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Opening up the Suburbs - An Urban Strategy for America (Paperback, New Ed)
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Opening up the Suburbs - An Urban Strategy for America (Paperback, New Ed)
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This housing strategy probably won't work, according to its
progenitor, the chairman of the board of the Real Estate Research
Corporation of Chicago and a consultant to foundations including
RAND, Brookings and Ford. Yet Downs feels Americans must be made to
try. "Opening up the suburbs" - don't think about Cicero - means
letting in poorish people, even if smaller lot sizes and lower
housing standards ensue. Ghetto-dwellers would enjoy the
educational and cultural advantages of suburban life and the urban
crisis would fade away. Could the present suburbanites tolerate
this migration? Downs throws out some appeals to self-interest: the
employable poor would become more productive and ghetto riot
dangers would end; new construction jobs would multiply while only
small zoning-type changes need occur. The question of financing the
whole business on a significant scale is generally ignored, except
for brief advocacy of "direct housing subsidies" which would
irritate middle-class suburbanite taxpayers still more. Downs warns
that "Anyone who opposes opening up the suburbs is thereby
implicitly opposing any effective means of improving big-city
crisis ghetto conditions," but he himself seems defeated by the
hard-cash angle at the very beginning. (Kirkus Reviews)
In this fast-paced, fact-filled short book, Anthony Downs takes a
close look at a national problem of increasing importance-opening
up the suburbs to the poor. After marshalling the arguments in
favor of introducing low and moderate income housing in suburban
areas where it is not now possible, he presents the suburbanites'
case against change. He finds legitimate claims and fears on both
sides. Mr. Downs believes it is possible, however, to devise public
policies that will reconcile the objectives and legitimate desires
of both poorer Americans desiring to upgrade themselves by entering
the suburbs and wealthier Americans desiring to protect the quality
of their hard-won suburban life. He proposes the concept of
balanced communities as well as other public policies to effect
this reconciliation. As the nation moves into the decade of the
seventies, the pressures of expanding population on the suburbs are
bound to increase. Anthony Downs provides here a thoughtful
analysis of the problems that are coming and practical proposals
for dealing with them, which will interest the professional planner
and the involved citizen alike.
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