording the (usually higher) costs of life in the town. An example in the developed world would be the banlieues of France, or the concrete suburbs of Sweden, which are comparable to the inner cities of the US.
In the UK, the government is seeking to impose minimum densities on newly approved housing schemes in parts of southeast England. The new catchphrase is 'building sustainable communities' rather than housing estates. However, commercial concerns tend to retard the opening of services until a large number of residents have occupied the new neighbourhood.
In the Third World, such slum areas are often irregularly built or managed, with individualistic, unregulated building and other forms of social or legal disorder. It has been said that this would be sometimes a case of spontaneous or psychological apartheid. In some cases inhabitants just live off the waste materials produced by the city (like, increasingly, around new African towns) and usually in such situations suburbs and houses are roughly built, often not even in the traditional building materials, as seen for example in the bidonvilles. Often nomads settle their camps in suburbs. The occupiers of more industrialised or longer-lasting homes may refer to such suburbs as "shanty towns".
In the illustrative case of Rome, Italy, in the 1920s and 1930s, suburbs were intentionally created ex novo in order to give lower classes a destination, in consideration of the actual and foreseen massive arrival of poor people from other areas of the country. Many critics have seen in this development pattern (that was circularly distributed in every direction) also a quick solution to a problem of public order (keeping the unwelcome poorest classes - together with criminals, in this way better controlled - comfortably remote from the elegant "official" town). On the other hand, the expected huge expansion of the town soon effectively covered the distance from the central town, and now those suburbs are completely engulfed by the main territory of the town, and other newer suburbs were created at a further distance from them.
Notable suburbs
Many suburbs have become famous in their own right, often due to the wealth and prestige associated with them. Perhaps the best-known American suburb is Beverly Hills, California, a wealthy suburb of Los Angeles, as well as Orange County, California which is known for its wealth. Other well-known suburbs include Shaker Heights, near Cleveland, which was one of the first planned garden communities in the U.S.; Grosse Pointe, Michigan, near Detroit; the Main Line suburbs of Philadelphia; affluent Long Island, New York, most of which are suburbs of New York City; much of Northern New Jersey (which is the common setting for U.S. drama films), with New York City and other cities in North Jersey being the major employers; much of the lower Hudson River Valley in New York is also a suburb of New York City; Redmond, Washington, home of Microsoft Corp. and Nintendo's American division, near Seattle; and Norman, Oklahoma, home of the University of Oklahoma and center of the nation's meteorological research interests.
Because of different local government patterns, suburbs of one city may be bigger than a central city in another area. The most-populous suburb in the United States is Mesa, Arizona near Phoenix, with an estimated population of 442,780 in 2005 -- more than Atlanta, Cincinnati, or Pittsburgh. Virginia Beach, with a population of around 450,000 is the largest city in the state of Virginia; some would consider it a suburb of Norfolk. Canada's, as well as North America's, largest suburb, Mississauga, Ontario, has nearly 700,000 people, greater than Vancouver, Boston, Massachusetts, and Washington, D.C..
Some suburbs swell so fast that they take over the politics of the counties they are built in. This happened in the 1990s to three suburbs in Florida: The Villages, Palm Bay and Deltona.
Largest Suburbs Worldwide
The following is a table of the largest incorporated suburbs worldwide, with over 800 thousand people. Only census data is listed. (Except cities that require exact records of birth/death/move registration such in Japan, and Brazil which estimates all its cities annually)
| Rank | City | Population | Metropolitan Area | Nation | source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Inch'on | 2,466,388 | Greater Seoul | S. Korea | S. Korea 2000 Census [1] |
| 2 | Giza | 2,221,868 | Greater Cairo | Egypt | Egypt Census 1996 |
| 3 | Quezon City | 2,173,831 | Metro Manila | Philippines | Ph Census 2002 |
| 4 | Bekasi | 1,931,976 | Greater Jakarta, Jabotabek | Indonesia | Indonesia Census 2000 |
| 5 | Ecatepec de Morelos | 1,688,258 | Mexico City | Mexico | Mexico Census 2005 CONAPO |
| 6 | Kobe | 1,528,940 | Greater Osaka | Japan | Japan Oct 2006 |
| 7 | Tangerang | 1,488,666 | Greater Jakarta, Jabotabek | Indonesia | Indonesia Census 2000 |
| 8 | Depok | 1,353,249 | Greater Jakarta, Jabotabek | Indonesia | Indonesia Census 2000 |
| 9 | Kawasaki | 1,342,232 | Greater Tokyo | Japan | Japan Oct 06 |
| 10 | Guarulhos | 1,283,253 | Greater Sao Paulo | Brazil | Brazil IBGE Estimate 2006 [2] |
| 11 | Thana | 1,261,517 | Greater Mumbai | India | India Census 2001 |
| 12 | Kalyan | 1,193,266 | Greater Mumbai | India | India Census 2001 |
| 13 | Saitama | 1,182,000 | Greater Tokyo | Japan | Japan Census 2005 |
| 14 | Caloocan | 1,177,604 | Metro Manila | Philippines | Ph Census 2002 |
| 15 | Zapopan | 1,155,790 | Greater Guadalajara | Mexico | Mexico Census 2005 CONAPO |
| 16 | Netzahualcoyotl | 1,140,528 | Mexico City | Mexico | Mexico Census 2005 CONAPO |
| 17 | Faridabad | 1,055,938 | Greater Delhi | India | India Census 2001 |
| 18 | Victoria | 1,035,000 | Hong Kong | China | Hong Kong Census 2000 |
| 19 | Suwon | 1,033,829 | Greater Seoul | S. Korea | S. Korea NSO Estimate [3] |
| 20 | Haora | 1,008,704 | Greater Kolkata | India | India Census 2001 |
| 21 | Pimpri | 1,006,417 | Greater Pune | India | India Census 2001 |
| 22 | Seongnam | 977,166 | Greater Seoul | S. Korea | S. Korea NSO Estimate [4] |
| 23 | Sao Goncalo | 973,372 | Greater Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | Brazil IBGE Estimate 2006 [5] |
| 24 | Ghaziabad | 968,521 | Greater Delhi | India | India Census 2001 |
| 25 | Chiba | 930,388 | Greater Tokyo | Japan | Japan Oct 2006 |
| 26 | Goyang | 886,000 | Greater Seoul | S. Korea | S. Korea NSO Estimate [6] |
| 27 | Shubra al Khaymah | 870,716 | Greater Cairo | Egypt | Egypt Census 1996 |
| 28 | Bucheon | 866,000 | Greater Seoul | S. Korea | S. Korea NSO Estimate [7] |
| 29 | Duque de Caxias | 855,010 | Greater Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | Brazil IBGE Estimate 2006 [8] |
| 30 | Nova Iguacu | 844,583 | Greater Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | Brazil IBGE Estimate 2006 [9] |
| 31 | Sakai | 832,287 | Greater Osaka | Japan | Japan Oct 2006 |
| 32 | Naucalpan de Juarez | 821,442 | Mexico City | Mexico | Mexico Census 2005 CONAPO |
| 33 | Sao Bernardo do Campo | 803,906 | Greater Sao Paulo | Brazil | Brazil IBGE Estimate 2006 [10] |
Note: Kyoto (1,473,068) could be considered a suburb, but it existed independently for a long time, and is quite different from Osaka region.
Indonesia and India census populations are from citypopulation.de
Census data is self-evident as it is published extensively, census dates for all nations are available here and national statistical agencies here.
Suburbs in pop culture
Suburbs are very predominant in pop culture, as they are often the setting for movies, books, TV Shows, and songs.
- The Burbs, a comedy film starring Tom Hanks deals with life in a surburban neighbourhood.
- Neighbours has been on television in Australia since 1985 and the United Kingdom from the following year. It is set in Ramsay Street in the fictional suburb Erinsborough.
- Knots Landing was a long-running show depicting suburban life. It was set in the fictional town of Knots Landing, California, and followed the lives of several families who lived on the suburban cul-de-sac Seaview Circle.
- The Australian Broadcasting Corporation television comedy Kath & Kim pillories the nouveau white trash of subdivisions with exaggerated provincial accents and below-average intelligence. It is set in the fictional suburb of Fountain Lakes.
- Suburban life through the eyes of stay-at-home wives and mothers is portrayed in the ABC television soap opera Desperate Housewives.
- Many U.S. sit-coms are set in the suburbs, including the animated Family Guy, and The Simpsons.
- Both TV shows set in the Buffyverse, Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel show a link between suburbs and hell. Sunnydale is built over the Hellmouth, while on Angel, the evil Senior Partners maintain hell dimension in which prisoners are trapped in an idyllic-looking suburban town filled with identical houses.
- The suburb of Mount Prospect, IL was featured in the The Blues Brothers film: Elwood bought his car from the Mount Prospect Police Auction.
- The comic strip Over the Hedge (and its Dreamworks SKG movie adaptation) parodies American suburban life from the perspective of animals.
- The Sims and The Sims 2 computer games are set in fictional suburbs.
- The classic Tim Burton film Edward Scissorhands makes commentary on American suburbia through the use of exaggerated clichés.
- Disney Channel movie Stuck in the Suburbs
- The New Line Cinema film Little Children is set in a suburb and also about suburban families and lives.
- The films American Beauty and Blue Velvet are about the publicly hidden lives behind the privateness of suburbia.
- The animated TV show The Boondocks features an African-American family living in a predominantly White American suburb.
"Suburbia"
The term suburbia is frequently used to encapsulate the concept of suburbs as oddly picturesque slices of tract-home nuclear family.
Given the de facto segregation of the American housing marketplace in the 1950s through 1970s, 'suburbia' also includes the notion of a 'white' area, inaccessible to members of other ethnicities and races, particularly Blacks.
After the rise of "Levittowns" across the United States in the 1960s and 1970s, many American teens born during those decades began to describe the inherently sanitized and disspiriting nature of American suburbs.
The popular TV show The Wonder Years, which was set in the late 1960's and early 1970's took place in an undisclosed suburb. In the very first episode, the show's narrator comments on the seeming sameness of suburbia, in the ending narration noting that despite the rows of identical houses and carports, within each one are people with unique stories and individual lives.
The concept of 'suburbia' came to envelop this and other, sometimes endearing, idiosyncrasies of suburban life -- for example, 4th of July backyard barbecues.
Popular culture largely recognized this concept during the 1980s and early 1990s. In Britain, television series such as The Good Life, Butterflies, and The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin depicted suburbia as well-manicured but relentlessly boring, and its residents as either conforming their behaviour to this situation or going stir crazy through its regimented blandness. In America, similar but more violent themes could be found in the works of David Lynch.
In 1994, playwright Eric Bogosian wrote and directed the play subUrbia, which focused on suburban twentysomethings with no real life goals or direction reacting to the return of a high school friend who had become famous. The play was made into a low-budget, independent film in 1997, with Richard Linklater at the directorial helm and featured up-and-coming actors Steve Zahn, Parker Posey, Ajay Naidu, and Giovanni Ribisi in lead roles.
Etymology: According to dialogue in the 1984 movie Suburbia (no relation to the Bogosian version) [11] , suburbia is a neologism made by combinining suburb and utopia.
The 1984 cult classic "Repo Man," starring actor Emilio Estevez, is based in a southern California suburb. Estevez plays Otto, a young punk who finds himself repossesing cars. A group of three punks run rampant doing crimes like robbing liquor stores and eating sushi and then not paying for it. Estevez's famous line from the movie occurs when one of these punks is shot to death during an attempted robbery. As Otto holds his friends head up, he states that he blames society for his life of crime, and Otto responds, "that's bullshit; you're a white suburban punk . . . just like me."
Suburbs in songs
- "Official Suburban Superman" by Suzi Quatro
- "Suburbia" by the Pet Shop Boys
- "Subdivisions" by Rush
- "Pleasant Valley Sunday" by The Monkees
- "Jesus of Suburbia" by Green Day
- "Lost in the Supermarket" by The Clash, later covered by Ben Folds (The song has several suburb references, including the line "We had a hedge back home in the suburbs/Over which we never could see.")
- "Rockin' the Suburbs" by Ben Folds
- "Jesusland" by Ben Folds
- "Little Boxes" by Malvina Reynolds
- "Buddha of Suburbia" by David Bowie
- "Cherry Bomb" by John Mellencamp
- "Greater Omaha" by Desaparecidos
- "Suburban Home" by The Descendents
- "Sound of the Suburbs" by The Members
- "Hey Suburbia" by Screeching Weasel
- "Suburbia Streets" by Fast Crew
- "Suburban Life" by Kottonmouth Kings
- "Suburban Relapse" by Siouxsie and the Banshees
- "Dinner at Eight in the Suburbs" by All-Time Quarterback
- "Good job nice clothes" by Corrupted Suburbs
- "Suburbia" by Schleprock
- "My Pink Half of the Drainpipe" by the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band
- "Christmas in Suburbia" by Martin Newell
- "Barons of Suburbia" by Tori Amos
- Songs from Suburbia album by Spring Heeled Jack
- "Suburbia" by Matthew Good Band
- "Semi-Detached Suburban Mr. James" by Manfred Mann
- "Your Little Suburbia Is In Ruins" by August Burns Red
Fear also makes a reference to Suburbia on "The Record", in the song Let's Have a War, which says "It's already started in the city, Suburbia will be easy." On the same album, in the song "I Love Living in the City," Lee Ving sings "The suburban scumbags, they don't care, they just get fat and dye their hair."
References
- Lewis, Robert (2001) "Manufacturing Montreal: The Making of an Industrial Landscape, 1850 to 1930" Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press
- Rybczynski, Witold (Nov. 7, 2005). "Suburban Despair". Slate.
- Smith, Albert C. & Schank, Kendra (1999). "A Grotesque Measure for Marietta". Journal of Urban Design 4 (3).
See also
Bibliography and external web sites
- Crabgrass Frontier by Kenneth T. Jackson 1985
- Managing Urban America by Robert E. England and David R. Morgan 1979
- Sprawl by Robert Bruegmann 2005
- http://www.ideal-homes.org.uk/why-suburbs-happen-01.htm on the suburban growth of London, England.
- http://www.hgs.org.uk/mystreet/index.html provides images of a mature north London suburb illustrating a wide range of domestic architecture.
- The End of Suburbia, documentary film (see also, Peak oil)
- http://fass.kingston.ac.uk/research/centres/suburban_studies/ for Europe's first interdisciplinary research centre for the study of suburbs, based at Kingston University.
- "Boomburbs": The Emergence of Large, Fast-Growing Suburban Cities in the United States, from Fannie Mae.
- Sierra Club Stopping Sprawl Main Page
- CBC Digital Archives - So long city. Hello suburbs!
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