ABSTRACT

This book identifies a distinctive kind of urban neighborhood that is on the rise throughout the USA, the dense, walkable, mixed-use bourgeois-bohemian suburb or the "boburb."

It looks at case studies of areas to live in Louisville, Kentucky. Based on scores of interviews with college graduates, backed by survey data and Census figures, it provides a clear, historical account of how these spaces arose. Chapters depict, analyze, and compare the Highlands neighborhood with other Louisville boburbs, contrasting them with the ephemeral bohemian quarters and the many suburban subdivisions. The Highlands are also compared with five other boburbs around the USA. Attention is given to the influence of transportation systems in shaping residential, community, and commercial spaces. Deeper cultural reasons for choosing the boburbs or the suburbs are also explored, including the political "big sort" between liberal and conservative places, and Bourdieu’s account of how the distinction between economic and cultural capital shapes how people choose to live where they live.

This book will appeal to those interested in the evolution and distinctions among urban neighborhoods. It is ideal for academics and students within urban geography, urban gentrification, cities, and population.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Walking to the coffeehouse

part I|57 pages

The Louisville Highlands

chapter 1|10 pages

Louisville

13The big picture

chapter 2|10 pages

Boburbia

The vibrant mixed-use community

chapter 3|27 pages

How did the Highlands happen?

From suburbia to bohemia to boburbia

chapter 4|9 pages

Why do you live in the Highlands?

part II|23 pages

Bohemia and suburbia in Louisville

chapter 5|10 pages

The Highlands and “the Glens”

70The suburban alternatives

chapter 6|6 pages

Germantown and Clifton

Bohemia the old-fashioned way

chapter 7|6 pages

NuLu and Portland

Bohemia on steroids

part III|31 pages

Varieties of boburbs

chapter 8|7 pages

Crescent Hill

93The bourgeois boburb

chapter 9|5 pages

Norton Commons

The boburb in the fields

chapter 10|4 pages

Russell and Shawnee

Imagining a multiracial boburb of the future

chapter 11|14 pages

Boburbs elsewhere

part IV|26 pages

Between bohemia and suburbia

chapter 12|25 pages

A measured appreciation of the boburb