Smart urban development: can sustainable suburbs be created?
This article is also available here in Spanish.

Smart urban development: can sustainable suburbs be created?

My list

Author | Lucía Burbano

Living in city suburbs is back in fashion in most parts of the world. Since the initial emergence at the end of the first decade of this century, the pandemic has drawn many people away from city centers. However, in urbanistic terms, they are models that appear to have reached a standstill and need a little more than just a face lift.

What do we understand by suburb?

Traditionally, a suburb is a "neighborhood or community located on the outskirts of a city and which is, generally, a deprived area". This definition, particularly the reference to the purchasing power of the residents, is now obsolete in numerous regions.

Suburbs are formed for several reasons, generally when cities have to expand as a result of their demographic growth, which is what used to happen in Roman times, although, in this case, it was the rich aristocrats who lived beyond the walls. That is where the term, suburbanicomes from.

Advantages and disadvantages of the impact of suburban sprawl

suburbs 2

Advantages

● Models based on organized urban development can decongest denser cities.

● They may be cheaper in relation to the cost per square meter. In San Francisco, for example, the median sales price for homes was $1.6 million. In Walnut Creek, a suburb of the city, that price drops to half.

More space. On average, a property in a suburb has 30m^2^ more compared with a property in the city.

Disadvantages

● Suburbs account for around 50% of all residential carbon emissions in the U.S. due to frequent use of private vehicles andthe energy cost of heating or cooling single dwelling homes.

Less happy and healthy residents than those in cities. The World Economic Forum refers to a study that claims that people who live in the city are happier and experience lower obesity rates.

Fewer options. The cultural, health or entertainment options are limited on the outskirts.

Characteristics that should apply to sustainable suburbs

suburbs 3

The suburbs of the future (and the present) are a global urban phenomenon that forms part of the history of cities, but a new chapter should be written in accordance with contemporary priorities.

Walkable mini-centers

In order to reduce peoples’ dependence on private vehicles, social, recreational, cultural and commercial hubs should be created that are reachable on foot or via some of the micro-mobility options available. This would do away with the ‘commuter town’ label.

Redesign public transport

Opting for multimodal transport that combines modes such as trains, buses or railroads, not just to connect the outskirts with the city but also between the different areas that belong to the suburb itself.

Examples of sustainable suburbs

Mueller, Texas

Built on the site of the former municipal airport Robert Mueller, this suburb is a modern, equitable and eco-conscious mixed-use community. It is made up of a mixture of single-dwelling houses and blocks of apartments equipped with solar energy, stores, restaurants, offices, parks and running trails, a museum and an amphitheater and it has the largest number of electric vehicles per capita in the country.

Los Angeles Eco-Village

Three miles west of downtown Los Angeles, the residents of the Eco-Village neighborhood strive to have a minimum impact on the environment and, at the same time, a lifestyle that does not totally disconnect them from city centers. Its location close to public transport, schools or stores, enables residents to drive less, while gardens and fruit trees provide a local source of food.

YarraBend, Melbourne

YarraBend is a new suburban project just 6.5 km from Melbourne, which is based on six pillars: sustainability, technology, art and design, health and wellbeing, knowledge and food and leisure. In terms of sustainability, this new neighborhood made up of 2,500 homes, uses recycled materials in its construction, renewable energies and creates lanes for pedestrians and cyclists and installs roof-top vegetable gardens.

Photographs | Unsplash/Unseen Histories, Unsplash/Michael Tuszynski, Jorge Gardner

Related content

Recommended profiles for you

MM
Marina Matashova
Andorra-LAB, Forward Consulting Group
Co-Founder, Sustainable Urban Planning Expert & Researcher
AA
Ana Claudia Donner Abreu
CAMARA FEDERAL
Teacher
SB
Shalom Ben Moshe
Rosh Haain Municipality
mayor
EY
EDISON YANEZ
AFE
Analista
VS
Victor Sebinelli
University of Campinas (UNICAMP)
Administrative staff; Student of Public Management and Government (specialization degree)
RM
Regina Monteiro
ICONE -Instituto das Cidades
PRESIDENT
AN
ALCENIR NEGRI
UTFPR-UNIVERSIDADE TECNOLÓGICA FEDERAL DO PARANÁ
Aluno
NV
NIKOLAOS VOGIATZIS
Municipality of Sofades
ICT ADMINISTRATION
MG
Maurici Garcia
T-Systems
Program Manager for the Smart City project GIJON_IN
DS
Dr/EnP Eugenio Santiago III
Philippine Office of the Ombudsman
Graft Prevention and Control Officer
XC
xue chang
Huawei
Marketing Manager
LR
Leonidas Ramirez Quintero
Corporación Universitaria del Caribe CECAR
Investigator student
XC
Xavier Casinos
Diputación de Barcelona
Dircom. I manage all departments involved in communicatio affaires (press, advertisment, publicatio
SB
Sascha Benes
Örebro Kommun
Digital strategist for the urban planning department
MS
Mônica Luize SARABIA
UFPE_NUGEPP
Supervisão
SS
Stella Sanchez
Indepent
Asesor
CC
Chris Christensen Chris
Honeywell
Cybersecurity America’s
RV
Rosario Virasoro
Digital house
Coordinator
VM
Vitor Moreira
Tribunais
Escrivão Adjunto
CG
Carlos Gómez
Commercial Attaché of the General Consulate of the Rep. of Turkey
Foreign trade expert