Traditional neighborhood development

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a drawing of a street with houses and trees

Traditional neighborhood structures can mean many things. A traditional neighborhood structure can be a suburb consisting of single family homes with big yards and plenty of greenery. In other cities, neighborhood structures can be multi-unit housing with little to no landscaping, or homes built out of cardboard that are close to each other. When learning about traditional neighborhood structures, also consider how civilians interact with each other, and overall quality of life.

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a house with flags on the roof and trees in the front yard, along with landscaping

The best house plans for Traditional Neighborhood Designs function within the context of the intention behind developing this kind of neighborhood. Namely, the house plans should: work well on narrow lots, have the option to have a garage with alley access, have welcoming front porches.

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a row of houses on a street with flowers in the front yard and trees lining the sidewalk

The Site Conway is billed as Arkansas’ leading-edge city, offering small-town flexibility and charm with big-city attractions, hotels, restaurants, shopping, and entertainment. The Village at Hendrix serves as the northern edge of downtown, and the staff works closely with the Downtown Partnership

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two maps showing the location of conservation sublivision and conservation sublivision

When neighborhoods are developed with conservation in mind, roads can be shorter and narrower than in conventional developments. Pavement can be further reduced where development is designed to resemble traditional villages, with homes close to streets, thereby reducing driveway lengths.

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a map with different colored areas in the middle and on top of it is an image of

In recent decades, SOM’s urban design work in China has created several successful old town redevelopment planning projects—such as Shanghai Xintiandi and Foshan Lingnan Tiandi—that integrate China’s ancient urban heritage into a new type of urban placemaking, one that celebrates local traditions while also creating immeasurable economic, social, and cultural value. Guangzhou’s Old Town is the latest of these.

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