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1 - Levitt's Progress: The Rise of the Suburban-Industrial Complex

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2013

Adam Rome
Affiliation:
State University of New York, Buffalo
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Summary

On 1,200 flat acres of potato farmland near Hicksville, Long Island, an army of trucks sped over new-laid roads. Every 100 feet, the trucks stopped and dumped identical bundles of lumber, pipes, bricks, shingles and copper tubing – all as neatly packaged as loaves from a bakery. Near the bundles, giant machines with an endless chain of buckets ate into the earth, taking just 13 minutes to dig a narrow, four-foot trench around a 25-by-32 ft. rectangle. Then came more trucks, loaded with cement, and laid a four-inch foundation for a house in the rectangle.

After the machines came the men. On nearby slabs already dry, they worked in crews of two and three, laying bricks, raising studs, nailing lath, painting, sheathing, shingling. Each crew did its special job, then hurried on to the next site. Under the skilled combination of men & machines, new homes rose faster than Jack ever built them; a new one was finished every 15 minutes.

Three years ago, little potatoes had sprouted from these fields. Now there were 10,600 houses inhabited by more than 40,000 people, a community almost as big as 96-year-old Poughkeepsie, N.Y., Plainfield, N.J., or Chelsea, Mass. Its name: Levittown.

In those excited words – the introduction to a cover story in 1950 – Time heralded a revolution in American life. Instead of building houses one at a time, the new leaders of the housing industry had begun to use factory like methods of mass production.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Bulldozer in the Countryside
Suburban Sprawl and the Rise of American Environmentalism
, pp. 15 - 44
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2001

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