Quote:
Originally Posted by jmecklenborg
I'd add to that that while suburban industrial parks and suburban office parks typically don't have a shared public space, and you might not meet a single person who works in the next-door building even after years and years, the workplaces themselves are every bit as social as anything in the city. So this thought that Americans are starved for interaction because so many live and work in car-centric environments is not really the case.
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While YMMV, I'd also say SFH suburbs aren't necessarily less social living environments than apartment buildings downtown. Probably the opposite pound for pound.