Quote:
Originally Posted by speedog
Nothing in Highwood is zoned RC1, the bulk of it is RC2 and most infill parcels in Highwood are 30' in width although there are exceptions like the two homes being built close to us that sit on lots that are 35' in the front, 45' in the rear and 130' deep.
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So a few comments here that I think support my view that this area is inner sprawl as opposed to suburb.
1) IMHO, virtually zero suburban areas have land valued enough for someone to tear down and build infills / subdivide lots.
2) if the infills are on 30' lots, the intensity of the original developments was worse than I thought.
3) RC2 zoning is nice, but like a sanitary pipe, it actually depends on if you are using it like that or for something else (not that there is anything wrong with that).
In my view, inner sprawl has a high probability over time to becoming inner city. So that is a good thing and means land is more valuable in inner sprawl. That's not going to happen on 38' suburban lots for a century. By calling your area inner sprawl I am actually putting more value to it than being in a suburb, so see it in the positive.