Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
From childless tower to child-full density: families and the evolution of vancouverism
Vancouverism – amenity-rich neighbourhoods comprised of thin residential towers set on street-defining podiums – has been globally promoted as a new model of urbanism: high-density yet livable, even for families with children. Boosters claim profitable sustainability on a human scale; critics decry a sanitized elite vertical suburb. Lost in these debates is the little-known history of how this foundationally low-density city – where the single-family detached home dominated both the landscape and policy – became an international symbol of livable density. This history starts with a single confined mid-rise apartment zone in the 1920s designed to protect the majority detached-home city. In the 1950s policy promoted towers for childless professionals to bolster the tax base. Negative public reaction to the towers led to the election of an anti-density, yet anti-highway city council in the 1970s. Ironically, a cancelled highway spurred the council to build moderately-dense equitable family housing near downtown. After residents reported a desire for higher densities, Vancouverism was born.
From childless tower to child-full density: families and the evolution of vancouverism
Vancouverism – amenity-rich neighbourhoods comprised of thin residential towers set on street-defining podiums – has been globally promoted as a new model of urbanism: high-density yet livable, even for families with children. Boosters claim profitable sustainability on a human scale; critics decry a sanitized elite vertical suburb. Lost in these debates is the little-known history of how this foundationally low-density city – where the single-family detached home dominated both the landscape and policy – became an international symbol of livable density. This history starts with a single confined mid-rise apartment zone in the 1920s designed to protect the majority detached-home city. In the 1950s policy promoted towers for childless professionals to bolster the tax base. Negative public reaction to the towers led to the election of an anti-density, yet anti-highway city council in the 1970s. Ironically, a cancelled highway spurred the council to build moderately-dense equitable family housing near downtown. After residents reported a desire for higher densities, Vancouverism was born.
From childless tower to child-full density: families and the evolution of vancouverism
Thomas, Louis L. (Autor:in)
Planning Perspectives ; 36 ; 559-581
04.05.2021
23 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Unbekannt
Life-Course Trajectories of Childless Women: Country-Specific or Universal?
Online Contents | 2022
|Why Childless Men and Women Give Up on Having Children
Online Contents | 2017
|Childless Elders in Assisted Living: Findings from the Maryland Assisted Living Study
Online Contents | 2013
|Online Contents | 2023
|