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Is Remote Working Causing an Exodus to the Exurbs? (apnews.com) 117

Last year 30,000 people moved into central Florida's Polk County — more than to any other county in America. Its largest city has just 112,641 people, living a full 35 miles east of the 3.1 million residents in the metropolitan area around Tampa.

But the Associated Press says something similar is happening all over the country: "the rise of the far-flung exurbs." Outlying communities on the outer margins of metro areas — some as far away as 60 miles (97 kilometers) from a city's center — had some of the fastest-growing populations last year, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Those communities are primarily in the South, like Anna, Texas on the outskirts of the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area; Fort Mill, South Carolina [just 18 miles from North Carolina city Charlotte]; Lebanon, Tennessee outside Nashville; and Polk County's Haines City... [C]ommuting to work can take up to an hour and a half one-way. But [Marisol] Ortega, who lives in Haines City about 40 miles (64 kilometers) from her job in Orlando, says it's worth it. "I love my job. I love what I do, but then I love coming back home, and it's more tranquil," Ortega said.

The rapid growth of far-flung exurbs is an after-effect of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Census Bureau, as rising housing costs drove people further from cities and remote working allowed many to do their jobs from home at least part of the week... Recent hurricanes and citrus diseases in Florida also have made it more attractive for some Polk County growers to sell their citrus groves to developers who build new residences or stores...

Anna, Texas, more than 45 miles (72 kilometers) north of downtown Dallas, is seeing the same kind of migration. It was the fourth-fastest growing city in the U.S. last year and its population has increased by a third during the 2020s to 27,500 residents. Like Polk County, Anna has gotten a little older, richer and more racially diverse.

The article points out that in Anna, Texas, "close to 3 in 5 households have moved into their homes since 2020, according to the Census Bureau."

Is Remote Working Causing an Exodus to the Exurbs?

Comments Filter:
  • Yes. Obviously. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by LindleyF ( 9395567 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @10:43AM (#64951891)
    You can afford more home and more land further out, so why not?
    • Re:Yes. Obviously. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @10:47AM (#64951905) Journal

      There's fuck all around and you have to drive a lot to do anything or see anyone.

      You might not mind that or not want to see anyone, but you asked why and plenty of people want to do things and see people and don't especially relish driving.

      • Re:Yes. Obviously. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Valgrus Thunderaxe ( 8769977 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @10:52AM (#64951923)
        but you asked why and plenty of people want to do things and see people and don't especially relish driving.

        Apparently you're wrong, because the article states these areas are the fastest growing areas in the country.
        • Both can be true at the same time.

          "People's preferences often conflict with each other, and housing, like everything, involves trade-offs... [youtu.be] People want more rooms and a backyard and their own walls, but they also want housing at a reasonable price so they can have money left over for other expenses. They want to live within a reasonable distance of work, and they want to live close to other amenities too, like transportation, parks, and services."

          And sadly, our children, who we have basically put under ho [medium.com]

          • Re:Yes. Obviously. (Score:4, Insightful)

            by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Monday November 18, 2024 @09:35AM (#64953863) Homepage Journal

            And sadly, our children, who we have basically put under house arrest, [medium.com] don't get to vote on the matter.

            That article is relating how parenting has changed....it isn't the neighborhood it's the parents refusing to allow kids to go out and play on their own away from home like I did when I was a kid.

            This is going to happen whether in an urban city or suburb...I'd still argue the suburb would be safer.

            Parents are way too paranoid these days....sad.

            I'm SO glad I got to grow up when I did....free to roam and play with friends and no fscking cell phone to keep tabs on me. We actually started earning and learning independence at a young age.

            • This is going to happen whether in an urban city or suburb...I'd still argue the suburb would be safer.

              I wouldn't: [thewalrus.ca]

              "In the US, at least, people who live in low-density sprawl are more likely to die violently than their inner-city cousins--thanks mostly to car accidents."

              • This is going to happen whether in an urban city or suburb...I'd still argue the suburb would be safer.

                I wouldn't: [thewalrus.ca]

                "In the US, at least, people who live in low-density sprawl are more likely to die violently than their inner-city cousins--thanks mostly to car accidents."

                I don't think I'd trust a reference from Canada whilst talking about the US.

                Two very different places...

            • And sadly, our children, who we have basically put under house arrest, [medium.com] don't get to vote on the matter.

              That article is relating how parenting has changed....it isn't the neighborhood it's the parents refusing to allow kids to go out and play on their own away from home like I did when I was a kid.

              This is going to happen whether in an urban city or suburb...I'd still argue the suburb would be safer.

              Parents are way too paranoid these days....sad.

              I'm SO glad I got to grow up when I did....free to roam and play with friends and no fscking cell phone to keep tabs on me. We actually started earning and learning independence at a young age.

              It's not just parents over-sheltering their kids. It's also the government. A mother in Georgia was arrested for "child endangerment" because her 10 year old walked less than a mile to a store alone [go.com]. That's ridiculous. At that age my friends and I were walking to places farther than that. In the attempt to protect our kids, we're smothering them to death.

        • by edwdig ( 47888 )

          Apparently you're wrong, because the article states these areas are the fastest growing areas in the country.

          The empty areas with no people are growing at a faster rate than the full areas!

          If you fill a large chunk of land with low density housing, you still have a trivial number of people compared to a high density area.

      • You can find places that balance space and stuff to do.
        • Plus it's a question of what do you want to do. Not everyone wants to go clubbing in the city, a lot of people would rather balance the distance it takes me to get to shopping/groceries/etc.. and the distance it takes me to get to parks/hiking/dark sky stargazing, etc.
      • There's fuck all around and you have to drive a lot to do anything or see anyone.

        You might not mind that or not want to see anyone, but you asked why and plenty of people want to do things and see people and don't especially relish driving.

        The people you claim don’t especially relish driving, are the same people who waste an entire workweek every month commuting to “things”. Including work.

        Those who actually don’t relish driving, don’t fucking do it.

        • The people you claim donâ(TM)t especially relish driving

          Well, me for one.

          are the same people who waste an entire workweek every month commuting to âoethingsâ. Including work.

          I do?

          Those who actually donâ(TM)t relish driving, donâ(TM)t fucking do it.

          I don't.

          I don't even own one.

      • Re:Yes. Obviously. (Score:4, Informative)

        by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @12:28PM (#64952127)

        Moved to exurb in 2020. While it requires a car... I got a "dream house" for about 30% less than I would have paid "in town." The cost is a 7-mile trip to Starbucks, 20 miles to Costco... and the potential for an hour-long delay returning home due to the surfers or the turtles. I have a grocery store and food trucks within a quarter mile. To go drinking at a bar is 20 minutes on the city bus. The only real pain is it is an hour plus 30 minutes traffic buffer to the airport. It is not what I would have wanted when I was 30, but now it is great!

        • To go drinking at a bar is 20 minutes on the city bus.

          If you're getting city buses, that doesn't sound very exurban, as generally characterised by not being part of the city area.

          Plus also the stores and food within walking distance. Sounds like you live in a small town near a city, rather than an exurb.

          • Ok, technically city-and-county busses. The route would actually take 2.5 hours to get inot town, but it is important access for peope that work at the two largetst employers in the area, along with connecting multiple villages.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        Next week, we'll have a story about all the people who moved to the boonies and hate it, and are moving back to the Big City for the very reasons you cite.

        Again.

        • Next week, we'll have a story about all the people who moved to the boonies and hate it, and are moving back to the Big City for the very reasons you cite.

          Again.

          I must have missed the first one.

      • Re:Yes. Obviously. (Score:4, Interesting)

        by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @01:50PM (#64952303)

        There's fuck all around and you have to drive a lot to do anything or see anyone.

        Depends on what you do. Frankly there's fuck all around in most American suburbs too. The American dream seems to be to sleep out in a house with a picket fence, and then "live" somewhere else.

        As for "seeing" people these places aren't deserts. There's many people living there. Sure it is harder to move away from friends but you make new ones local to you. There's plenty of opportunity to see people. The small towns often have plenty of facilities as well, so it's not like you're driving over an hour just to go to dinner.

        My wife grew up in a country town with a population smaller than the one in TFS and one which was even more remote. Whenever we stayed there we weren't alone, we weren't bored. These places are just as liveable as any other, unless you weekly requirement is to go into a high end Apple store for a chat with a genius.

        • Re:Yes. Obviously. (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Narrowband ( 2602733 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @02:48PM (#64952419)
          Also, if you have a nice house in a driveable location with easy parking, the travel isn't all one way. The people you want to see can come to you, rather than it always having to be the other way around. Decks and patios and back yards with grass and trees and such provide for cookouts and places for the kids to play. Sure, sometimes you have to drive a bit to see your friends, but not always, and you can also turn the car the other way and drive just a bit to a lake or waterfall or mountain trail.
          • Sure, sometimes you have to drive a bit to see your friends, but not always, and you can also turn the car the other way and drive just a bit to a lake or waterfall or mountain trail.

            This is the biggest reason I don't know how people live without a vehicle. How do you get to the wilderness, like the places no public transit will ever run?

            • In my experience, they rent a car, and even if they do that like every week, it's still cheaper than owning one and having a place to park it. I just checked and the price to rent a car from my local Avis for next Fri-Sun is all of $90, with no insurance, no repairs, no maintenance. Car rental is pretty competitive. There's also Turo.

              The average car payment is now $700 a month and that's not even getting into insurance.
              • To be fair if you are spending $700/mo on a car it is probably a car you like, as opposed to just an appliance. You can get a box that will get you from a to b and back for much less than that. Around here even poor people drive cars.
            • This is the biggest reason I don't know how people live without a vehicle. How do you get to the wilderness, like the places no public transit will ever run?

              The only people without a vehicle are those without drivers licenses. I own no car but I'm not without a vehicle. Between car sharing apps and Sixt rental being at the next metro station over I always have the ability to get whatever vehicle I need for the situation I find myself in, be that a trip to the wilderness, or a truck to move house. When I lived in Australia I used to go camping on K'gari (formerly Fraser Island) twice a year, it's a place only accessible with a proper 4x4 (not that shitty thing A

              • These days I actually wonder what you mean by "places no public transit will ever run". It's a concept foreign to me now that I live in a country with an incredibly well connected public transit system.

                Perhaps we have different definitions of wilderness.

                I've never owned a 4x4 in my life. Didn't stop me spending most of my annual leave in a place that needed one.

                Same reason I don't own an airplane.

                • No we don't. Personally I don't live in a country with true wilderness, but that doesn't change my example of Australia. A place you can only get to with a 4x4 and a ferry with no roads, no mobile, no nothing. And yet I went there. Without ever *owning* a 4x4.

                  If you *live* in the wilderness you need to own a car. If you *go* to the wilderness you don't. There's an entire service industry out there that exists purely to lend you the vehicle you need.

                  Sidenote: I'm on Avis's website right now since I'm about t

                  • If you *live* in the wilderness you need to own a car. If you *go* to the wilderness you don't. There's an entire service industry out there that exists purely to lend you the vehicle you need.

                    I live in the city. I visit the wilderness all summer long. Renting a car would be a PITA. But by all means you do you.

                    I suspect you don't have a pilots license so you may have missed the point

                    I don't but learning to fly a real plane instead of MSFS is on my bucket list. I still won't own a plane of course. Like cars people who own planes tend to use them regularly.

      • by Cyberax ( 705495 )

        There's fuck all around and you have to drive a lot to do anything or see anyone.

        Fun fact: you'll likely spend MORE time in transit in a city if you want to "see anyone" than in an exurb. There's a really helpful site that lets you plot isochrones: https://www.geoapify.com/isoli... [geoapify.com] - try playing with it, compare the distance you can cover by car and by transit within 30 minutes.

        Transit is basically a trap. It's incovenient, slow, and useless.

        • Fun fact: you'll likely spend MORE time in transit in a city if you want to "see anyone" than in an exurb.

          Depends on your city. You can travel longer distances faster from an exurb, but there are fewer people around. Also, you basically need to go to someone's house, since they aren't amenity rich rather than meet in the middle, which effectively doubles the distance.

          Plus if you like a drink and your court ordered interlocked ignition is working properly, well that's not so good.

          Transit is basically a trap.

          • Transit is basically a trap. It's incovenient, slow, and useless.

            In America, sure. Well except New York. And some bits of SF. Also surprisingly some of Carrollton, TX.

            Depends where in NY too. Manhattan? Great. Central and southwest Brooklyn? Not bad. Lots of northeastern Brooklyn and Queens, not so much, unless you really like late, overcrowded buses. And the thing with getting anywhere from LGA. JFK is better, but I think a respectable argument can be made that the best transit-connected airport in New York is in Jersey.

            Chicago is actually fairly well done. The trains go directly to the airports, connecting through downtown, with relatively safe and moderately c

          • by Cyberax ( 705495 )

            Depends on your city.

            Nope. It does not hold even for New York City as a whole, although Manhattan is an exception. A stunning example: commutes in Greater Houston Area are faster than in _any_ large European city.

            Plus if you like a drink and your court ordered interlocked ignition is working properly, well that's not so good.

            I don't drink, so not a problem for me. But even this problem will soon be solved by self-driving taxis.

            In America, sure. Well except New York. And some bits of SF. Also surprisingly some of Carrollton, TX.

            It's true everywhere. Cars are fast, although they can't work in dense cities for everyone. The fix: don't build dense cities.

            Cars also were a great equalizer in the US, a person with a car can access more business

            • A stunning example: commutes in Greater Houston Area are faster than in _any_ large European city.

              That sounds unlikely. Possibly your top speed is higher (though extraordinarily unlikely). Possibly your average speed is higher, but the distances you need to go are on the whole greater. Plus if you're not commuting by motor vehicle, then there are never any traffic jams. Busses vary depending on how much cities like to prioritize the convenience of a single occupancy vehicle over a 100 person bus.

              I don't dri

              • by Cyberax ( 705495 )

                That sounds unlikely.

                GHA average commute is 26 minutes. Berlin is 32 minutes, London is 45 minutes.

                Busses vary depending on how much cities like to prioritize the convenience of a single occupancy vehicle over a 100 person bus.

                The average bus occupancy is 15 people in the US.

                Plus you know trains are faster than cars. Let's say you're going from London to Slough (which is just outside the M25, but pretty much continuous urbaness all the way. That train hits 125mph, and doesn't get stuck in traffic. The 25 mile journey takes 17 minutes.

                You forgot to account for the transit time (walking to/from the station) and waiting for the train. Buses also have shitty average speed due to the need for constant stops. And if you space bus stations further, people have to walk longer, negating the time savings from sparser stops.

                Cars are the great equalizer to those that can afford them and legally drive them. For everyone else, they are the great divider. Plus the US is weirdly bad at public transport.

                EVERY country is bad at transit. It sucks universally. And yes, cars don't work for alcoholics, chil

                • I mean... having done the same google searches you've picked the highest estimates for Europe and the lowest for Houston. Anyhow it's also expensive to move because in the UK house sales are taxed unlike the US, so there's substantial financial pressure to eat a longer commute rather than move.

                  The average bus occupancy is 15 people in the US.

                  Then buses should certainly get priority by a huge margin.

                  You forgot to account for the transit time (walking to/from the station) and waiting for the train.

                  Cars get st

      • There's fuck all around and you have to drive a lot to do anything or see anyone.

        You might not mind that or not want to see anyone, but you asked why and plenty of people want to do things and see people and don't especially relish driving.

        I can't remember if you live in the US or not...I kinda don't think so?

        If not...you may not really be familiar with much of the US....in that if you live outside of the urban cities, you're only choice is NOT rural.

        The suburbs have nice neighborhoods, shopping, etc.

        • I can't remember if you live in the US or not...I kinda don't think so?

          I do not, but I have done.

          If not...you may not really be familiar with much of the US....in that if you live outside of the urban cities, you're only choice is NOT rural.

          Yep, it's the 'burbs. As distinct from both rural and small town.

          The suburbs have nice neighborhoods, shopping, etc.

          They're almost exclusively zoned for single family residential builds, so anything useful is a slog away by car. This is bad for traffic, because cars are

          • You misunderstood, but I'll elaborate. It's not like it's impossible to see people, but my memories of the US was that if you didn't live in the same neighbourhood, and wanted to visit a suburbanite, it was generally a long slog by car with a designated driver needed. The whole concept of meeting with someone half way between in a public venue wasn't really a thing in many cases. It kinda sucked and I generally socialised a lot less with suburbanites than townies, because "hey wanna get a drink this evening

      • There's fuck all around and you have to drive a lot to do anything or see anyone.

        I have no idea how old you are, but most men don't want "fuck all around" when they're older. Most guys my age that I know don't actually like going out that much and value the peace and quiet of the country, or as close to it as you can get. You sound like a young man, because that's how I was when I was young. I wanted to be "near it all", the center of social stuff (which back then meant things like the Movies, restaurants, amusement parks, shopping, etc). I've definitely reached the Get off my lawn sta

    • Re:Yes. Obviously. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @10:49AM (#64951913)

      You can afford more home and more land further out, so why not?

      Because it doesn't fit the narrative that people need to be caged like rats in cramped, overcrowded blocks of concrete, such as this [boredpanda.com], with high temperatures because of lack of greenspace. The narrative doesn't foresee people wanting to walk out their back door onto grass or lay out under their trees, which helps to keep temperatures down, and not bump into their next door neighbors every time they open the door.

      • Re:Yes. Obviously. (Score:5, Informative)

        by Shades72 ( 6355170 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @01:14PM (#64952217)

        While I'm sure you'll find a lot of people agreeing with your stance, would it also not be like that current pace of life is deemed not fun anymore? Living an hour, or one and a half hour of a large(r) city, it would seem to me, not insurmountable.

        But you'll have more room to do your thing. See more "untamed" nature happening around you on your lot. Having space to stroll around. Or have the whole family over and that not resulting in lots of infighting as everyone doesn't need to be in each other's proverbial hair.

        Now, city life and having almost anything in walk-able distance has its own charm. I happen to like that, but I sure wouldn't want to impose that on anyone who wouldn't like that.What I like about the walk-able concept is that there is a lot less external headache to deal with. And even though it may not seem like it, it is actually a lot less noisy too.

        This concepts invites a lot of what is good from life outside of the city into the city. Definitely not all good things, but more than you would expect.

        Now I'll stop ranting on about that concept. Life out of the city slows down to a much more manageable pace. That usually results in more piece of mind and not enough people dare to put a price on that for their own sake. Or perhaps even acknowledge that it has a value.

        What I expect is happening, is that the pandemic and remote working made a lot of people realize that piece of mind is much more valuable to them than they initially thought.

      • I'm beginning to come to the conclusion that if someone starts taking about "the narrative" and aren't engaging in literary criticism they might be a bit of a dingus.

        Aaaaand well you appear to have decided that the only two possible choices are the sprawl of American suburbs turned up to 11 or the closest we have to mega city one.

        I do not live in an apartment block like that or indeed an apartment at all. But also I live in walking distance of shops, good public transit. How every dies that work??

    • The burbs are soulless and lonely and the peak of inefficiency.

      Why would I want so much house that my precious spare time is wasted on maintaining it?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You can afford more home and more land further out, so why not?

      Or just, afford any home! I'm a teacher, and a few years back had offers at a few elite independent schools. Most of them were in downtown of large cities. Couldn't possibly afford to live even with 30 minutes of the schools that were in Dallas or Baltimore. I would have totally ended up in places like Anna or Ennis if I chose Dallas, and... maybe somewhere in Pennsylvania had I chosen Baltimore?

    • the problem is you move to the middle of nowhere, buy a house and the job you've got goes away and suddenly you're stuck with a house and kids in school and the whole 9 yards and zero job prospects.

      Remote jobs are more common now, but they're not infinite. I've seen plenty of folks trapped in my shitty town back when I lived there, and moved to a bigger city for work. There's a reason why big cities draw people.

      The problem is our transportation network. It's not capable of supporting the population
      • High density housing provides enough density for effective mass transit, walking and bicycling all of which are several orders of magnitude more space efficient than cars. You need a better transportation network which means something other than cars.

        • As soon as you get serious about mass transit they come in with all sorts of shenanigans like hyperloop or other nonsense and derail the entire process. Even cities that have decent public transportation and mass transit are often being taken over by cars. A bunch of Europeans are complaining how it's happening over there.

          Without a major political realignment we are stuck with cars as our main form of transportation. And that means people are going to block high density housing because our transportatio
          • A bunch of Europeans are complaining how it's happening over there.

            Possibly: the car lobby with its capture of the press is strong here. After ~60 years of relentlessly pro-car legislation where anything that prioritises any other transport under any circumstances is branded a "war on motorists". Cyclists are of course a particularly favourite group to demonize, and it has been so relentless and so continuous that it's become part of the "truth" and even elements of the left wing press indulge in it.

            I can'

      • This isn't wrong. But you can be in the "exurbs" and still have a commute under an hour. Just have to be smart about it.
    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Or afford a house at all.

  • by dmay34 ( 6770232 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @10:46AM (#64951899)

    HOAs are great! You guys will love them! Imagine the worst most awful people on Nextdoor and now give them power to fine you and even repossess your home. You'll love it!

    Now... Home prices in the awful inner scary cities with no HOAs to protect your home values should drop aaaaaaaaany day now....

    • by LindleyF ( 9395567 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @10:50AM (#64951915)
      No, you have to go further out to find the No-HOA houses. Worth it, HOAs are trash.
    • Right, because they're so much worse than condo and apartment boards, lol.
    • What are you nattering on about? There are plenty of houses in the suburbs being sold without the onerous requirement of a tyrannical HOA. The last two homes I have purchased are literally 10 minutes out of town and have no HOA. I refuse to consider any property that has an HOA.

      Sure thereâ(TM)s an HOA in those developments where every third house is the same and theyâ(TM)re all built like shit by the lowest bidder. But that is not the only option out there.

      • I can only speak for Florida, not the other places mentioned in the article. In Florida, houses built before 1994 aren't hurricane safe and are nearly impossible to insure. You'll have to use the state insurer (Citizens) and you're risking your life. The overwhelming majority or houses built past 1994 have HOAs. I have had only good HOA experiences and Florida has some laws that limit the worst abuses of HOAs. But there are still some bad stories.
    • Home prices in the awful inner scary cities with no HOAs

      The city council effectively becomes your HOA.

    • unless you're *way* out in the boon docks. Mega corps noticed that they could make a ton of money by taking over HOAs. John Oliver has a video about it. Scary stuff.

      Hell, mega corps are taking over trailer parks.

      And that's before you talk about NIMBYs. You can't really have high density housing when cars are involved. Build a 500 unite apartment where everyone needs a car and suddenly you've got all those people trying to go to work at once. NIMBYs know that so they fight against high density housin
    • Every state is different with regards to HOAs. In many places they are out of control. Florida HOAs are at least somewhat limited by the government in terms of what they can and can't do. You do still hear some nightmare stories. But there are also very good HOAs. They work exceptionally well for medium-density housing. I still own a townhouse in Celebration, FL that includes a maintenance reserve. All exterior, roof, and yard are managed by the HOA. So there's really not anything for which they can
      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        But there are also very good HOAs

        The only difference between a good HOA and a bad HOA are the people on the board. All it takes is the neighbourhood busybody to sneak their way onto the board and then drive everyone else out to replace them with other neighbourhood busybodies.

        And you know the people - the one person on a street with too much time on their hands who complains about everything and everybody. HOAs are magnets for people like those who then get on the board and then start issuing fines and eve

        • In the case of most HOAs, the board does not directly issue fines. At least the way mine is structured, the board hires a management company. We do have volunteers who go around and look for violations that they can refer to the management company who makes a final decision. And I do get a letter about once a year for something minor (forgot to put the trash can away, a brown spot in the grass, et cetera.) But those don't result in fines. For one of my properties, I did get a notice that the mailbox ne
    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      HOAs? There are homes without them.

      • Here in Tennessee, it was fairly trivial to find homes without HOAs. "Please don't show us any properties with an HOA; We think it reduces the value by 50% or more." should be the end of it.

        You're paying your realtor, aka Buyer Broker, a massive pile of money at closing. It is completely reasonable to set hard requirements and enforce them. If it's not, find someone else to take your 3%.

    • by 0xG ( 712423 )

      Condo strata councils are *much* worse.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    One reason for urban flight is simple. Fewer drug-crazed people trying to kick down your door to rob your place, or come after you. Especially with the latest Tik-Tok craze of trying to kick down people's doors for views. Do you want your children playing near piles of syringes, or growing up with the word "strays" meaning bullets as opposed to a random puppy? Since many US cities do nothing to deal with crime, if not defunding police in order to ring a dinner bell for addicts to come and take up resid

    • Especially with the latest Tik-Tok craze of trying to kick down people's doors for views.

      Must be a localized thing. In a lot of places in the US, you do that and the last thing on the video would be the bullets about to pierce your chest.

    • How about Elvis shaking his hips on tv, scandalous!

  • exodus (Score:3, Interesting)

    by gary s ( 5206985 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @11:14AM (#64951969)
    Hmm, Lets see, Get out of town, away from the crowds of urban areas. Get away from housing developments that are just twisty tiny passages with houses all alike. Often run by Nazi inspired HOAs. Now move out, land, home that dont come out of cookie cutter. Neighbors that care or will leave you alone if thats what you want. A slower pace, more the likey a larger home for the same price. Hmm. Why would be move out of the city?
    • I suspect a lot of it is precisely neighbors that leave you alone. If you live close to people you have to somewhat do what they want you to do. If you have big dogs they will get scared and it won't be hard for them to force you to muzzle. If you want to take up blacksmithing, people will have the police on your doorstep because of the noise, etc etc. Out of the city you can do what you want to do.
      • >If you live close to people you have to somewhat do what they want you to do.

        Yep. I'm in my 4th home since I stopped living with my parents many decades ago. Every place has been a bit further from the city with a bit more space between me and the neighbours than than the one before it.

        The closer your neighbours, the more potential for friction. Life's too short to be dealing with everyone else's crap interfering with your personal time in your personal space.

  • Back to office suckers. Look at DFW area exurbs, they all free fall now, built too much, and demand is reversing.
    • Or there is actual supply, unlike pretty much everywhere except Florida and Texas.

      Needs more growth boundaries and government restricting expansion of government services and utilities.

      • There isn't much supply here in Florida. I don't know the situation in Texas. Many people have moved here since the pandemic and the only land that doesn't have houses on it is land that is preserved or land that's hard to develop. Unlike other states, Florida has very exact laws that require municipalities to constantly upgrade zoning so that more and more houses an be built. But even Polk county isn't cheap. If you want to put an offer in for land or a house, make sure you include an escalation claus
  • by cowdung ( 702933 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @11:22AM (#64951991)

    Great! Let's bring new life to small town USA.

  • by Balthisar ( 649688 ) on Sunday November 17, 2024 @11:53AM (#64952061) Homepage

    So not everyone wants to live in high density urban areas? People value different things? And they're able to act on their values? Good.

    • by Roogna ( 9643 )

      This is exactly what I like to point out when people do that "But everyone needs space! And cities suck!"
      Just like there are people who want their 100 acres and to never see another person, there are also family's like mine where we adore the city. We've lived in suburbs, we've lived rural, and we've lived big city, and I will take the city every single time over anything else. In fact when we look at maybe moving we only even look at cities larger than our current one.

      Which is fine, choices are fantastic

  • I hear stories about those who bought a 2 hr commute away from the office during the pandemic. Some were told by upper management that full remote work was for reals here to stay. They made life affecting choices based on wishful thinking. Since then, employers have put on 3 and 4 day in-office mandates and have recently started to enforce them.

    The exurbs look less attractive unless you have an apartment in town (a pied-à-terre) to bunk for a couple of nights and a salary to afford that.

    • There are many people who have permanent remote work jobs. I started at my job 17 years ago fully remote. For a brief period my employer had a local office where I could optionally go. I did go into the office for a while although it was a little far (almost half a mile) It's endemic in certain lines of work such a field sales to work remotely.
  • Not sure how true this is in the USA, but in Canada far-flung exurbs are about the only place near a major city where housing is remotely affordable. It's a trap, though... we're building massive car-dependent sprawl in a completely unsustainable way, and in 20-30 years time when all the infrastructure needs replacing or repairing, we're going to be in a huge financial hole. At that point, either the exurb property tax rates will skyrocket or they'll be left with crumbling infrastructure and become awful

    • That's a strange way to do it. Here in the USA, we build massive car dependent sprawl in an unsustainable way and then Aldi, Publix, Walmart and Home Depot open up new locations in order to cater to the new exurb area and soon those exurbs are now just generic suburbs.
  • I think people need to be clear that there are really three categories here;

    small towns which are down the road from a city and have their own urban area,

    suburbs that are attached to a large city and have local shopping centers etc

    and exurbs which are rural development that is not attached to any urban amenities - aka house in the country.

    The responses here seem to conflate all three. But they each have their own character and problems. What is shared is the hollowing out of urban areas with establish

  • You've just discovered what the rest of the world already understand to be "satellite towns" &/or "dormitory towns."

    They're the worst places in the world to live because they have all the worst features of both suburbs & living in the countryside & none of the benefits. If you have an active mind &/or want a social life, don't go anywhere near these places.

Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes, and not rather a new wearer of clothes. -- Henry David Thoreau

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