New Zealands development, and especially Auckland and in some ways Wellington and Christchurch, is a perfect example of planned urban sprawl and the creation of suburban 'communities', and there are plenty of examples of these,, Takapuna,, Glenfield,, Glen dowie,, glen eden,, just about every where out west until you get to the Waitakaries.gjm wrote:[
The word Suburbia refers to a very broad range of expressions of the way that many cultures have dveloped over time. What we, You and I that is, have here in NZ is in some respects quite different to the expressions of suburbia in other parts of the world.
NZ has always had the luxury of space,, this is where the whole idea of the 1/4 acre section comes from,, it was part of the promise and lure offered to my parents generation when they immigrated here after the war. It was a very well devised plan on the part of the English and NZ commonwealth governments set up to highlight the stark contrast between living in the Urban mess of England's big and industrialized cities and the idyllic setting of a lush green environment with in easy road and rail access to the work centers,, the enticement was made all the more sweeter by offering guaranteed subsidized housing. In order to fulfill this obligation some of the older inner city 'suburbs' such as Ponsonby in Auckland and New Town in wellington where built up and expanded until they started to encroach to close to the older more established and more affluent areas. At that point they moved out of the city areas and started building all of the places like Howick in Auckland and the places i grew up around wellington,, Porirua, Cannons creak, Tawa, Whitby, and then out over the hills to the Hutt Vally.
What i think zstowasser post is alluding to,, and more closer the Video from TED,, is that these places have not lived up to the promise and have, in fact, become the problem. I must admit i'm a little drunk right now having had an end of week BBQ and beer afternoon at work so it could be that we are taking in parallels right now,, but part of my point is this,, NZ's version of post WW2 suburbia is very much in step with all the variants you will find in the US, the UK Australia and other places such as South African and Canada,, it might be a little greener and maybe even sunnier,, it might also be less populated,, but the isolation, detachment from real community and the centralized shopping and utilities in very controlled and franchised environments is very much the same.