tract housing
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A type of residential development where many similar or identical houses are built together on a large area of land (a tract). This approach allows for efficient, rapid construction, often resulting in uniform neighborhoods.
Usage
"Tract housing" refers to the large-scale development of residential properties. It describes the houses themselves as a collective entity, not the act of building them. * The post-war economic boom led to the rapid expansion of tract housing in American suburbs. * Critics argue that some tract housing lacks architectural diversity and character.
Advanced Usage
- The term often carries connotations related to suburban expansion, mid-20th century development patterns, and debates on urban planning, community design, and architectural homogeneity.
Variants and Related Words
- Tract house (n): An individual house within a tract housing development.
- They bought a classic 1960s tract house.
- Subdivision (n): A tract of land divided into lots for houses; often the area containing tract housing.
- Development (n): A more general term for a group of buildings constructed at the same time, which can include tract housing.
Synonyms
- Cookie-cutter housing
- Suburban development (in context)
- Mass-produced housing
Antonyms
- Custom-built homes
- Eclectic neighborhood
- Historic district
Related Phrases/Concepts
- Urban sprawl: The uncontrolled expansion of urban areas, often into surrounding suburbs, for which tract housing is a common component.
- Master-planned community: A larger, more comprehensive planned residential area that may contain sections of tract housing but typically includes more varied amenities and housing types.
Noun
- housing consisting of similar houses constructed together on a tract of land