Real Estate

Are Suburbs a Fading Fad?

Leigh Gallagher's 'The End of the Suburbs' explains why cities are growing at a faster pace than suburbs for the first time in decades.

By Whitney Teal

Are the suburbs—and their promise of more space and better schools—coming to an end?

According to Leigh Gallagher, author of The End of the Suburbs: Where the American Dream is Moving, probably. Nightmarish commutes and endless strip malls for people living on the outskirts of cities, among other factors, explain why cities are growing faster than suburbs for the first time in decades, she argues.

Interested in local real estate?Subscribe to Patch's new newsletter to be the first to know about open houses, new listings and more.

Gallager wrote on Time.com that the post-World War II experiment of planned communities may have run its course. She writes: 

“We are a nation that values privacy and individualism down to our very core, and the suburbs give us that. But somewhere between leafy neighborhoods built around lively railroad villages and the shiny new subdivisions in cornfields on the way to Iowa that bill themselves as suburbs of Chicago, we took our wish for privacy too far. The suburbs overshot their mandate.”

Interested in local real estate?Subscribe to Patch's new newsletter to be the first to know about open houses, new listings and more.

There is hope for suburbs, though, Gallagher suggests. Montgomery County and other DC suburbs are rapidly growing.

Shyam Kannan, real estate consultant and planning director for the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, explains why older and more walkable suburbs are the exception, telling Gallagher: “We are moving from location, location, location in terms of the most important factor to access, access, access."

What do you think? Does new suburban construction have a bright future, or is it a thing of the past? Tell us in the comments below.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here