Do You Know What a Boomburg is?

Published 07 June 07 06:15 PM | Lois Szydlowski 
 

Do You Know What a Boomburg is?


 The traditional urban model of the central city serving as an economic and cultural center hub for the suburbs is fast disappearing in many areas of the country. Instead, suburbs are growing into little cities of their own, building their own entertainment, shopping, and cultural outlets to support their booming populations, says Robert Lang, director of the Metropolitan Institute at Virginia Tech in Alexandria, Va.

  • Outlined trends are: Edgeless cities, Megapolitans, and  Boomburgs


What's a Boomburg?

Boomburgs are towns that until recently have been more suburb than city. They are not the core city of a region - "
think North Las Vegas, not Las Vegas," says Lang - but they do have more than 100,000 residents and have experienced double digit population growth since 1970.

  • Boomburgs have lots of new development both Greenfield and infill, and they are the source of infrastructure investment ... light rail systems, regional rails, airports and freeways. Boomburgs are booming.
  • They offer a mix of uses and housing choices
  • Boomburgs are also an indication of a positive new dimension in land use.
  • Rather than contributing to sprawl, Boomburgs offer the potential of "remaking the American metropolis through more compact development that accommodates growth while conversing land.

What are Edgeless Cities?

Another trend, according to Lang, is the emergence of edgeless cities, or metros with indeterminate boundaries sometimes covering up to hundreds of miles. A good indicator of edgeless city growth is the location of office space.

  • Nearly 40 % of U.S. office space is now located in edgeless cities; traditional downtowns account for 33%.
  • Miami, which has 72% of its office space in edgeless areas, > 50% of their office space in the outermost areas.

What are Megapolitans?

 

An offshoot of edgeless cities, Lang describes them as "2 or more metropolitan areas with anchor principal cities between 50 and 200 miles apart in which residents from one city work in the other."

Rising gas prices and growing "carbon consciousness" among consumers will add to the push for denser development in the suburbs.
Source: Realtor® Magazine Online, Camilla McLaughlin
© 2007 FLORIDA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS

Abridged by Lois Szydlowski

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