The American dream, rezoned
A rising generation of Americans wants to live differently聽鈥 more 鈥淓uropean,鈥 you might say 鈥撀燽ut they have to change the rules of U.S. housing first.
A rising generation of Americans wants to live differently聽鈥 more 鈥淓uropean,鈥 you might say 鈥撀燽ut they have to change the rules of U.S. housing first.
There鈥檚 a story that is pretty much universal for many American parents. It goes something like this: Drive the son to soccer practice. Then drive the daughter to piano lessons. Then drive the son to a weekend tournament. Then drive the daughter to a birthday party. Lather. Rinse. Repeat.
The names of the events might change or be different for every child, but the reality is the same. Parenting can often seem remarkably like a free Uber service for people who tend to leave plentiful Goldfish crumbs in the back seat. On weekends, one might as well don a chauffeur鈥檚 cap and beg the government for a tax break on mileage.
For my wife, however, this American ritual is utterly bizarre. As a typical German teenager, she had a job and friends and played on the local volleyball team, but her parents never drove her anywhere. Being chained to a steering wheel strikes her as only a notch above indentured servitude.
And that, in many ways, is what Mark Trumbull鈥檚 cover story this week is about: the desire of a rising generation of Americans to live differently 鈥 more 鈥淓uropean,鈥 you might say 鈥 and how they鈥檙e trying to change the century-old rules of American housing to do it.聽
The fact is, my wife鈥檚 parents didn鈥檛 drive her anywhere because they didn鈥檛 need to. Her German suburb looks like an American suburb 鈥 shrunk by a factor of about five. The houses are smaller, the lots are smaller, the gardens are smaller, and around most corners are buildings with multiple housing units. It鈥檚 denser. That means friends and volleyball practices and first jobs at pizza shops are all closer, and parents can tell their kids to walk or take a bicycle.
For the younger generations in America, that is an increasingly pleasing prospect. Car buying is dropping and a growing share of millennials and Gen Zers is putting off getting a driver鈥檚 license or eschewing it entirely. They want to take the bicycle. Add in concerns about climate change among many young Americans (and wanting to limit car emissions), and you get a scenario where density becomes desirable.
Yet most American neighborhoods have been designed with the exact opposite in mind. The expression 鈥測our home is your castle鈥 gives some indication of the prevailing mindset since the 1920s, when modern single-family zoning first took hold. Who wants the smallest castle on the block?
So what is happening now, from the D.C. suburbs to California, is a recalibration of what American homeownership should look like. There are other important factors, too. The single-family mentality and its lower density mean fewer places to live 鈥 and therefore more upward pressure on home prices. That has meant many people of color have been locked out of the most common way for individuals and families to build wealth. Many young Americans say equity demands greater density.聽
It鈥檚 extremely unlikely that Georgia is going to become Germany anytime soon 鈥 or ever. But Mark鈥檚 story is a glimpse of how some portions of America are reimagining the American dream in ways that could shift the American experience both subtly and profoundly.聽