Concept information
Preferred term
inner-ring suburb
Definition
- Inner-ring suburbs, or what some call “first” suburbs, are communities that developed just outside of central cities during the period following World War II. Initially these suburbs were bedroom communities for mostly affluent, white residents who commuted back and forth, often by streetcar, from work in the urban core to their home life in a safe, low-density neighborhood. Levittowns are examples of such communities. [Source: Encyclopedia of Social Problems; Inner-Ring Suburb]
Broader concept
Belongs to group
URI
http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/N9J-PQ3F40FW-3
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