Buildings
Pocket neighborhoods in San Antonio
This article was originally published in Plaza de Armas.
On a recent drive through the Government Hill neighborhood, along the edge of Ft Sam Houston, urban developer Peter French noticed something curious: a cluster of eight small homes with a private parking court. The cottages debuted in April 1929 on a lot that stretches one block, from Grayson to Quitman, with a typical width of about 65 feet. All the homes face inward, and are connected by a walkway that bisects the lot.
A small but growing group of urbanists, French among them, see this design as a key to building healthier communities.
These “pocket neighborhoods” simply turn houses away from the street, toward a semi-public space, which often takes the form of a landscaped courtyard. Residents give up their private yards in exchange for a larger communal area where children can play safely and adults can forge stronger relationships as they garden, barbecue, or have a drink with their neighbors after work. Proponents of this style of development claim that it has far-reaching implications for safety and social well-being. Ross Chapin, author of Pocket Neighborhoods: Creating Small Scale Community in a Large Scale World, argues that this layer of small-scale shared space helps “mend [the] broken web of belonging, care and support” that is missing from many suburban communities.
I can’t speak for the relationships forged at the Whippoorwill Cottages (a name for this development that French’s research turned up; they were originally named Grayson Courts), but I do know quite a few people who have lived in a cluster of homes with a shared courtyard off St. Mary’s Street, just south-west of King William. Often referred to simply as “The Compound,” this group of homes was not originally designed as a courtyard neighborhood: all the houses face outward toward either St Mary’s or Stieren Street. Real-estate lawyer and art enthusiast Michael Casey was approached about buying a group of four adjacent duplexes on this corner around 1990. He decided to purchase a vacant house with a large, fenced-in back yard behind the duplexes at the same time.
About
Search
Recent posts
Topics
- Buildings (2)
- Downtown (4)
- Energy (2)
- Exploring (4)
- Facebook (3)
- Meta (3)
- Midtown (1)
- Public space (11)
- Redevelopment (6)
- Regulations (3)
- Suburbs (1)
- Theory (5)
- Transit (4)
Subjects
General resources
Good blogs
Reports
San Antonio resources
Research (my Evernote clips)
- The Quest for High-Tech Solutions in New Mexico “Ghost City” – Next American City
- American consumers prepared to pay more for clean energy | Ars Technica
- EPA's New Fracking Rules On Emissions Strike Tricky Balance | TPM Livewire
- Do food deserts matter? Do they even exist? – The Washington Post
- Should Miraflores be a park or a museum?
- Are Some Buildings Too Ugly to Survive? – Room for Debate – NYTimes.com
- In Texas, a revolt brews against standardized testing – The Answer Sheet – The Washington Post
- Study: alternative energy has barely displaced fossil fuels
- Counting the cost: the hidden price of coal power
- Twin Creeks Aims To Cut Solar Panel Cost In Half | TPM Idea Lab
- Ideas presented for a redesigned Alamo Plaza – San Antonio Express-News
- Campaign highlights historical ‘power' – San Antonio Express-News
- Tragedy spawns new, unique outdoor venue – San Antonio Express-News
- Rezoning efforts take the first step – San Antonio Express-News
- Alta Devices, Maker of Highest Efficiency Solar Panel, Working With Military | TPM Idea Lab
- Lighter, Quicker, Cheaper: A Low-Cost, High-Impact Approach « Project for Public Spaces – Placemaking for Communities
- Darden Restaurants dedicates Florida's largest privately owned solar-energy plant. – OrlandoSentinel.com
- How Lighter, Quicker, Cheaper Interventions Can Catalyze City-Wide Renewal « Project for Public Spaces – Placemaking for Communities
- Better block initiatives
- Virginia Tech Capital Bikeshare Study

