
Why is retail so fickle?
Almost everyone here has seen the telltale strip mall that has seen better days. We usually surmise that one of two factors has impelled the tenants to flee a shopping center or other commercial district: either the demographics in the area have changed (usually becoming lower income), or a newer, shinier shopping center has opened

What’s in a name? Apparently not much for apartment complexes.
I was recently driving in an area close to where I grew up, and noticed something different about two apartment complexes. The first of these was called La Caribe when I was in high school: Despite few, if any, other visible changes to the appearance of the buildings, it is now Martinique Terrace. The other

Generosity can be measured in meters.
Many municipalities see the pricing on meters for on-street parking as a science unto itself. Of course a city wants greater revenue, but it does not want to deter people from parking on the street—almost always the most preferred method over more costly garages—simply because the prices become too high. After all, parking meters typically

Binodal small towns: a help or a hindrance?
When I was in school a few years ago doing research on various downtowns across the US, we had to spend twice as much effort on gathering demographics for New York City than we did for anywhere else. Of course this has something to do with the fact that the residential population of downtown Manhattan

Suburban desolation taken to new extremes.
In late May I drove around with a friend whose first visit to New Orleans included both the usual haunts as well as some of the less frequented surrounding areas. Our two days of travels stretched as far as the plantations along River Road to the west, the isthmus between Lakes Pontchartrain and Maurepas (with

Four-Legged Pedestrians?
As I prepare for a significantly longer essay on the introduction of complete streets into the American landscape, I wanted to include a few images of a quiet but growing concern among planners and civil engineers: biofragmentation through the construction of roads. In his book Road Ecology, Richard T. T. Forman estimates that 1,000,000 animals
Why dirt?
As a kid, one of my brother’s best friends once said, “When I grow up, I’m not going to live anywhere.” While never quite sure exactly what he meant, we liked the concept of it. Now it appears I may be coming close to fulfilling his ambition: with a new job I will be moving
Recent Comments

Why is retail so fickle?
Almost everyone here has seen the telltale strip mall that has seen better days. We usually surmise that one of two factors has impelled the tenants to flee a shopping center or other

What’s in a name? Apparently not much for apartment complexes.
I was recently driving in an area close to where I grew up, and noticed something different about two apartment complexes. The first of these was called La Caribe when I was in

Generosity can be measured in meters.
Many municipalities see the pricing on meters for on-street parking as a science unto itself. Of course a city wants greater revenue, but it does not want to deter people from parking on

Binodal small towns: a help or a hindrance?
When I was in school a few years ago doing research on various downtowns across the US, we had to spend twice as much effort on gathering demographics for New York City than

Suburban desolation taken to new extremes.
In late May I drove around with a friend whose first visit to New Orleans included both the usual haunts as well as some of the less frequented surrounding areas. Our two days

Four-Legged Pedestrians?
As I prepare for a significantly longer essay on the introduction of complete streets into the American landscape, I wanted to include a few images of a quiet but growing concern among planners
Why dirt?
As a kid, one of my brother’s best friends once said, “When I grow up, I’m not going to live anywhere.” While never quite sure exactly what he meant, we liked the concept
Recent Comments
Recent Comments
- AmericanDirt on Memories of Marsh Supermarkets: Kroger tries (half-heartedly) to fill the void of a once-mighty chain.: “Yes, Kroger (the surviving, successful chain) may have prevailed in part because it reoriented its tenure among its portfolio every…” May 21, 22:10
- AmericanDirt on Hoboken NJ: gentrification in a time-lapse overdrive, but without all the improvements.: “Yeah, Hoboken largely abides by the scale of neighborhoods in Queens and (especially) Brooklyn. This is no surprise, given that…” May 21, 22:04
- Carl Michaelis on Memories of Marsh Supermarkets: Kroger tries (half-heartedly) to fill the void of a once-mighty chain.: “loses his touch, or directs it elsewhere.” May 20, 23:29
- AmericanDirt on Memories of Marsh Supermarkets: Kroger tries (half-heartedly) to fill the void of a once-mighty chain.: “Sounds about right. Welcome to the lucrative world of venture capital. When a once-capable executive loses his touch, he sells…” May 19, 23:14
- Andrew Yeo on Memories of Marsh Supermarkets: Kroger tries (half-heartedly) to fill the void of a once-mighty chain.: “There was a Marsh where I grew up in Troy (as well as Kroger and later a Meijer). Everything always…” May 19, 21:26
Recent Comments