Description
Leading the way for similar happenings worldwide, North America’s suburbs are changing. They have become ethnically and racially diverse. As a result, these now-multicultural outskirts reflect the character of our socially varied world. This is threatening to some. In the long term, however, this social transformation and the potential spatial change accompanying it can provide essential elements to address suburbia’s infamous isolation and monoculture. In light of this, this publication attempts to understand the significance of the future suburb, not only as a place for a diverse neighborhood culture but also, at a larger scale, as a new form of decentralized city.