This thread is sorta a continuation of my last thread concerning LA's status as one of the "Big 6" urban cities.
From the consensus of that thread, I will admit that LA is functionally more suburban than NYC, Chicago, Philly, Boston, and SF.
However, after spending a year here, I still think LA isn't quite like other Sunbelt cities like Atlanta, Houston, or Charlotte. It's still consistently denser throughout, probably the most city-like place that still relies on the automobile to get around. But a large chunk of central LA was built in the prewar and interwar era, which was also the era in which it had the largest streetcar system in the world.
Thus, I would propose 3 general urban development types, at least in the the US and Canada:
Prewar: mainly cities built before the advent of the automobile. Houses, multi-family homes, and apartments are usually built wall to wall in a grid layout that encourages walkability and predominant public transportation use. Commercial areas blend into residential areas more with mixed-use development.
Ex: New York ( Manhattan, brownstone Brooklyn), Chicago (The north side close to the loop), Philadelphia, Boston, San Francisco( Nob Hill, Tenderloin), DC, Montreal.
Interwar: these cities were built around the time cars were beginning to make their mark on cities. A lot of them are built on a grid but buildings are often not wall to wall. Rather, they have some space between them. They also devote some space for cars such as garages. The streetcar suburbs are probably the best example of this type of development with a higher concentration of single family homes, garden apartments, and commercial areas that have less mixed use development than the prewar cities.
Ex. Los Angeles ( central areas like Boyle Heights, Echo Park, Silver Lake), Miami/Miami Beach, Detroit ( before decline), New York ( Queens, Bronx, most of Brooklyn), Chicago ( areas between the core and the bungalow belt), Montreal.
Postwar: Pretty much more suburban, relying on urban sprawl since WW II. We are quite familiar with these types of cities. Mainly detached SFHs with commercial areas separated with barely any mixed use development. Heavily dependent on the automobile.
Ex. LA ( most, especially San Fernando Valley), Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, Charlotte, Tampa, Orlando.
And as I just showed, one city could have multiple types of urbanism within its borders.
Please share pictures and discuss