LEARNING FROM DELMARVA POSTSCRIPT

TRILO-G Chapter 15 – Learning From Delmarva – spells out what can be learned about THE USE AND MANAGEMENT OF LAND from the small Urban Support Region that occupies the DelMarVa Peninsula between the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean.

Following completion of Chapter 15, the prospect of contemporary economic and social changed dramatically. (See Introduction to Vol II, BRIDGES about books never being ‘completed.’) Urban Support Regions have existed since the emergence of New Urban Regions following World War II – but they may not exist for much longer.

What Happened?

By the start of the fourth quarter of 2008 it was clear that the shelter bubble had burst in the US of A and in other nation-states that allowed Autonomobile driven (aka, autocentric) human settlement patterns to become dominant. See THE PROBLEM WITH CARS.

The ‘housing bubble’ had actually been deflating for two years and many – including the Chairman of the Fed – thought (prayed) that it was just another “adjustment” in the “natural business cycle.”

But no! The ill-conceived strategy to ‘solve’ the Affordable and Accessible Housing Crisis by driving up ‘home ownership’ Collapsed.

Pumping billions of dollars into the shelter market (and in the process funding and exacerbating the Helter Skelter Crisis and the Mobility and Access Crisis) was never a good idea. Freddie, and Fannie’s tragically failed speculation scheme put hundreds of thousands of Wrong Size Houses in the Wrong Locations and when this became obvious to all, the house of cards (aka, house(es) with bad loans) Collapsed.

Fannie and Freddie’s Collapse exposed shockingly shoddy lending and banking practices – and criminally negligent Agency oversight – that resulted in lending the wrong amounts of money to the wrong borrowers.

Much more important, the shoddy practices resulted in lending the wrong amount of money secured by the Wrong Size Dwelling in the Wrong Location. If it were just a bad loan to a poor risk, someone would buy the property when the defaulted. Massive numbers of bad loans on badly located properties lead to Collapse.

The shelter tragedy is:

• Personal for those who were bilked
• A just reward for those who will go to jail for fraud, and
• Completely avoidable but for the those who claim to be guided by the ‘free market’ but ignored the re real market and failed to come to an understanding of human settlement patterns and the forces that drive dysfunctional settlement patterns.

There is tragic irony because:

• During the run up to Collapse, sane professionals had evolved a “Location Efficient Mortgage” strategy. LEM is driven by ‘smart growth’ advocates but is based on the most intelligent lessons – as opposed the greatest short-term pay out – of 75 years of housing policy experience.

• The market demonstrates that most citizens prefer non-Autonomobile dominated settlement patterns.

• New Urbanism has provided life size working models of places at the Alpha Cluster-scale and Alpha Neighborhood-scale that work. The market is responding to these places. All New Urbanists need to do is to learn about Critical Mass, Balance, real Regionalism and the need for a comprehensive Conceptual Framework.

• Since at least 1973, intelligent voices have been predicting exactly what happened – although most had no idea of the massive scale of Financial Enterprise greed and fraud. The last 35 years of predictions were based on warnings first articulated in the early 1920s.

As time passes the over-inflation of Wrong Size Dwellings in the Wrong Location – scatteration of urban land uses and dysfunctional human settlement patterns – drive more and more mortgages under water and the pain spreads. See 23 December report from Nat Ass of Realtors.

The ill-conceived shelter strategy and the shoddy lending and banking practices exposed the gross negligence of Agency regulators and Enterprise ‘valuation’ and underwriting services which allowed and facilitated the proliferation of collateralized debt obligation ‘securities’ and other Ponzi schemes – classic and freshly conceived – to deflate the entire Global financial structure.

These events exposed the frailty of an economic system primarily driven by consumer consumption without regard to finite physical limits of resources and the importance of settlement patterns.

When consumers are not happy and safe – aka, scared – they do not buy.

They do not by new Autonomobiles and the Autonomobile industry has to be bailed out. They do not buy things they do not really need and the retail and service sectors go down. Even “developers” want a bailout. The dropping oil prices are a barometer of “trust” and the cumulative result of individuals balancing Need and Desire (See Chapter 23).

For reasons spelled out in THE ESTATES MATRIX few believe what they read in MainStream Media. Soon they will not believe advertising of any kind and the source of revenue to provide information to citizens will disappear.

As noted in GENERATIONAL GENERALIZATION:

The emerging reality is Collapse of the Mass OverConsumption ‘civilization’ that has been driven by those at the top of the Ziggurat who are wasting Natural Capital to:

• Pay the total cost of a ‘driven-to-frenzy-by-technology’ society, and

• Subsidize the full cost of dysfunctional settlement patterns.

So what does this have to do with Urban Support Regions?

As Chapter 15 points out there is a great deal to be learned about the USE AND MANAGEMENT OF LAND – or rather the misuse and mismanagement of land – from Urban Support Regions. The Urban Support Regions have proven to be a bellwether and some of the most damaging aspects of dysfunctional human settlement patterns – scattered urban land uses and the proliferation of short grass pollution – are clearly demonstrated.

The bottom line is that Urban Support Regions depend economically, socially and physically on interRegional transfers of wealth, goods and services that are dependent on long-distance, high-energy consumption activities:

• Second homes
• Tourism
• Climate / topography delimited Recreation
• Colleges and Universities in Communities in the Countryside
• Export of food and fiber
• Export of energy and raw materials

The cost of everything that involves energy will go up, and up – unless no one has money to buy the good or services – see the gas price at the pump this week.

Exporting energy will be very costly because the energy will have to be ‘green.’ If the energy is converted to electricity there is line loss; and coal is heavy; and… there is no escape, PERIOD

Enjoying a cappuccino on a front porch along Talbot Street (‘main street’ in Saint Michaels, MD – a special place in DelMarVA that exists to support second homes and tourism), EMR noted trucks delivering building supplies from the Cores of the three primary New Urban Regions that make DelMarVa an Urban Support Region. (They are, of course, Washington-Baltimore NUR, Philadelphia NUR and Hampton Roads NUR. New York NUR and Richmond NUR also contribute, but not as much.)

Having three potential sources of doors and windows is “competition” in a Friedman Flat Earth economy. It is “unsustainable inefficiency” in a finite resource economy with high energy costs.

Where to from here?

There are three possible directions for all or parts of Urban Support Regions:

One. They may become small New Urban Regions through intelligent use of import replacement to reduce the Critical Mass necessary to support their Balanced Communities.

Two. The may becom
e SubRegions of the dominate NUR – Expand Philadelphia NUR down the DelMarVa Peninsula or expand the ties to Hampton Roads NUR through the bridge-tunnel or span the Chesapeake Bay to the Washington-Baltimore NUR. With high energy / transport costs for Autonomobility (and for trucks) one can easily figure out the probabilities.

Three. De-urbanize. Vast parts of Urban Support Regions will go the way of the proposed Buffalo Commons.

How to decide which way to go is sketched out in THE USE AND MANAGEMENT OF LAND. A Window on the process is provided by the discussion of MegaRegions – the expansion of the Los Angles NUR to Las Vegas and emergence of three ‘new’ MegaRegions based on the Denver NUR, the Salt Lake NUR, and parts of the Southern Rocky Mountain Urban Support Region morphing into a “New Mexico” Mega Region. See Chapter 13.

(Note: References to other part of TRILO-G are left in this post to indicate where additional resources can be found when TRILO-G is completed.)

EMR


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15 responses to “LEARNING FROM DELMARVA POSTSCRIPT”

  1. Not Ed Risse Avatar
    Not Ed Risse

    EMR blathers on and on.

    The Greenspan created Federal Reserve credit bubble affected housing prices everywhere, whether auto dependent or not.

    As oil prices plummet, the free market will delay bringing on line alternative energy sources.

    The Saudis know there is a range that oil can trade in without being replaced by other energy sources.

    When oil was above $100 we were well into that free market replacement zone.

    The important point is there are alternatives to oil to fuel automobiles in a price range that will never cause the demise of EMR’s dreaded “Autonomobility”!

    Individual freedom to choose where to live and where to drive will survive.

    In fact, lower housing prices in the outlying suburbs may encourage even more driving which is now itself also cheaper.

    EMR’s gloating when oil topped $100 was premature to say the least.

    Merry Christmas.

    Let us all give thanks to the God who loves us and who created a universe with unlimited energy for our enjoyment.

  2. Anonymous Avatar

    Here is a link to a .pdf file

    http://tinyurl.com/3mw6am

    It ain’t over yet, folks.

    Merry Xmas!!

  3. Merry Christmas All and to EMR.

    It appears that more thinking is going into the concept and role of USRs – a good thing IMHO.

  4. E M Risse Avatar

    Larry:

    Thank you and Merry Christmas to you too!

    EMR is always thinking but as you will note this is NOT a change from anything we have said before. As the future becomes more well defined it is easier to sketch out how components of human settlement will continue to morph.

    EMR is not sure “Not Ed Risse” does much thinking before he / she writes.

    It is a good think he / she has faith in someone he / she calls “God.” He / she will need it when reality finally seeps in.

    “The Greenspan created Federal Reserve credit bubble affected housing prices everywhere, whether auto dependent or not.”

    This statement has some truth but not what some might assume.

    Almost all dwelling prices are affected. Some house prices have gone up in very good locations. Most have gone down. But the important point is that those that have gone down the most — 75% to 150% — are in dysfunctional locations that are Autonomobile dependent.

    “As oil prices plummet, the free market will delay bringing on line alternative energy sources.”

    There is no such thing as a “free” market.

    Alternative energy souces will not come on line due to lack of demand for expensive energy more than any other factor.

    “The Saudis know there is a range that oil can trade in without being replaced by other energy sources.”

    There WAS a range. Now demand is shrinking. As the Depression deepens OPEC will have to shut down more and more production but soon the lack of oil revenuse will destabalize petroleum exporting nation-states.

    In that case, guess how many markets will exist that anyone could call “free.”

    “The important point is there are alternatives to oil to fuel automobiles …”

    But not cheap sources and so there are no sources that the majority will be able to afford.

    “Individual freedom to choose where to live and where to drive will survive.”

    This “freedon” has never existed for a majority of citizens and the number who can afford to live by the Large, Private Vehicle Mobility Myth is shrinking by the hour.

    “In fact, lower housing prices in the outlying suburbs (Core Confusing Word) may encourage even more driving which is now itself also cheaper.”

    Cheap gasoline in the short term does not mean there will be cheap food or a place to drive to work.

    EMR

  5. The problem I have with EMR’s argument is that it happened before – in Tokyo in 1990. It is striking how similar the Japanese and American meltdowns have become. But Tokyo’s woes weren’t from wrong sized houses in the wrong location – were they? I don’t think so. Not unless 600 sq ft apartments on mass transit lines represents the wrong house in the wrong location.

    Bubbles happen when greed overwhelms common sense. They burst when common sense makes a comeback. From the Dutch tulip bulbs to half built homes in the Inland Empire.

    But, EMR, since we are talking bubbles … what do you think of the bayfront real estate market in the DelMarVa USR? Particularly Oxford and Easton?

  6. Frank Popper Avatar
    Frank Popper

    Anyone interested in more information about the Buffalo Commons should look at my Rutgers website, policy.rutgers.edu/faculty/popper. My wife Deborah, a geographer at the City University of New York/College of Staten Island and Princeton University, invented the concept in 1987 and have been writing about it ever since. Best wishes for the holidays from both of us,
    Frank Popper
    Rutgers and Princeton Universities
    fpopper@rci.rutgers.edu, fpopper@princeton.edu

  7. E M Risse Avatar

    Frank:

    Long time no see.

    Was it was in Puerto Rico? or prehap at ASPO?

    Anyway, Happy Holidays!

    EMR thinks of you and your wife’s work every time he visits or considers the Nothern Rocky Mountain Urban Support Region or the National Bison Range — even in the Heartland — Central Missouri USR they are running buffalo.

    A cluster mate here in Greater Warrenton who grew up in Eastern Montana tells scary stories about returning for high school reunions.

    Years ago our fellow Greater Warrenton-Fauquier resident Joel Garreau suggested that some “Edge Cities” would become ghost towns like those old mining camps / towns.

    Today’s WaPo has an obit for the whole idea of “malls.”

    General Growth Properties — what a name they selected! — should have sold while they were still “growing.”

    Groveton said:

    “The problem I have with EMR’s argument is that it happened before – in Tokyo in 1990. It is striking how similar the Japanese and American meltdowns have become.”

    Good observation. The difference is that the Jananese one had a stable Global context in which to work out new strategies. Toyota is only now showing its first loss in 50? years.

    Things are not, however, going well with the New Japan. Did you see yesterdays note on elderly Japaneese having to turn to petty crime?

    “But Tokyo’s woes weren’t from wrong sized houses in the wrong location – were they?”

    Not quite but the root problem with a sustainable future for Japan, as we point out in The Shape of the Future, is dysfunctional human settlement pattern of a different sort.

    It is driven by the political power of non-urban land owners and policies that result is over concentration.

    Functional settlement patterns rely on Balance, not artificial “policies.”

    Interestingly, the Japaneese Government has been trying to use Planned New Communites (at 10 to 20 Persons per acre AT THE APLHA COMMUNITY SCALE) to try to Balance the settlement pattern for three decades. Good friend Will Owen was an advisor to and observer of the process after he was marginalized by the Business-As-Usual applolgists at Brookings and elsewhere.

    “I don’t think so. Not unless 600 sq ft apartments on mass transit lines represents the wrong house in the wrong location.”

    Actually they do. It is the other end of the specrum of dysfunctional settlement patterns.

    “Bubbles happen when greed overwhelms common sense.”

    AND there is no source of information upon which citizens can make good choices in the voting booth and in the marketplace. See THE ESTATES MATRIX

    “They burst when common sense makes a comeback.”

    OR, more often, when the law of supply and demand is allowed to work by a fair allocation of true costs — as a matter of policy (rare) or a matter of supply and / or demand drying up.

    The later happens more often than common sense due to the lack of good information on which to base decision. (Too many are making money Riding the Tiger.)

    “From the Dutch tulip bulbs to half built homes in the Inland Empire.”

    Which IE?

    Greater Spokane in the Tween Cascades and Rockys USR or,

    the desert extension of the Los Angles New Urban Region? Some are saying Las Vegas is now in the SoCal MegaRegion.

    See note on ghost towns above.

    “But, EMR, since we are talking bubbles … what do you think of the bayfront real estate market in the DelMarVa USR? Particularly Oxford and Easton?”

    EMR admits he has not been to DelMarVa in nearly a year. When last there the market was down for second homes and age-restricted retirement enclaves.

    EMR has no update on the “market” but recall that the top 5 percent of the Ziggurat is over 5,000,000 households.

    When a member of the Board of the Maryland Environmental Trust (state agency like VOF) EMR got a peek at the size of the money vaults burried on the waterfront in Oxford, etc.

    So nothing would surprise EMR IN THE SHORT TERM.

    What do you see happening that is of note?

    Have a great Holiday!

    EMR

  8. Not Ed Risse Avatar
    Not Ed Risse

    EMR should enjoy this article about the spread of suburbia to China and elsewhere, particularly this quote:

    ""It's too bad that we as Americans are turning away from suburban sprawl as Asia adopts it," said Robert Fishman, a professor of architecture and urban planning at the University of Michigan."

    Available here:

    http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D95AGU080&show_article=1

    Not Ed Risse is not sure EMR does much thinking before responding.

    EMR wrote, "Almost all dwelling prices are affected. Some house prices have gone up in very good locations. Most have gone down. But the important point is that those that have gone down the most — 75% to 150% — are in dysfunctional locations that are Autonomobile dependent."

    Of course housing prices dropped faster and farther in outlying areas. It is simple supply and demand. There is a lot more unused land available in Loudoun County to build a lot more sprawl than closer in.

    It really has very little to do with "Autonomobile" dependency.

    Come to think of it, EMR is not good at math either. If a $200,000 house dropped by “150%” that would mean the new buyer gets paid $100,000 to take it!

    Happy New Year Ed!

  9. Anonymous Avatar

    The AP article cited above is a perfect example of why Dr. Risse rails about MainStream Media.

    This is not just old news, it is wrong.

    This is old news because some developement in some countries has been low density single family detached dwellings on indivdual lots accessible only by car since the 20s.

    The question is what percentage of the houses?

    Read Dr. Risse’s work on Euro-spraw.

    Not long after the Berlin Wall came down Fairfax County sent a delegation to Russia to help them build “subdivisions” outside Moscow.

    This is all man bites dog stuff driven by the need to write something someone will read.

    And look at the ‘data’ that Daisy Nguyen uses:

    “A 2006 survey (it is almost 2009) of American Institute of Architects members shows that large architecture firms with more than 100 employees reported billings from international work doubled in four years.”

    That is 2002 to 2006 or 2001 to 2005? Either way those were boom years.

    And most of the billings were for work on schools, hospitals, etc and highrise buildings of all sorts.

    The projects that involve dwellings that are not in highrise buildings are almost all “New Urbanist” (aka, “anti-sprawl”) projects if you can beleive the statements from the firms PR falks.

    No one needs an “architect” to design orphan subdivisions and single family detached dwellings.

    “Meanwhile, billings in the U.S. this year [that is in 2008] dropped to the lowest point in the 12 years the survey has been conducted.”

    And how much did the foreign work drop since the 2006 survey of 2001/2 to 2005/6 billings?

    Bob, why bother to spread this BS you must be smart enough to know it is sillyness.

  10. Anonymous Avatar

    We took the -75% to -150% figure to represent loss of equity — a leveraged underwater mortgage.

    There are a lot of scattered McMansions that you would have to pay someone a lot more than $100,000 to take over the Mortgage at the current face value.

    Good By

  11. “the Affordable and Accessible Housing Crisis “

    Nonsense. ther eis no such thing. Study after study have shown that people make rational economic choices when it comes to trading affordiability, accessibility, ans travel expenses.

    The housing market and the fuel market may change the ratios, but they will not change the dynamic: people will travel some distance to live when the cost of travel is less than the cost of rent.

    All the houses built today wll be occupied at some price. All the fuel produced will be consumed at some price.

    Calling this a crisis is pure hyperbole, unbounded by reason.

    End of story.

    RH

  12. “There are a lot of scattered McMansions that you would have to pay someone a lot more than $100,000 to take over the Mortgage at the current face value.”

    When was the last time you saw someone “take over the payments” on a mortgage?

    This statment is complete, nonensical, craziness.

    Take a million dollar home purchased ten years ago. Assuming 105 DOWN AND 6.5% INTEREST the balance onthe home now would be $745,000. If the market value dropped 35% then the current value would be $650,000.

    In this example the seller would have to pay the buyer $100,000 or more to take over the current mortgage at face value. And if the home is more recent than that, the situation is worse. But the buyer would have to be nuts to take the deal: he would have to declare the $100 grand as income, but he would also get a larger than normal tax deduction on his interest.

    But, if the same home is 20 years old, the mortgage balance is only $500,000 and then the buyer would be paying the seller a hundred grand to “take over the mortggage”.

    Ther might be a lot of homes where you would have to pay to get rid of the mrtgage, but the statement is meaningles because there are far more where the seller would get a premium over the face value of the mortgage.

    More than one third of homes have no mortgage, and the vast majority of homes are not under water and not in arrears.

    Statements like this are partially true, but essentially wrong. As such they amount to friht mongering and spreading falsehoods. This kind of nonsense is like crying “Fire” in a croudwd theater.

    Let’s try to have a little more realistic view of the facts, before we select one ostensibly correct one and hold it up as if it was the universal truth.

    RH

  13. Look at a place like Ashburn. 4 bedrooms homes sell for from $500,000 to upt $1.2 million in that area today.

    Four bedroom SFH rents are $2500 and up.

    At $2500 rent, you are better off to buy a $500,000 home, if you plan to stay more than 7 years.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/10/business/2007_BUYRENT_GRAPHIC.html?_r=1&ref=patrick.net#

    Then, you have to figure out your commuting costs, especially if your job changes within seven years.

    The only facts that matter are the ones that affect YOUR condition. But accordin to EMR we just can't allow people to make decsions this way, because it is "bad for the public good".

    RH

  14. “Saint Michaels, MD – a special place in DelMarVA that exists to support second homes and tourism), “

    St. Michaels was there for centuries before second homes and tourism became popular. Evidently its reason for existence has changed over time.

    RH

  15. Story in the New York Times about Chinese factory workers returning to the fields as manufacturing and exporting wanes.

    “I guess I’ll go back to working in the fields, like I used to”, said one man wiating in Guanzhou for a train back to the countryside.

    It is going to be a lot of fun to watch America try to support F-22 Raptors with an economy based on sustaianable agriculture.

    RH

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