So the gist I'm getting is that I'm arrogant for having the opinion that the Highland Park "attached single family homes" have a site plan and feature list and target market that aren't ideal for urbanity or walkability? LoL
Puhlease! I happen to also not like "faux traditional" or "new made to look old" when it's done on the cheap (these are selling for ~$200psf, if that...which is in line with the construction methods used for these particular homes).
And with this spread out site plan, 2 garages per home, front and back lawns, etc, I'd hardly call these townhomes...more like attached single family.
I think they are more fitting where the development pattern already consists of these things (Brookhaven, Buckhead, Sandy Springs, parts of Decatur, etc). I'm not sorry for holding a higher standard for what
I wish Inman Park would become, and it's not because I became snobby once I moved away - I'd have the same opinion if I still lived there!
And if 2,300-3,400 SF is "downsizing" (and I know for Atl that it is), well then golly gee these suburban families are making HUGEEE adjustments moving into the uber urban jungle that is Inman Park.
LoL can we please get real? Of course I don't expect Atl to transform its sprawling mess into SF or NYC, but I would hope that we can do better in the urban villages such as Inman Park.
And the million dollar question: why do these people need a separate "park" with the Beltline right there? This is not being arrogant or snobby or elitist. This is being rational.