My garden would be perfect were it not in deepest darkest suburbia and a good 15 mins walk from the nearest station. |
|
This is the heaviest and bleakest view of Australianised suburbia ever represented on local screens. |
|
In fact, all the characters in this film are equally compelling, giving a quirky impression of life in suburbia coming apart at the seams. |
|
They are accused of doing little or nothing so as long as the problem stays in the inner city and white suburbia is safe. |
|
The paradigmatic narrative of leaving suburbia while on the brink of adulthood can be mapped across generational difference. |
|
Well, the big deal is that suburbia is rapidly invading areas that were once considered more natural than man-made. |
|
Chris Towie is a doctor in Wallan, a town just outside the fringes of Melbourne's northern suburbia. |
|
Others who are keen to flee suburbia aspire to live in a market town, head for the coast, or really get away from it in rural isolation. |
|
As far as I can tell, the concept of the hormone-crazed teenager is coeval with suburbia. |
|
It was also evidence that much social innovation now springs out of suburbia. |
|
The opening sequence paints a portrait of the quietus and quaintness of suburbia and the stifling boredom it can induce. |
|
It has recently come to my attention that there must be a range of undocumented wild birds at large in British suburbia. |
|
Like her affluent neighbours in suburbia, Warner found herself obsessing about the smallest things. |
|
A superhero in suburbia is a neat idea, but the suburb has to be at least slightly believable for the show to work. |
|
Developers are proposing mini housing estates in leafy suburbia as current policies deter them from greenfield sites. |
|
It's a daily visual reminder, one of several visible from the house and garden, that this is not suburbia, it's the countryside. |
|
The song was hypnotic, the words felt like an incantation, a Latin mass for suburbia. |
|
Van Rooyen shook all the right hands, made promises and also did the walkabouts, not into suburbia, but the platteland. |
|
In Britain, his main gripes were spreading suburbia, neglected defences, and the rise of a pliant state-educated clerisy. |
|
Orange County is beachfront suburbia, where the sun burns ambition to a crisp. |
|
|
And yes, Bourneville is shockingly quiet and reserved but one thing I do like about suburbia is the relative quiet. |
|
Currently I'm living in suburbia, real suburbia with families and everything. |
|
The house he and his companion inhabit, with its wood paneling, kitschy horse lamp and loosely covered sofa, is far from upscale suburbia. |
|
On a more populist level, sunken living rooms are reinvading suburbia as Americans ditch large open spaces for rooms with more intimacy. |
|
His immersion in her mall adventure is a succinct metaphor for the soul-damaging nature of materialist suburbia. |
|
A survivor of fire, flood and suburbia, Christ Church is a remarkable artefact of Wellington's early settlement. |
|
He then began photographing what had become banal suburbia, complete with tract housing, strip malls and gas stations. |
|
Ok you may say that they were dangerous and you were giving the people who lived in them a new start by transplanting them out into suburbia. |
|
The city is small and comforting, and its people live in genteel pockets of suburbia and have 1950s good manners. |
|
However, the lush arrangements of their music are more alt-country than drab suburbia. |
|
We live with our dogs in cities or suburbia, with kids and spouses and jobs. |
|
From the line, new housing estates have sprung up, housing families keen to own a piece of the new suburbia. |
|
Another factor to be considered is the change in buying habits due to the growth of suburbia. |
|
Growing up in that suburbia and air of pop culture, these images stayed with me like a weird dream. |
|
He documented America as it really was, from the political unrest to the rise of suburbia. |
|
More recent critiques of suburbia have focused as well on their alleged vulnerability in an energy-constrained era. |
|
The building of new synagogues on the eve of the Revolution is considered in the context of the nouveau riche and the move to suburbia. |
|
The price of land led them to build a new home in a housing estate, reconciling their original idea and the constraints inherent in suburbia. |
|
After 25 years of life in suburbia, she declared without fanfare that the next 25 were hers. |
|
The big picture that emerges is this. Our suburbia is becoming as diverse as the big cities, which means they will no longer be insular. |
|
|
The cities have great swathes of villa land suburbia, quiet lanes often tree lined stretching namelessly on and on until they melt into unfinished desert building sites. |
|
I did grow up in a neighborhood with many earmarks of suburbia. |
|
East London got heavy industry, while West London got upmarket suburbia. |
|
It's been a very long trek across inner suburbia to reach this remote rail hub surrounded on three sides by an expanse of tracks and overhead cables. |
|
Irish asphalt-layers, the scourge of suburbia, have reached Norway. |
|
Unhappiness fuels great disdain for all of suburbia and its inhabitants. |
|
One person sees suburbia as a malignant cancer, while another can discern a burgeoning new type of city. |
|
Consumer demand and demographic changes, which support retreat from suburbia, will drive the transformation more than Congress, experts say. |
|
Our government certainly does not force people to leave downtown and settle in suburbia. |
|
Their modern counterparts face much worse, being hemmed in by the spread of suburbia, by motorways and the remorseless growth of traffic on ordinary roads. |
|
To the end of the Metropolitan Line and Uxbridge station, the very heart of sweet suburbia. |
|
Changing housing needs may produce movements away from suburbia towards either the city or the country. |
|
My great-grandparents later moved out north-westward, into suburbia. |
|
As our train rumbles in through suburbia, Chris and I share our all-time understudy horror stories. |
|
I grew up in a prefab house on Main Street in 1950s suburbia, the second and last child of a proverbial nuclear family. |
|
Now it seems after years of deriding the suburbs as boring and lacking in character, people are queuing up to praise suburbia as utopia in a big way. |
|
Even if complex coal liquification technology was adopted Australian suburbia would still feel the petroleum pinch. |
|
Farmers and lumbermen settled this valley in the 1870s and '80s, and today the town still feels a world away from sprawling suburbia. |
|
The once semi-rural idyll of suburbia might have faded under the weight of hollowed-out high streets and the urban ethnic mix but suburbia is a resilient place and all the better for its modern diversity. |
|
But the wunderkind, who runs the Donmar Warehouse theatre in London, was anything but blasé last night about the success of his dark satire on suburbia. |
|
|
Today's cinemas are increasingly being located within multiplex entertainment centres on the edge of town or in suburbia, warranting an extended journey for city dwellers. |
|
Essentially a system of pre-fabricated living spaces stacked on top of each other, habitat was well before its time, espousing high-density urban architecture in an era when residential suburbia was still the norm. |
|
Is it not Canadians themselves who want to live in suburbia? |
|
It can be new or renovated, in downtown or suburbia. |
|
Britons are famous for their liking for suburbia, but commuting long distances to work has become common in the small towns, villages and woodlands of the 'rururbia' that surround many major European conurbations. |
|
Deer have become well adapted to living in environments near suburbia, and they have benefited from warmer winters and a decline in hunting in some areas. |
|
When hip-hop artists wrote about the world they saw in the inner city, black and white teens recognized that the isolation of suburbia was not much different. |
|
To reverse a perception that it was in decline, Québec chose to revitalize the centre of the city using available infrastructure and a design that does not compete with suburbia. |
|
Secondly, whereas the central feature of the American suburbia is that they have been the refuge of the whites, the Canadian suburbia is moving exactly in the opposite direction. |
|
With the influx, though, suburbia began to engage in a different spacio-cultural vision of life. |
|
Hostility to the non-urban regions includes a detestation of suburbia. |
|
If America suburbia is not to your taste how about a return to the era of tank tops, chain-smoking and medallion men. |
|
But they lost their appeal when city living enjoyed a renaissance in the yuppified 1980s, and suburbia came to represent a safe and boring existence. |
|
Some, such as Moorside, exist as recently constructed residential suburbia, whilst places like Hollinwood exist as electoral wards and thoroughly industrialised districts. |
|
In the beigest parts of suburbia where I grew up, bridge was a game played by groups of parents in recreation rooms furnished with upright pianos and souvenir sombreros. |
|
When Bush lost the Republican presidential primary in 1980, the thought of dissolving into the small talk and narcotising rituals of Houston suburbia filled him with dread. |
|