Trailer parks remain one of the last forms of housing provided by the market explicitly for low-income residents. They also highlight a working example of traditional urban design elements and private governance.
Historically, trailer parks and other forms of low-income housing (boarding houses, residential hotels, and low-quality apartments) have been criminalized in nearly every major US city. Beginning in the 1920s, urban policymakers and planners started banning what they deemed as low-quality housing.
In the suburbs, urban policymakers undertook a policy of “mass eviction and demolition” of low-quality housing. Policymakers established bans on suburban shantytowns and self-built housing.
The Housing Act of 1937 formalized this war on “slums” at the federal level and by the 1960s much of the emergent low-income urbanism in and around many U.S. cities was eliminated.
Despite the United States’ attack on low-income housing, trailer parks have somehow managed to survive. For low-income rural residents, the parks provide an affordable alternative. With an aftermarket trailer, trailer payments and park rent combined average around the remarkably low rents of $300 to $500. Even the typical new manufactured home, with combined trailer payments and park rent, costs around $700 to $1,000 a month. This offers a decent standard of living at far less than rents for apartments of comparable size in many cities.
Trailer parks are not only cheap due to manufacturing; they’re also cheap thanks to their surprising exemption from most conventional land-use controls. They are often subject to minimal setbacks, fewer parking requirements, and tiny minimum lot sizes. The result is that many trailer parks have relatively high population densities.
Trailer parks actually use an urban design more common in European and Japanese cities. With functional urban densities and traditional urban design, the only thing missing in most trailer parks is a natural mixture of commercial and industrial uses. Many urban trailer parks are located within walking distance of commercial and industrial uses.
As is seen in the television show The Trailer Park Boys, trailer parks allow low-income communities to engage in private governance. Compared to many low-income neighborhoods, trailer parks are often fairly clean and relatively safe.
A trailer owner pays rent not only for a slice of land in an apparently desirable location but also for a kind of club good known as “private governance.”
Edward Stringham describes the concept as “the various forms of private enforcement, self-governance, or self-regulation among private groups or individuals that fill a void that government enforcement cannot.”
In the Trailer Park Boys, this kind of governance is provided by Mr. Lahey, trailer park “security”.
The park management provides order within the park, upholding certain basic standards on cleanliness and maintenance while also dealing with unwanted visitors and settling disputes among neighbors.
While proper society tends to look down on parks, in reality, we have a lot to learn from them.
Paul Plante says
The Elvis wannabe without the shirt doesn’t look like he is missing too many meals, anyway.
Scotiagirl says
“Private governance…(promoting) order within the park, upholding certain basic standards on cleanliness and maintenance while also dealing with unwanted visitors and settling disputes among neighbors” Who knew that, for just “a few dollars more,” Cape Charles has its own version of such a community ? It is called Bay Creek!
Paul Plante says
So Bay Creek is a mobile home park?
Interesting.
All this time, I thought it was some kind of ritzy upscale thing for people who didn’t like living in trailer parks.
Scotiagirl says
If you read closely, you will notice that Scotiagirl drew a parallel between the trailer park profile and that of Bay Creek in that “private governance is the prevailing concept –upholding basic standards, etc. as listed above”. Whether one pays the $300-$500 “rents” in a trailer park or buys a Bay Creek lot for several hundred thousand dollars (and this is what they sell for, look it up…) the environment, the restrictions and the manner in which people must comply to live there remain startlingly similar! Scotiagirl regrets that she may have offended any denizens of the Eastern Shore, she is after all a Canadian import and therefore perhaps does not comprehend the subtleties of class distinctions here on the Shore.
Paul Plante says
It’s not only on the Shore.
Class distinctions exist all over America.
And its amazing what they can do with a mobile home these days.
Look at a Bay Creek ad and you would never know it was really a trailer park.
Scotiagirl says
Exactly Scotiagirl’s point! The rules, restrictions, protections, obligations for the inhabitants are virtually the same…and there is startling similarity among many who call either place home (although, from her experiences in Canada (as in Trailer Park Boys) she concedes that the Bay Creek folk often dress better…)
Paul Plante says
So, do the better-off folks of Cape Charles look down on their less well-off neighbors in Bay Creek and write them off as “trailer trash” as happens so many other places in America?
Scotiagirl says
Scotiagirl is unable to determine who is “better off” so she is unable to answer your question. Perhaps a “from here” will address this!
Paul Plante says
I mean, the folks in the picture above here who live in Bay Creek look pretty normal to me, anyway, especially the dude with the gut, so really can ever tell.