The Exurbanites

A week ago, I wrote a blog entry about an article in the Detroit News featuring the results of a survey about attitudes toward the City of Detroit. Separate surveys of City and suburban residents were conducted. Surprisingly, Metro residents had positive attitudes toward the city, although this tracked with prior residency in the city. The blog entry was titled "Interesting City attitude-Suburban attitude survey in Metro Detroit."
Yesterday's News has a follow-up article, entitled "Beyond the suburbs: Paradise found beyond sprawl--City-centered lifestyles become a thing of the past as suburbanites move farther away," about that increasing segment of the population that continues to move farther and farther away from the center city. Also see "Beyond The Suburbs: Detroit: Out of sight, mind."



From the first article:
This is exurbia, a place defined by its lack of definition. Not small town and not suburb, these postmodern outposts are the latest stopping-off point for families fleeing the tone and traffic of suburbia. Yet as the land moves from soybeans to subdivisions in one generation, residents are discovering that they are leaving more than rush hour behind.
In this middle-class borderland, the tenuous connections to Detroit have snapped. Residents have few economic, social or emotional connections to the city or to Detroit's traditional suburbs. They've crossed an invisible threshold past which these affluent Metro Detroiters cease to be Metro Detroiters at all. It's more than an academic distinction. As more people leave the gravitational pull of the city, they are creating a new way of life, a suburb of nowhere in particular with no social or economic center. It is a lifestyle more and more Americans will lead, as the city-centered pattern of past generations fades away.
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It makes sense in the land of the car (Michigan) that gas stations are the place to hang out...


But what happens when we run out of oil? Of course, the Glazers have a big enough expanse to grow food.
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