NokiMo
philedwardsinc
philedwardsinc

patreon


Why the suburbs were built for cars (and the forgotten plan for shopping centers)

The suburbs won't change. Why?

How this video happened

This started with strip malls.

I stumbled on this Masters thesis and was hooked. Though the author was writing it to make the argument that strip malls should be considered a preservationist's subject (which...I dunno about that), I was intrigued by the research and wanted to learn more.

I quickly found out there was a bigger story that spoke to the planning of the suburbs at large. I'd delved into some of the suburban design issues before, but I quickly discovered a new and richer subject matter that included shopping's key role in planning suburbs to be car friendly. That car obsession was also a unique insight of JC Nichols, a developer whose work I'd run into by accident and got to learn more about over the course of the video.

Check out more

Here's a link to the reaction video (for some paid tiers).

Why so many shopping centers are the same

One of the big mistakes I've made, for much of my life, is thinking that suburban conformity was a state of mind, but it was also a regulated act. And that includes shopping centers.

In the Community Planner's Guidebook, you'll find suggestions for countless best practices in shopping centers, from ceiling height, to basement usage, to shrubbery, to, of course, parking. But I became particularly transfixed by the listing of shops that were ideal for a shopping center of any size.

It comes in the form of a neat little table.

Preceded by a message from JC Nichols (and a modest disclaimer that any "hard and fast rules" would be a mistake), it's a listing of sizes of shopping centers followed by possible tenants. I'll share the template for the smallest centers.

What jumps out to me is how dated some of the stores are - you're unlikely to find bakeries, shoe repair shops, or beauty shops in most strip mall developments today. Yet, at the time, it was highly recommended you have them.

These lists ran the gamut of shopping center sizes and provide a fascinating window into the 1947 view of commerce. As you might expect, haberdashers and milliners are recommended for only slightly larger spaces.

In addition to the quaint makeup of the stores, however, is a prescriptive nature that rhymes with the video I made about suburban car love: these recommendations had a lot of heft. Because the Community Builder's Handbook influenced the FHA, and because the FHA had a lot of power over developments, the fact that JC Nichols wanted you to have a shoe repair shop could, reasonably, be considered an offer you couldn't refuse.

Of course, there's a tension in this history too — it's really tough to draw a line between what the FHA wanted and what the market wanted. There's a chance that the market would have naturally coalesced on shopping centers pretty similar to the ones Nichols recommended. After all, he contended that his recommendations were data driven ones drawn from his own experience. However, I have to think that some of the geographic and cultural diversity that was ignored in suburban planning at large also got shoved into the service alley in this case, too.

But if you think I'm getting over my skis in saying that commerce itself was shaped by one man's weird preferences, I hope you can at least enjoy digging into the list of store types at a large shopping center and be transported.

Public stenographer! Popcorn and nut shop!

The past is a foreign country and, thankfully, you don't have to drive to get there.

Sources for the video

Above I've linked the thesis that started it all and the Community Builder's Handbook. Here are some more sources:

Why the suburbs were built for cars (and the forgotten plan for shopping centers)

Comments

hahah where you can wear a bucket hat and no one makes fun of it.

Phil Edwards

https://youtu.be/-Jhfs8PHT3M?si=yIoqtVQjoIIoGXR8 Hang in there to about midway where she talks about the decline in grocery stores in Kenosha, WI. Also, Kendra is great and makes really interesting videos. Like and subscribe!

Robin M

It's been several years since I looked at the blog but I think the guy has stopped posting. He used to track the demise of small local grocery store chains and he actually got sued at one point by the owners of a defunct chain for posting the year-to-year decline in stores. The whole thing was ridiculous because he used publicly available information that literally anyone could look up. But it was pretty demoralizing and scary, so he stopped posting.

Robin M

wow i'm adding this blog to my brainstorm list.

Phil Edwards

The history of grocery stores/supermarkets goes right alongside this. Check out this blog: https://www.groceteria.com/ The Marina style Safeway is a personal favorite. I can't remember where I read it but there has been a shocking decrease in the number of grocery stores in the US. A lot of urban areas have less than a tenth of the grocery stores they did in the 50s and 60s.

Robin M

i have been vaguely curious about the barber explosion in cities too

Phil Edwards

The proliferation of barber shops in neighborhood centers has exploded. These serve the families looking for bargain cuts, but barbers looking for a different customer are looking at alternative markets. One location that my barber is looking at is unused offices in small industrial complexes. The rent is cheap and the neighborhood is usually rich in younger men with more disposable income.

Ed Harrison


Related Creators