PrettySquareGal
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,003
- Location
- New England
It's ironic: shopping malls killed downtowns, and now big outdoor shopping villages that feel like old downtowns are thriving, and malls seem like an 80s relic.
You get to go to this little village, almost like a contrived theme park, and play at J Crew, Restoration Hardware, Williams Sonoma, Banana Republic, L.L. Bean, Build-a-Bear, The Apple Store, etc, and eat at Cheesecake Factory or Melting Pot, then see a blockbuster in a reclining lounge chair. Rather brilliantly timed with a middle class unable to afford a proper vacation. It's kind of hard to fit a JC Penney or Sears into that uber hip mix.
Over the weekend one of the local news stations reported that the percentage of real estate sales and rentals are higher within the city limits of Los Angeles than they are in the surrounding suburbs for the first time in decades. Apparently the "Millennials" are opposed to the idea of driving from the suburbs into the city, and prefer to have everything within walking distance (or short public transportation trips) so they're buying and renting properties that are close to the companies they work for. Because of this, the "experts" are recommending shopping in the suburbs if you're looking for a home in the Los Angeles area because you're likely to get a "better" deal while this trend lasts.The trend now in city planning is "walkability," which is a counterreaction to sixty years of suburban sprawl. Young middle-class families are rebelling against the idea of having to use a car to get everywhere they want to go, and are pushing more and more for development to return to the areas it abandoned in the days of "white flight" and "suburbanization" after WWII. This is all well and good, but it also has the effect of forcing working class families out of their neighborhoods in the sacred name of Development, and where such displaced people will go is still a question to be resolved. But I suspect that the day is not far off when the "suburbs" will become the new American Ghetto.