
Roger Lewis of the Washington Post offers an intelligent and considered rebuttal to the WSJ piece, writing, "Focusing on hypothetical designs of free-standing houses can even be a distraction. It can mask a more serious aspect of the challenge: the diminished sustainability of low-density, residential subdivisions in suburbia where most free-standing houses of the future are likely to be situated."
He states, "No matter how green individual homes are, suburban sprawl is intrinsically anti-green. It generates infrastructure inefficiency; car dependency and rising fossil fuel demand; carbon-emitting, time-wasting road congestion; and, despite availability of inexpensive land at ever-greater distances from jobs, escalating development, construction and public service costs."
The article provides an intriguing reminder that green architecture isn't always as green as it seems. And cities, often associated with pollution, are potentially the greenest societal direction of them all.
Here at Ecogeek we often cover green architecture and building technology, both in the city setting and in suburbia. As there will always be some people who yearn for suburban or rural settings, both design approaches have merit. However, when it comes to the greater good, or greater green perhaps, cities arguably present the most environmentally friendly, lowest impact, living opportunity.
From electric vehicles to urban agriculture, the city has arguably the greater potential for green communities, with minimum land use, greatest energy efficiency, and lowest environmental impact. And with the U.S. population's exodus from cities to surburbia reversing for the first time in five decades, the timing is ideal for green city architecture. So let's move the focus onto greening cities, but let's not blindly throw out suburban efforts wholesale, either.