http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/s ... enDocument
...discusses wing haven and the "rocky" times some merchants have had.
first of all - i wasnt aware that wing haven was a new urbanism development. i thought it was a subdivision with a quasi-neo traditional commercial area not seamlessly integrated with residential?
in any case, these "hybrids" dont seem to have the success of true new urbanist developments, and ironically, it seems that developers seem to develop 'hybrids' as they percieve full blown new urbanism to be too risky.
in my opinion, you are being risky when you are hoping that people who live in a sprawled out subdivison will by default choose to use a neo-traditional commercial node. i would think it would be obvious to do it 'right' and seamlessly integrate walkable residential and commerical.
...discusses wing haven and the "rocky" times some merchants have had.
first of all - i wasnt aware that wing haven was a new urbanism development. i thought it was a subdivision with a quasi-neo traditional commercial area not seamlessly integrated with residential?
in any case, these "hybrids" dont seem to have the success of true new urbanist developments, and ironically, it seems that developers seem to develop 'hybrids' as they percieve full blown new urbanism to be too risky.
in my opinion, you are being risky when you are hoping that people who live in a sprawled out subdivison will by default choose to use a neo-traditional commercial node. i would think it would be obvious to do it 'right' and seamlessly integrate walkable residential and commerical.



