From walkable neighborhoods to on - site fitness classes, package pick - up solutions to online rent payments and more, new data from the largest - ever survey of apartment residents gives a detailed picture of what apartment residents want — and even what they'd expect to pay for it.
Not exact matches
Hank Dittmar, the American - born chief executive of the Prince's Foundation for the Built Environment, has an op - ed in today's Guardian on a scheme to accommodate England's 3 million planned housing units in
walkable, mixed - use, low - carbon
neighborhoods where residents benefit
from connectedness to city and community life.
So, we haven't completely removed the car
from our lives, but we can definitely see a possible future where those beautiful bicycle paths are more common, where
walkable neighborhoods are standard rather than the exception, and where public transportation is greatly improved.
This is all a great shame because it distracts readers
from the real value of the book, in which Zehner asks the question: «Why do the options of wind, solar, and biofuels flow
from our minds so freely as solutions to our various energy dilemmas, while conservation and
walkable neighborhoods do not?
Approaches range
from car clubs, to ride sharing, to promoting liveable,
walkable neighborhoods.
When sustainability advocates talk about the need to cut down on emissions
from driving, it's clear to me that living in a
walkable neighborhood is key, a subject Lloyd Alter has devoted many posts to.
From making a more complete
walkable neighborhood to celebrating its uniqueness, placemaking is a leading economic development strategy.
«Besides, a lot of people
from millennials to boomers want to live in or near revitalized downtowns in
walkable, bikable
neighborhoods.
From celebrating the uniqueness of a place to bringing amenities such as food markets to make more complete
walkable neighborhoods, placemaking is becoming a leading economic development strategy.
The majority of millennials» housing preferences may not be as different
from previous generations as once believed, according to a new report released this week
from The Demand Institute, Millennials and Their Homes: Still Seeking the American Dream.The report finds that the majority of millennials want to own a house in the suburbs as they look to raise families and they want more space, a veer
from other studies that have shown twentysomethings will likely choose
walkable urban
neighborhoods when it comes time to buy.
With his retirement
from his legacy company, and after more than 30,000 happy homeowners, his focus now is on high end boutique
neighborhoods that are urban -
walkable — refined.