Archive for the ‘growth’ Category

Controlling Growth by Controlling Water

Monday, August 20th, 2007

bolinas.png

Taking a look at Bolinas, CA in Hindsight you’d be forgiven for thinking there was something wrong with our data. There’s a steady growth up until 1971 and then suddenly: nothing.

bolinas-graph.png

Thankfully, this article Controlling Growth by Controlling Water from the New York Times of October 2005 explains:

The same urge to remain pristine has led to one of the most extreme anti-growth policies in the nation. For more than 30 years, Bolinas has refused to authorize a single new water meter, needed for hooking up to the town water supply. There are now 580 meters - the same as in November 1971, when the moratorium began.

I wonder if Bolinas is unique, or if there are other communities that have limited growth in similarly inventive ways?

The Origins of Madison, WI

Thursday, June 14th, 2007

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Sometimes the constraints on expansion give rise to the most interesting patterns. From Wikipedia’s article on Madison,

Madison was created in 1836 when former federal judge James Duane Doty purchased over a thousand acres (4 km²) of swamp and forest land on the isthmus between Lakes Mendota and Monona within the Four Lakes region with the intention of building a new city on the site.

You can see the beginnings of the developments from around 1850 quite clearly on Hindsight, both around the area between the lakes and then further out expanding West and Northeast. After inital expansion after founding the city, you can clearly see that development continued along lines defined by the isthmus. Fascinating stuff!

Correlation or Causation in Seattle?

Monday, June 4th, 2007

Capitol Hill, Seattle

CHS: Capitol Hill Seattle (“Tales from the fancy pants part of Seattle’s Capitol Hill”) has a great theory about growth in Seattle around the turn of the last century:

“You can see that most homes in our neighborhood came into existence prior to 1930 with a big spike in 1906 — that’s the same year as the legendary San Francisco earthquake, of course, so it seems like Seattle may have benefited from the destruction to the south. It’s also interesting to note where most of the area development has occurred post-1950 — you only find the more-recent blue and purple dots down the hill off Madison for the most part with a few scattered here and there between this part of the hill and Broadway.”

Correlation or causation? Does anyone know more about the relationship between the San Francisco earthquake of 1906 and growth in construction rates in Seattle around the same time?

Between Nashville and Smyrna

Saturday, June 2nd, 2007

LaVergne, TN on Trulia Hindsight

We’ve been really excited by the response to Hindsight so far, especially from blogs like This is LaVergne, TN. It’s a blog “dedicated to keeping our community updated on current events, and serves as a guide for restaurants, entertainment, schools, and more.” - exactly the kind of thing blogs are made for!

Kathy T from This is LaVergne wrote:

I was poking around online and stumbled upon this neato online toy that shows what housing growth has been from 1890 to the present. It shows LaVergne being fairly quiet until the mid 1990’s and exploding in the 2000’s. Want to take a peek? Go here!

We’re really thrilled to see folks like Kathy T taking the time to send links around mailing lists, forums and blogs. I’ve just made a blogs category so we can return the enthusiasm and highlight the most interesting things people have linked to so far.

Plano, Texas

Sunday, May 27th, 2007

planoThe suburb of Plano, Texas has been rapidly growing since the 1990’s. Its population doubled to 222,030 by 2000, making Plano one of the largest suburbs in the Dallas area. Many large corporations like Frito-Lay and JC Penney began moving their headquarters here in the the 1980s, advancing its growth. Plano has a flat terrain with a grid-pattern of streets and highways. Development has taken place all the way to the city limits. Watch its recent growth.