Tag Archives: 40504

Day 52-A Golden Ratio

day 52Today took me to the Gardenside area, roughly along Parker’s Mill Road just south of Versailles Road.  This neighborhood had quite a mix of houses, from modest ranches, to more elaborate, more sprawling ranches, to larger 2-story types and on to houses that probably qualify as McMansions.  With the exception of the McMansions, the area appears to have been built in the 1950’s and into the 1960’s.   All of the houses were nice enough, though none were really notable.

The odd thing today: I had really hoped that I would see the neighborhood’s inhabitants in full force on this very pleasant fall day, but I probably walked a full mile before encountering anyone who wasn’t in a car.  This was especially mystifying by the McMansions and there acre-plus plots.  Eventually, as I started to pass smaller homes, I started to see more people and even at one point had a pleasant conversation.

There were certain parts of this neighborhood that appealed to me at an unconscious level.  That is, it felt “right” to me despite lacking features that I think are pretty important, like safe routes to parks and commercial corridors.  I can recall a comment that a realtor once made to me, that once a client says a house reminds him of where he grew up, the realtor knows the house search is over.  I think about this often, especially when I face this cognitive dissonance between my gut reaction to a neighborhood and my rational one.   Does this neighborhood have some aspect that reminds me of “home” somehow, or was it the smell of dry leaves and the occasional whiff of laundry drying?  My best guess is that there is some magic ratio involving street width or house setbacks that l really like, and this neighborhood (especially the more southern portions) was built close to that ratio.

Day 20

Day 20Today’s walk was in a subdivision called Golfview Estates, a neighborhood of 1940’s era frame houses sandwiched between the Red Mile track and the Gay Brewer Jr. golf course.  As I’ve come to expect from older (that is, pre 1950’s) neighborhoods, there are a lot of interesting things going on here.  There are nice things, flower filled yards, or ones decorated with knicknacks.  Not all of the interesting things are good; one house has a driveway that has for all purposes been converted into a trash heap.  A number of homes loudly proclaimed that they had CCTV systems and that your every move was being recorded (in one case, this may have been to protect materials being used in a remodel rather than personal property, but the number of people who felt the need to post such signs was striking.  I wonder if this is a good indicator of the safety of a neighborhood or whether people notice that their neighbors have done something and decide it’s a good idea.

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“Herbie” trash bin covered in bumper stickers

This area leaves some unsolved mysteries.  For example, how does a Boy Scouts trailhead sign find it’s way to a dead-end street?  And when one covers their trash bin with bumper stickers, it the intent to say what you really think about whatever it advertizes?

What worked: Lots of interesting things

What didn’t: The sidewalk configuration, which basically necessitates that the Herbie, et. al., trash barrels are placed on the sidewalk for collection.