Sky gardens! Vertical neighborhoods! “Recombinant” houses that can be taken apart and reassembled! They’re all here, in a new show at the Museum of Modern Art called Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, in which teams of architects, ecologists, and landscape designers reimagined suburbia.
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This concept for suburban Keizer, Ore., called Nature City, includes a massive “compost hill” that harvests methane from yard waste, creates compost, and warms the swimming pools on top.
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Live in a cave! Or a tower with a waterfall inside! Cave dwellers live next door to the indoor climbing wall, while the waterfall generates water pressure for the whole development.
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This design, dubbed The Garden in the Machine, plops eco-groovy “vertical neighborhoods” and wildlife habitat into the space of an old factory in Cicero, Ill., a suburb of Chicago.
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“Recombinant houses” within the neighborhood structure allow families to shift their living spaces to meet their changing needs. Kids go off to college? The neighbors can have the extra bedrooms.
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The project, Thoughts on a Walking City, takes a suburban neighborhood in Orange, N.J., and turns it into a pedestrian-friendly "transit village" by putting multistory apartments where streets now lie.
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How do you get around without streets? Check out those cute little bike and walking paths wedged between the houses and apartments.
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The Simultaneous City project team designed a mixed-use downtown for Temple Terrace, Fla., including a new Town Hall, business incubators, and three types of housing.
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A network of elevated houses is cooled by the prevailing winds, and provides shade to lower floors and public spaces below.
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Suburbs, Jetsons style: MoMA remaps America
By Greg Hanscom
Greg Hanscom is a senior editor at Grist. He tweets about cities, bikes, transportation, policy, and sustainability at @ghanscom.

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