5 Ways British and American Suburbs Look Very Different

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  • Опубликовано: 4 фев 2025

Комментарии • 4,7 тыс.

  • @LostinthePond
    @LostinthePond  Год назад +170

    I intentionally didn't discuss housing differences, because I did so previously in this video: ruclips.net/video/Myx-jrf9K_E/видео.html

    • @Forced2DoThis1
      @Forced2DoThis1 Год назад +3

      I LEARNED so much about that grassy area in tis vid. LOL

    • @toddwynn3397
      @toddwynn3397 Год назад +11

      You are one of the few RUclipsrs that, when I read one of your comments, I can't help but hear your voice as I do so.

    • @neutrino78x
      @neutrino78x Год назад +4

      Lawrence, it's funny because to hear most Europeans talk, there is no such thing as a suburb outside of North America. Of course we all know that's not correct. 🙂 I have no idea what we call that thing between the sidewalk and the pavement here in the SF Bay Area....I can't think of anyone referring specifically to that. But I'll go with "mow strip" since apparently you saw it somewhere, lol 🙂

    • @karenmorrisette5027
      @karenmorrisette5027 Год назад +6

      Laurence, I don't have that "grassy area" where I live, just a huge front "lawn" (garden). But ive heard people call it "the city strip" cause the city that I live in is in charge of keeping it clean and mowed. I guess it just depends on where you live. Ive had to call my city's Maint. dept and tell them that the main road I live off of needed to have the trash picked up & mowed & also when a dead tree was abt to fall in the street.
      Btw, it was nice to see Arthur again, hes such a happy bouncy puppy. The reason ppl want to speak to other ppl that have puppies is cause we know they must have a good heart if they love puppies/dogs. Make sense? We know that we have one thing in common and that's our love of dogs. Have you ever heard about the guys who get dog walking jobs so they can meet girls, cause girls see them as sensitive and caring. ❤

    • @TxVoodoo_
      @TxVoodoo_ Год назад +6

      Neutral Ground isn't the bit of grass between sidewalk and street - in Louisiana, it's the grass in the middle of a street that has that kind of divisor in the middle. In eastern PA, it's "median".
      32 yrs in southeastern PA (Philly suburbs) , never called that grass strip a "berm" - it was a curb strip. In Texas now for 25 yrs, and I haven't had to bother naming it because it doesn't exist in 3/4s of the suburbs. It's just yard, then street. Boom. No sidewalks. Safety? Pfft! (I mean, look at TX gun laws SIGH). But berms are slopes next to highways.

  • @judibarton8807
    @judibarton8807 Год назад +2758

    I live in western Pennsylvania and I always call the strip of grass between the street and the sidewalk ... "the strip of grass between the street and the sidewalk".

    • @laumay7364
      @laumay7364 Год назад +55

      Ditto here in CA. I referred to it as front lawn sometimes.

    • @richardlahan7068
      @richardlahan7068 Год назад +23

      Same in South Carolina.

    • @Heavywall70
      @Heavywall70 Год назад +30

      My Father is from Titusville Pa and he called it
      “The Devil Strip”
      By no means makes it official but that is what he said.

    • @KatieAllison77
      @KatieAllison77 Год назад +88

      I call it the yard, there just happens to be a sidewalk going through it :)

    • @annemarieanderson4824
      @annemarieanderson4824 Год назад +25

      Here in Oregon most people say “planting strip” or “median.” Some people call it a “right of way” if there is no sidewalk

  • @kmillerdevx3
    @kmillerdevx3 Год назад +539

    In the USA, the word "garden" typically refers specifically to a plot planted with vegetables. (*or flowers*) So we might have both a "yard" and a "garden".

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +34

      Not just vegetables, flowers too.

    • @ewthmatth
      @ewthmatth Год назад +23

      ​​@@ferretyluvflowers and ornamental plants is the first thing that comes to my mind as an American hearing "garden", more so than vegetables. Not everyone grows food at their house but most people have at least some strip of dirt where they grow plants that they like and pull "weeds" that they don't like.

    • @LJBSullivan
      @LJBSullivan Год назад +21

      I have a flower garden and veggie garden

    • @patrickdix772
      @patrickdix772 Год назад +32

      Yeah, Midwestern USA a garden is any part of a residential property for either food (mostly vegetables) or ornamental plants are grown.
      I recall being thrown off by some British novels I read as a kid. They'd have descriptions of playing in the garden, which knowing gardens as non playing areas made no sense until I learned the British definition.

    • @Cyber-Riot
      @Cyber-Riot Год назад +11

      One typically keeps their garden in their back yard.

  • @katfishzomby
    @katfishzomby Год назад +281

    my parents in iowa called it "city easement" or just "easement" because of how much control the city has for that space between sidewalk and street. the mantra was "the city owns that spot but you have to take care of it."

    • @johngalt97
      @johngalt97 Год назад +17

      Yes, "city strip". Lawrence forgot the most essential attribute, though, that anything you leave on it is considered 'up for grabs'.

    • @christinepavot8185
      @christinepavot8185 Год назад +7

      Diana, my family have always called it an easement too.

    • @madmommy
      @madmommy Год назад +7

      Easement! From Wisconsin, lived in Kansas. Same in both places.

    • @gthelee3412
      @gthelee3412 Год назад +7

      Yes, in Iowa it I call it an Easement. When I lived in Denver, I used the same word and nobody ever questioned it, or made fun of me. 😅 I've also heard right-of-way used.

    • @makecorollagreatagain1876
      @makecorollagreatagain1876 Год назад +1

      Thats what I heard it called in Kansas as well

  • @bobcole612
    @bobcole612 Год назад +259

    I’ve always called it an easement, because while the homeowner owns it and is responsible for it, the city holds an easement from the curb to the house side of the sidewalk. This prevents a homeowner from making a legal claim to deny access to the sidewalk to pedestrians.

    • @AndreaSemanovich
      @AndreaSemanovich Год назад +12

      Yes, I call it the easement

    • @TimothyReeves
      @TimothyReeves Год назад +7

      I thought the homeowner had an easement, meaning they were allowed to use it to access their property even though it is city property…sometimes also used for driveways that are shared between multiple homes.

    • @lennybuttz2162
      @lennybuttz2162 Год назад +6

      My grandma also called it an easement. (north central WI) I thought the city did own that strip of land but homeowners were responsible for taking care of it? Whatever way it works it's confusing.

    • @bobcole612
      @bobcole612 Год назад +8

      @@TimothyReeves in most cities, the property owner owns the land. The tax records will define it in any case. Shared driveways can also constitute an easement, but that’s a minefield I would never enter by buying a house with a shared driveway. Also when you have buried utilities (phone, power, cable, etc) in either the front or back yard, the utility companies maintain an easement to access their facilities.

    • @adammckee3496
      @adammckee3496 Год назад

      I thought an easement was any common ground between homes or on the edges of the community.

  • @alyssasmith6010
    @alyssasmith6010 Год назад +226

    Haha! I’m a traffic engineer that used to work in the UK. When writing my first report I used “verge” and my boss asked what that meant. I had to replace it with “grassy strip next to the road”. 😅Swales are usually verges that collect rainwater, and berms are a verge that is mounded up.

    • @austinrenner9568
      @austinrenner9568 Год назад +10

      So interesting to hear the correct info and your insight on this! It never fails to amaze me how something as innocuous as the name for a strip of land can be so varied from one place to another lol. Thank you for commenting 😀

    • @ceebee2858
      @ceebee2858 Год назад +2

      Living roughly in the center of the US, I agree with your definitions. Except for "verge" - we side with your boss on that one.

    • @jimmyjams9036
      @jimmyjams9036 Год назад +9

      A swale is a type of drainage area or piece of land that has a dip in it. A berm is a built up area higher than the land around it usually used to protect from flooding or other items.

    • @LJBSullivan
      @LJBSullivan Год назад

      Swales can be a road that dips down and comes back up

    • @lberry750
      @lberry750 Год назад +7

      As a law enforcement traffic homicide investigator for a couple of decades, the difference depended on how the strip of grass was separated from the road surface. If there was a curb, it was a parkway…if not, a swale. I think this is found in the USDOT Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices…or maybe somewhere else. It’s been too long, but some things just stick with you.

  • @MizGizma
    @MizGizma Год назад +103

    I call it "the other side of the sidewalk" ... and this year my city planted more than a hundred trees in my neighborhood in that zone and I got a 10 foot tall oak. I'm so happy about it that I had to share.

    • @HilaryB.
      @HilaryB. Год назад +2

      I'm happy you're happy 😊, you can never have enough oaks! Enjoy it!

    • @jerelull9629
      @jerelull9629 Год назад +2

      You don't have to take GOOD care of the tree they forced upon you. And WHO has to repair the damage the tree makes as it overgrows that too-slim space? Certainly not the city, I bet. It's a form of taxation without representation -- or consultation or consideration.

    • @werefrogofassyria6609
      @werefrogofassyria6609 Год назад +1

      The Werefrog got the electric company to remove the trees in that area for free. Yelled at them for not sending the insurance proof of their tree remover people: the one condition to allow them on the lawn. They offered to remove entirely, and The Werefrog took them up on it. Then yelled at them for remaining mess. They came out and cleaned it up.

    • @NotKev2017
      @NotKev2017 Год назад +1

      @@jerelull9629 You are correct. If the city planted it and those roots grow into the pipes, it's the homeowner's responsibility to get it fixed.

    • @bradleyshort1009
      @bradleyshort1009 Год назад +1

      @@jerelull9629it’s not taxation without representation - you can literally email your representation in local, state, and even federal, to voice your disagreement. Unless it was put in after you moved to the house without your consent it is just another expense of owning that house. If you don’t like it, don’t buy a house that has it.

  • @kamroc1
    @kamroc1 Год назад +156

    You named 15 or so names for something I never knew had a name. I’d go with “that grassy thing over there”

    • @jlbaker2000
      @jlbaker2000 Год назад +3

      Grassy knoll. lol

    • @Devila103
      @Devila103 Год назад +5

      I didn't know they had names, either. In Louisiana and Texas, I've always considered it part of the front yard. Some houses, streets, and neighborhoods don't even have sidewalks.

    • @HowManyRobot
      @HowManyRobot 11 месяцев назад +1

      I'm going with "sidewalk taint" from now on.

  • @miggy-ninefive
    @miggy-ninefive Год назад +19

    I'm from Chicago suburbs! We don't talk about those grassy things, we just mow them and don't ask questions.

  • @talltaleradio
    @talltaleradio Год назад +129

    Man...I've lived in suburbs most of my life (excluding 12 years in New York City), and I utterly and completely had no idea that strip of grass next to the sidewalk even HAD a name...let alone dozens! I learn something every day, and often from Lawrence!

    • @brendatruant7404
      @brendatruant7404 Год назад +3

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @masterofallgoons
      @masterofallgoons Год назад +2

      I grew up in Southern Connecticut which is the NY tri-state area, and New England at the same time, and I've never heard most of these terms... if I had to name it I'd have said 'median.'

    • @Diphenhydra
      @Diphenhydra Год назад +5

      @@masterofallgoons but “median” is that bit of sidewalk in the middle of a road. Being from MA, never once have I heard a name for that strip of grass next to the sidewalk. I don’t think I’ve ever heard anyone refer to is separately from just the yard.

    • @masterofallgoons
      @masterofallgoons Год назад +1

      @@Diphenhydra - yeah 'median' or 'island' is usually what I'd say or hear for that, but like I said, if I had to name that bit of grass I'd probly have said 'median' .. but I've never heard it named before... but I was surprised to hear him say 'median' was a pacific northwest thing

    • @TheTonyahawk
      @TheTonyahawk Год назад +3

      I lived in Los Angeles most of my life with some in Montreal and I too have never realized that this even had a name. It's just basically there.

  • @lynnwelch6223
    @lynnwelch6223 Год назад +49

    I live in Louisville, KY and have always called the area between the sidewalk and the road/street the easement. The area in the middle of the road - dividing the two sides of the road is what we call the median.

    • @knight4today
      @knight4today Год назад +1

      Hello from just across the river! I live just near Corydon.

    • @MsSkipperkim
      @MsSkipperkim Год назад +1

      The median here usually has flowers and bushes too. They are maintained by the city. The city I used to live in had 2 with waterfalls that we referred to as free car washes.

    • @hannakinn
      @hannakinn Год назад +4

      I have heard it referred to as the easement by builders and land surveyors.

    • @sarahglass2462
      @sarahglass2462 Год назад +2

      It is also common to call it a median in Cleveland, Ohio too. Easement was the only other term I recognised for tree lawn. I literally had to wait through most of the bit to understand what he was referring to because I was unfamiliar with any of the other 15 terms. I had no idea America was so divided! 😂

    • @JPMJPM
      @JPMJPM Год назад +3

      Here in Tennessee, we also call it an easement!

  • @peterdebad1
    @peterdebad1 Год назад +56

    I call the strip of grass between the sidewalk and curb "city property that I am expected to take care of." Thanks Lawrence. Peace!!

  • @mariebrooks5955
    @mariebrooks5955 Год назад +65

    Here in western Canada, we call the verge a boulevard. A major reason for them, is for the depositing of snow in the winter. The boulevards get snow piled on them by the snow plows. This keeps both the roads and the sidewalks useable without having to truck the snow away. Same reason for the street signs being up higher. Signs mounted on a low wall would be obscured by corner snow piles. It’s all very practical.

    • @stevej5813
      @stevej5813 Год назад +4

      We call it a boulevard as well here in Ontario.

    • @WooliestPuma
      @WooliestPuma Год назад +2

      In eastern South Dakota too

    • @PGHGEOLOGIST
      @PGHGEOLOGIST Год назад +3

      I'm going to just say it. Calling it a boulevard seems very odd. I grew up living along a boulevard, but it was a kind of street. This is particularly odd because even though the definition of a boulevard is a type of broad avenue planted with rows of trees, the boulevard that I grew up on had very few trees and did not have a strip of grass between the sidewalk and the street.

    • @chriscunliffe7450
      @chriscunliffe7450 Год назад +1

      My experience here in Canada is that roads are built in the center of a 66 foot right of way which is public land (66 feet was the length of 1 surveyors chain ) now days electric, TV cable and internet wires or old land line phone wires are buried under the boulevard ,the pavement usually is 25 to 30 feet of the 66 foot right of way

    • @AdamMann3D
      @AdamMann3D Год назад +4

      A boulevard is a 4 lane street with a median.

  • @Its_me--Boo_Radley
    @Its_me--Boo_Radley Год назад +64

    We lived in Ann Arbor for over 20 years, and I never once heard the term extension lawn. We always called it an easement and yes, our current easement does contain a large tree.

    • @kellylaliberte548
      @kellylaliberte548 Год назад +1

      Same!

    • @gmscott9319
      @gmscott9319 Год назад +2

      Not Ann Arbor, but still in Michigan. We also call it an easement.

    • @richardbeck8945
      @richardbeck8945 Год назад +2

      Central IL we call it that as well.

    • @Merivita9
      @Merivita9 Год назад

      We do as well in Iowa

    • @marshallsweatherhiking1820
      @marshallsweatherhiking1820 Год назад +1

      To me it is the place where the snow from the road gets piled up. In really snowy places it becomes a wall separating the sidewalk canyon from the road.

  • @erinmckibbin4236
    @erinmckibbin4236 Год назад +150

    I am from Cleveland, OH and we call that strip of grass a Tree Lawn. That is where the city plants the city trees. The city owns the street, the Tree Lawn, the tree, and the sidewalk, however, it is the homeowner's responsibility to mow the Tree Lawn and shovel the sidewalk.

    • @jeannehaile8465
      @jeannehaile8465 Год назад +11

      Right?! I'm a Clevelander, too.😊

    • @sentientred
      @sentientred Год назад +12

      Another Clevelander, another tree lawn.

    • @higgme1ster
      @higgme1ster Год назад +1

      We Southerners would say shovel the snow from the sidewalk if it ever happened. That would probably be once every other leap year. Come to think of it, even when it snows here it melts the next day by 10:00 am.

    • @kellythomas6507
      @kellythomas6507 Год назад +7

      In Akron, we call it a Devil’s Strip.

    • @andrewphillips7854
      @andrewphillips7854 Год назад +8

      Cleveland Heights OH checking in. We always called it tree lawn too. Some of my Akron coworker friends called it devils strip

  • @nicoleovermoyer1749
    @nicoleovermoyer1749 Год назад +150

    I have never called the strip between the sidewalk and the road anything other than "the other side of the sidewalk" while being vaguely annoyed I have to mow it even though I don't technically own it. I'm from Pennsylvania, and I always thought 'berm' was specifically an inclined patch of grass near a ditch that came next to a road. So thanks for teaching me something new today!

    • @grovermartin6874
      @grovermartin6874 Год назад +22

      Yikes! Where I grew up the median was what separated the two traffic lanes on the right side from the two traffic lanes on the left side. Flowers and bushes were often planted in the median (or median strip). It made for a lovely drive on the boulevard.
      At least, that's what I thought they were talking about...

    • @michaeldowson6988
      @michaeldowson6988 Год назад +13

      In my part of N. America, a berm is a raised bank bordering a watercourse. And a swale is a shallow linear drainage channel with gently sloping sides. May be only seasonally filled with water.
      I used to work in urban topographical mapping for civil infrastructure development when young.

    • @ChadHadsell
      @ChadHadsell Год назад +1

      Here in the PNW most people seem to call it the "parking strip."

    • @ashicks
      @ashicks Год назад

      this is also what i knew a median to be, growing up in baltimore city, maryland. @@grovermartin6874

    • @feliciagaffney1998
      @feliciagaffney1998 Год назад +5

      I'm from VA and NC, and agree with the OP.
      And yes. The "median" separates lanes of traffic going in opposite directions. Median = middle.
      And I agree with Michael Dowson on berm. But isn't a berm on a golf course too? I don't play golf and only watch it when I'm visiting my dad and he's watching it.

  • @TabithaElkins
    @TabithaElkins Год назад +44

    It's hard to compare British suburbs to American suburbs, because there are huge regional differences. Regarding how green everything is, keep in mind that much of the US is at the latitude of Portugal and Spain. I've noticed that the color of the sky and trees is more intense, due to the sun being more direct.

    • @fmcm7715
      @fmcm7715 Год назад +5

      Having come back to Ireland recently from a two week holiday in Spain I have to agree about the colours in Spain being more intense.

  • @bradparnell614
    @bradparnell614 Год назад +54

    I'm fascinated by all the terms you used to describe the bit of grass between the street and sidewalk. I have to confess I don't think I've ever heard it referred to as anything at all. I mean it's there and people know it's there, but I just don't remember anyone calling it anything. I'd never even considered that it had a name or ever even wondered if it did. I'd be up all night thinking about it except that it's already after 1 in the morning and I probably won't be able to stay awake much longer thinking about anything.

    • @eloiseteklu84
      @eloiseteklu84 Год назад +8

      Exactly! I've never heard it called anything .. just that dead grass area where the dogs do their business.

    • @nyefayth8918
      @nyefayth8918 Год назад +4

      Agreed. I'm from Wisconsin and have never heard anyone refer to it as anything special. 🤷‍♀️

    • @JustMeLuana24
      @JustMeLuana24 Год назад +3

      Oh good. I'm not the only one. I did not hear anything familiar as he was suggesting names. I've lived in Ohio, California (LA & San Diego) and now Wisconsin.

    • @timoboyle8867
      @timoboyle8867 Год назад +2

      I was born and raised in California and today was the first time that I'd ever considered the possibility that the bit of lawn on the other side of the sidewalk had its own name.

  • @maedre45
    @maedre45 Год назад +26

    We've always called it an easement. A lot of rural neighborhoods don't have sidewalks, but there is almost always an easement where permanent structures can't be built that the city/county can use for utilities at their will. I've never thought to call it anything else as it was at least descriptive for it's practical use.

  • @TanyaQueen182
    @TanyaQueen182 Год назад +83

    Beautiful camera shots in this video Lawrence. Thank you for being the coolest British-American guy on RUclips. 💜

  • @wilbertjanssen1010
    @wilbertjanssen1010 Год назад +2

    Hi Lawrence, thanks for your nice video! I don't live in either UK nor US, but do find cultural differences and similarities interesting.
    I'm a Dutch biologist, so there's two reactions I have. You are pretty close to why American leaves can be more vibrantly green. For being in more shaded circumstances most of the time UK plants need to stack up more chlorophyll in their leaves that thereby become darker and less vibrant. Have a look for shaded plants in your garden if you want to check this colour difference.
    The word Berm is Dutch for verge and is used as such here in the Netherlands, but here those strips are owned by the local government and maintained by their contractors over here.
    Cheers,
    Wilbert

  • @TRquiet
    @TRquiet Год назад +43

    In the area of Lansing, Michigan, we also call it a “right of way,” because it typically comes up when discussing access by local municipalities.

    • @sabatoa
      @sabatoa Год назад +13

      Same area as you but I call it an easement

    • @bjdefilippo447
      @bjdefilippo447 Год назад +1

      ​@@sabatoa These are the two I'm most familiar with. I've heard verge, but I don't recall what state I was in. I'd no idea there were so many names for it!

    • @karenshlemkevich2591
      @karenshlemkevich2591 Год назад +1

      Same in Ontario Canada.

    • @kynn23
      @kynn23 Год назад +1

      Here in SW MI, I think the official name is "right of way," but "curb lawn" also sounds familiar to me. (I've never had one myself.)

  • @jackgilchrist
    @jackgilchrist Год назад +42

    As a lifelong Pacific Northwesterner, I didn't know the lawn on the other side of the sidewalk had a name. I always just called it "the lawn on the other side of the sidewalk."
    Then again, I've only once briefly lived in a place that had them. Mostly I've lived in rural areas where there's no sidewalks and just a drainage ditch between lawn and road, or fields or woods instead of lawns.

    • @franciet99
      @franciet99 Год назад +3

      I’m in the south and agree with you.

    • @auntietara
      @auntietara Год назад +10

      Native PNW here as well, and in 60 years I never lived anywhere that had one. Now we live in Kansas, and don’t have one here either, although there IS one on the other side of the street. I’ve never called it anything because I’ve never had a need to name it. 🤷🏻‍♀️
      As for “median,” that’s the bit between lanes in the middle of the street or freeway.

    • @donkeyphone2457
      @donkeyphone2457 Год назад +1

      Huh, I call it a boulevard. I'm in North Dakota, but haven't always been. I just don't think I had any need to name that until I moved here. I'd never had one before. I'm fascinated.

    • @gardenman3
      @gardenman3 Год назад +2

      California here and I never knew it had a name either

    • @judychambers919
      @judychambers919 Год назад +4

      PNW and we always called it the parking strip.

  • @hilupianoservice
    @hilupianoservice Год назад +64

    I spent a fair amount of my childhood in Chicagoland and Kansas City, and all the people I met called the land between the sidewalk and the street a parkway. I'm shocked you didn't mention parkway in your video being a Chicagolander yourself now.

    • @perryshaffer8358
      @perryshaffer8358 Год назад +8

      Yeah. You park in a driveway and drive in a parkway, or so goes the joke.

    • @pentacleman1000
      @pentacleman1000 Год назад +12

      Yes, I live in the Chicago area and also have always known it to be the parkway. And was surprised to not hear that as one of the options.

    • @Melds
      @Melds Год назад +3

      Yes, same here in Los Angeles, California.

    • @neils5539
      @neils5539 Год назад +8

      Yep, parkway if you're from the Chicago area.

    • @kimlersue
      @kimlersue Год назад +1

      I also live in both these plkaces..but raised in Chicago. In Chicago..Elmhurst suburb..we learned tree bed. In K.C. Parkway..or tree bed.

  • @CaraFay-bf8jk
    @CaraFay-bf8jk 7 месяцев назад +3

    The strip of grass in the center of the street is the median. Between the sidewalk and street is called an easement. You would probably find that there is utilities equipment buried there, such as water, sewer and gas lines.

  • @centran
    @centran Год назад +30

    It's referred to as a parkway in Chicago. As for the tree; dig out grass in a box shape 1-2 feet around the tree. You can put in wood chips but leaving it dirt is actually easier to pull or weed wack any grass or weeds that grow. Makes mowing easier and it doesn't look as bad as you think. Looks pretty nice if you upkeep it.

    • @cobrakai3732
      @cobrakai3732 Год назад +13

      I was waiting for parkway to be mentioned. I’m surprised he didn’t mention it since he lives here… I grew up in the Chicago suburbs and only heard parkway or sometimes easement.

    • @bobnewkirk7003
      @bobnewkirk7003 Год назад +2

      @@cobrakai3732I feel like Easement is the legal term for the ownership of the plot. Its a parkway to me, but given that we don't own it, it functions as public land used for access. I have a river behind my house and there is a similar strip of land along it also classed as and easement that the DNR can use.

    • @centran
      @centran Год назад +7

      @@bobnewkirk7003 easement is if you own the property. Typically in Chicago your property line will end somewhere on the sidewalk. Then the other half of the sidewalk to the curb is the parkway. Most people will maintain it but I think legally it's only if it's a multifamily 3+ that you are required to maintain.
      Also, the city just recently put in place a new plan to take care of the trees. Instead of having to call in they will work in zones and inspect/take care of them. Every three years they'll make the rounds to each tree.

    • @annier6
      @annier6 Год назад

      I kept thinking what I remember my parents using just wasn't coming up. I couldn't remember what it was but none of those. I now clearly remember it being "parking".

    • @markschennum188
      @markschennum188 Год назад +9

      Grew up in the North Shore suburbs of Chicago. It was called a parkway by one and all.

  • @kelleyhill7757
    @kelleyhill7757 Год назад +36

    I grew up and live in Alabama. I never even thought about what to call that extra portion of grass between the sidewalk and the street. Interesting episode. Thanks!

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +5

      Same here. I just call it part of the curb.

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Год назад +2

      BTW Neutral Ground is not the whole Gulf Coast...but only New Orleans metro. They use that for any city owned strip...such as where the streetcars run on St Charles.
      In Mobile the part in front of your sidewalk is the easement. The part in the middle in the median.

    • @michelehoffman1308
      @michelehoffman1308 Год назад +3

      Same! I've never thought about it until now. My house now does not have one.

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Год назад

      @@michelehoffman1308 does it have a sidewalk?

    • @IppolytosPankrateios
      @IppolytosPankrateios Год назад +1

      Most Americans i believe never think about it, because it is not a matter of enough importance for Americans to name it, or even think of giving it a proper name.

  • @Lantanana
    @Lantanana Год назад +60

    I have lived in both New Mexico & Texas all my life, and I can tell you the greenness of trees varies in the US too. As a child when I saw photos other places, I thought they were editing the color of the trees. Turns out, no, trees elsewhere can be at least twice as green as they are in New Mexico. It has something to do with temperature and/or water.

    • @privateinfo1711
      @privateinfo1711 Год назад

      In a lot of cases, it's an easement so that's what i call it.

    • @sykomcawesomeness
      @sykomcawesomeness Год назад

      @@privateinfo1711 You, sir, have replied to the wrong comment. Well done. 👏

  • @thomasearle5290
    @thomasearle5290 Год назад +1

    In Oak Park Illinois, where I live, (close to where YOU live Laurence) we call it a "Parkway". And strangely, i have never heard it called anything else in my 62 years. "Live and learn" "Die and forget everything" as my Grandma used to say.

  • @five-toedslothbear4051
    @five-toedslothbear4051 Год назад +48

    I’ve lived in the suburbs almost my entire life, except for my first five years when I lived across the street from a suburb in Chicago. In my Chicago suburb, we call that strip of grass a parkway, and the reason the dogs do their business on it is that generally it is part of the right of way of the street, not private property. Trees in my neighborhood are quite gren, as long as they last, because unfortunately, the trees in my neighborhood are old and huge, and storms take them out occasionally.

    • @pamr4040
      @pamr4040 Год назад +2

      We also called it a parkway in Southern California where I grew up back in the 50s-60s.

    • @VinzClorthokeymasterofGozer
      @VinzClorthokeymasterofGozer Год назад +1

      We lived in the North suburbs for 20 years and called it an easment.

    • @singingscience
      @singingscience Год назад +2

      I was waiting for someone to say parkway! I've always called it that, and I had no idea there were so many other names.

  • @terryomalley1974
    @terryomalley1974 Год назад +49

    Another interesting and humorous comparison, Laurence. It was great to see Arthur again! He's very telegenic; you should feature him a little more in your videos.

    • @karenmorrisette5027
      @karenmorrisette5027 Год назад +6

      I totally agree, puppies are so bouncy, happy & photogenic. And Arthur has a wiggle when he walks. Oh, and that tongue out makes him look like hes saying "daddy were going for a walk? Yay!!!"

  • @PamelaWissenbach
    @PamelaWissenbach Год назад +47

    Being a New Englander, a "common" is a town square/public green space that used to be used for "common" grazing of livestock. Now, they are used for gatherings for town events. We don't really have a name for that public grassy area between the public sidewalk and the road, although I have heard it called a verge. FYI: pavement is what we call the tar and gravel on the road it's self.

    • @anndownsouth5070
      @anndownsouth5070 Год назад +1

      Being British by origin, I'm surprised Lawrence didn't realize this. In South Africa, we have commons as well, and I'm sure we got it from the British.

    • @cheighes1
      @cheighes1 Год назад +3

      Agreed, in my part of New England we don't really have many of these. We just call it "the sidewalk grass" in the places we see it. Honestly I can't think of when I'd use the term unless I was filling out a police report or insurance affidavit.

  • @Chirrup18
    @Chirrup18 6 месяцев назад +1

    I know I'm late to the party, but I'm catching up on lots of past videos. I've lived in many states east of the Rocky Mountains and I think that in most of them the grassy area either doesn't exist or it's called an easement. Here, a few miles west of you in Aurora, IL, it's called a parkway and it is administered by the city. Parkways, which may or may not include a sidewalk, encroach on our yards anywhere from about 5 ft to upwards of 25 ft, depending on the size of the yard. The good news is that the city takes care of the trees that are planted in the parkway. They do not, however, mow, fertilize, water, etc. Welcome to the hodgepodge that is Chicagoland!

  • @loubrewer8228
    @loubrewer8228 Год назад +61

    In Australia it is sometimes called a "nature strip" And the sidewalk is a "footpath."

    • @fridaytax
      @fridaytax Год назад +1

      Footpaths! You must live in fancy Australia. In non-fancy Australia, we just have really big nature strips with lots of hidden divots from the postman's motorbike.

    • @MrCarrera28
      @MrCarrera28 Год назад

      @@fridaytax 😆🤣😆🤣

    • @BrandonLeeBrown
      @BrandonLeeBrown Год назад

      I just watched a video explaining nature strips in Australia. I might have missed the part about the footpath, or it didn't stick out to different enough from sidewalk for me to notice it being mentioned. I think it was an American noting the term, nature strip though.

    • @StarryEyed0590
      @StarryEyed0590 Год назад +3

      XD You've just enlightened me. I read a series of books by an Aussie author where the characters were always walking along footpaths and I was honestly envisioning like a dirt trail, because that's what a footpath would usually mean in America. It all makes so much more sense now. XD

  • @rondelayo
    @rondelayo Год назад +84

    Thanks Laurence I don’t think you could ever know how many of us Americans didn’t know what that strip of grass was called until now!!! I know I didn’t🤷🏽‍♀️

  • @5jmcrae
    @5jmcrae Год назад +32

    "Yard" is the maintained area of land around your home ( If you have very large property, you can have a yard, and then things are in wild/natural state outside of that). A yard can contain both a garden and a lawn. The garden is the portion of the yard containing everything but the grass. You can have an herb garden, a flower garden (although these can also be called flower beds also - totally confusing, I know!), a vegetable garden...and so forth. The lawn is the portion of the yard with grass, which is maintained through mowing. In theory, you could have a yard that contains neither grass nor a garden; it could be just dirt or rocks (go to Arizona to see some of these).

    • @Nana-Opa
      @Nana-Opa Год назад +2

      Or here in PA we have a few ( more than 2, less than a hundred)acres, that’s not ever farmed we call it - property .
      And we call the back part no one can see- the back 40!

    • @Catmom-gl5nt
      @Catmom-gl5nt Год назад +3

      Exactly, I have 5 acres of densely wooded property, with my backyard abutting an official civil war battlefield. My own land was part of the battle but was zoned for agriculture. I have a garden directly behind my house but have chosen to leave the bulk natural. My garden is absolutely distinct from my yard or lane.

    • @jadeekelgor2588
      @jadeekelgor2588 Год назад +1

      In Omaha, the "yard" can be frontyard or backyard. Legally the front yard may not contain flowers, fruits or vegetables. The city desires all front yards to be grass. Although, there is no "requirement" for this. Just negative reinforcement for not having grass. Some houses place rocks (like in Phoenix Arizona), some pave it over with concrete, blacktop, bricks, etc. These home ate generally hit with additional taxes and fees for maintaining an additional "parking area" other than the driveway.
      In addition, places where houses once stood but are now empty of house and foundation are considered "empty lots". If owners try to do anything except plant and maintain grass, they are cited and fined. Community gardens or even just using your empty lot as flower or vegetable garden is an offense.
      Even though there's no front yard or back yard...the whole lot is considered "front yard".
      So it is more correct to say most places use the legal names for parts of a residential lot because of the plethora of legal citations involving said lots or parts of.
      Oh, BTW...Business owners can legally fence an existing sidewalk and right of way and make it part of their lot. Although this usually pertains to areas adjacent to the businesses parking lots. Why is this allowed? Because the city can now tax that space as parking spaces.

    • @belkyhernandez8281
      @belkyhernandez8281 Год назад

      Good points.

  • @lisastiles1408
    @lisastiles1408 Год назад +19

    Ahh….the sounds of home. I’m from Missouri and the sound of the locusts made me feel like I was back there for a minute! Also, in my suburban neighborhood, most people didn’t have fences and we kids fairly freely through the backyards of our various neighbors. Happy times. 🙂

    • @Aiophgy
      @Aiophgy Год назад

      Missouri gang

    • @noradorris9631
      @noradorris9631 Год назад +2

      Virtually no one had a fence in my neighborhood growing up between 1962 and1980. I've revisited and still there seemed to be very few fences. Most separation between houses is accomplished by the driveway alongside each house.

  • @joermnyc
    @joermnyc Год назад +16

    Here in Forest Hills, Queens, NY there’s sidewalks with and without the grass on the street side of the sidewalk and it seems to vary from block to block, like one block got together and decided “we don’t want this” and ripped it out and paved it, while the next block was like, “that block is nuts” and kept theirs.

    • @NEbluefire
      @NEbluefire Год назад +2

      Right. I'm in Kew Gardens. We also remember having that thing where it's just one square space rather than a whole strip.

  • @withbothfeet8593
    @withbothfeet8593 Год назад +15

    This is more attention to the edge of the yard or the grass by the curb than I have,collectively, thought about in my entire life 😊

  • @JimJones-sz4vi
    @JimJones-sz4vi Год назад +5

    I call that bit of lawn the easement, since it is usually a utility easement.

  • @pbj9270
    @pbj9270 Год назад +2

    Local ordinances in the northern suburbs of Chicago, call the space between the sidewalk and the street a parkway.

  • @kilanspeaks
    @kilanspeaks Год назад +114

    I want you to know what these videos are interesting even for non-British/non-American audiences. I, an Indonesian who barely have access to sidewalks, didn’t know that there’s so many names for the devil’s strip (this is now my favorite term). As a bonus, now I kind of understand the meaning of the word ‘terrace’ whenever my Malaysian friends talk about their housings. Cheers to that! 🍻

  • @randyronny7735
    @randyronny7735 Год назад +8

    Here in Minnesota, the area between the curb and the sidewalk is the berm. Though, in the new areas they no longer put in sidewalks or put the sidewalk right up against the curb.

    • @matthewjohnson6360
      @matthewjohnson6360 Год назад +1

      In YMC we call it a boulevard.

    • @CJbrieflittlecandle
      @CJbrieflittlecandle Год назад +1

      I’ve lived in Minnesota my whole life and we’ve always called it the boulevard

  • @lntraveler264
    @lntraveler264 Год назад +17

    There is definitely a difference between green in the UK and the US. I'm so glad to hear someone else say it! Spring comes earlier in most of the US so the leaves have more time to become deep green. The UK greenery feels like perennial springtime green...until the leaves fall to the ground.

  • @NotGoddess
    @NotGoddess Год назад +2

    Midwest US - we'll call it an easement, sidewalk strip, verge & other names. But in the heat of summer when we're mowing it's called the hellstrip.

  • @kristicox1073
    @kristicox1073 Год назад +65

    In Oregon, the pipe that runs from the gutter to the ground is called the drainage pipe. A median refers to the divider in the middle of the freeway. Never heard or thought about a real name for the grass between the sidewalk and the curb. Very interesting. Thanks for sharing!

    • @casa5080
      @casa5080 Год назад +8

      Yeah, same. Oregon raised, and when he said that PacNW called that bit of grass a median, I thought, no? A median is the strip of concrete separating the traffic directions.

    • @louisnorred8530
      @louisnorred8530 Год назад +4

      Washington (state) checking in, also have no name for grassy strip. Median definitely refers to the thing in the middle of the road. Also I would have guessed downspout was British, I've only ever heard drainpipe or drainage pipe.

    • @illillyillyo
      @illillyillyo Год назад +3

      I’m from the east coast and I agree that the median is the divider in the middle of the highway/freeway.

    • @leslielovesflorida
      @leslielovesflorida Год назад +2

      I was born and raised in Oregon but now live in Florida but we grew up calling it the side median or easement.
      Either one used and I would know what someone meant

    • @julienielsen3746
      @julienielsen3746 Год назад +1

      I live in Oregon and never heard a name for it. A neighbor told me I'm supposed to take care of it though. Does it belong to the city or part of my property?

  • @JonKurz
    @JonKurz Год назад +11

    As a fellow Illinoisan, I can’t believe you left out “parkway” which is what everyone I know calls it. 😮 Maybe that memo got lost in the pond - or Great Lake. 😁

    • @StellaMayfair7
      @StellaMayfair7 Год назад

      Parkway ftw!

    • @blueyedtopher
      @blueyedtopher Год назад +4

      I'm from Southern California and we call it parkway.

    • @rettawhinnery
      @rettawhinnery Год назад +2

      @@blueyedtopher In Kansas, we drive on parkways and park on driveways.

    • @karneyt1722
      @karneyt1722 Год назад

      Northwest Indiana calls it Parkway too.

  • @galacticmaya73
    @galacticmaya73 Год назад +30

    While watching a RUclips channel on the hurricane in FL a few days ago, someone called a small building a shed. Thus began a comment frenzy. It was not a shed but a pavilion; not a pavilion but a gazebo. We ended up having a vote, which was even more divisive. 😁

    • @mm4chelle
      @mm4chelle Год назад +1

      And in Utah it’s called a Bowery!

    • @diamondlou1
      @diamondlou1 Год назад +1

      😆

    • @kimlersue
      @kimlersue Год назад +2

      Had it blown away...you would have never had the great conversation..

    • @Cricket2731
      @Cricket2731 Год назад +4

      Ohioan chiming in here. A "gazebo" is an open-air structure, something like an open-air tent (with 6 sides), but a permanent structure.

    • @sidneyvandykeii3169
      @sidneyvandykeii3169 Год назад +2

      ​@@Cricket2731You are 100% correct in describing a Gazebo.....from Washington St.

  • @bettyrouch1833
    @bettyrouch1833 Год назад +7

    In my suburban childhood, we called your "verge" a tree lawn, because all along the street trees had been planted in the tree lawns! Looking up into that maple tree made me nostalgic. Where I live now, we mostly have pines, spruces and aspen, but I miss those broad-leaf trees.

  • @sadiejane2781
    @sadiejane2781 Год назад +153

    I want to thank you for not being so Anti-American. I get that people will think and say whatever they want, but it is remarkably refreshing to find a person who isn't originally from America who doesn't insult us that much or in your case at all. And I know there has to be other folks like you, you're one of the few I have personally encountered. I honestly wish that I could financially support you, but instead I can just say keep being you!

    • @sweiland75
      @sweiland75 Год назад +12

      He has been living there, since 2008, and is now an American citizen. For him to make videos trashing America wouldn't make sense.

    • @edgarbanuelos6472
      @edgarbanuelos6472 Год назад +10

      Well, he did choose to live there. Immigrants do tend to be more patriotic like that.

    • @sadiejane2781
      @sadiejane2781 Год назад +16

      @@sweiland75 Wasn't making a statement against that. Was just saying thank you for being kind. Have been marking some channels as do not show me this crap for a couple of days.... so, I found all his videos refreshing and said as much.

    • @sadiejane2781
      @sadiejane2781 Год назад +13

      @@edgarbanuelos6472 Again, as I said to the other commenter, wasn't making a statement against it - just thanking him for being kind.

    • @edgarbanuelos6472
      @edgarbanuelos6472 Год назад +3

      @@sadiejane2781 I was just trying to add on to your comment. I'm glad you acknowledged it

  • @86RSJag
    @86RSJag Год назад +36

    Brit here 🇬🇧. Currently sat in my garden, intensely assessing the grenliness of the trees in my periphery. I can concur that the shade of green is a rich but ultimately dark shade of green. I am visiting the USA next week so I will hopefully remember to return here to report my findings in the land of the Chick fil A.

    • @williamfranciswhite450
      @williamfranciswhite450 Год назад +4

      Make sure to Report back to us Brits when you find out lol

    • @KJones-qs7ju
      @KJones-qs7ju Год назад +4

      Hah I was wondering if Chick fil a existed in the UK the other day or if it was a US thing specifically. Now I know 😊

    • @86RSJag
      @86RSJag Год назад +5

      @@KJones-qs7ju my life changed forever when I tried chick fil A sauce. Now I travel annually to America to enjoy this delicacy. In the past I’ve visited on a Sunday and then found myself very upset.

    • @Great_Wall_of_Text
      @Great_Wall_of_Text Год назад +7

      Chick Fil a sandwiches are shockingly good. Get the battered, deep fried varient. That is where they shine.
      Back when every fast food place was trying to copy chick fil a, a friend of mine asked his manager (they worked at chick fil a) if he was worried about McDonald's stealing their business.
      He asked as they stood in the kitchen at 5 am hand battering all the chicken for the day
      The boss said he'd worry when McDonalds started hand battering all their chicken on the morning before it was served.
      If you like deep fried chicken and sweet iced tea, it's hard to beat.

    • @cplcabs
      @cplcabs Год назад +1

      @@KJones-qs7ju I have never heard of it. Then again, I never hear of 5 guys until I was in the US and my friend (from the UK) and I went to one and he told me there were plenty in the UK.

  • @allenaitken1516
    @allenaitken1516 Год назад +8

    I’m 59 and live in Indiana. I didn’t know it had a name. It’s just the strip of grass by the road. My parents are from England and I have more relatives in England then here. I enjoy hearing you talk about what my family from across the pond talk about. Go Uxbridge and Swindon.

  • @Gingerbread_Gorl
    @Gingerbread_Gorl Год назад +3

    I left your channel for a while and came back and I think your content has really gone to the next level while I was away! I appreciate all the research you are doing. Very interesting.

  • @dabassmann
    @dabassmann Год назад +17

    In Texas it's commonly called an "easement strip" or simple an "easement". You're responsible for mowing it and keeping the tree trimmed higher than 14 feet above the street, but the city can do anything they want with it, such as put up a communal letter box, remove the tree or certain branches. This is also where the water meter is located.

    • @Watchoutforsnakez
      @Watchoutforsnakez Год назад

      I’m from Southern California and my instinct was to call it the easement though we didn’t have them there. (Grass is for The Wealthy and selfish jerks who are water wasters)

    • @rustyroseranch
      @rustyroseranch Год назад +3

      I'm Texan and didn't know it had a name 😂
      I usually use easement to refer to a road that runs through someone else's property.

    • @dabassmann
      @dabassmann Год назад +3

      @@rustyroseranch Yes, basically correct. An easement is any property that YOU are expected to maintain, but the city/county/state/fed can "use". Think of a telephone pole that is mounted within your property lines, there is an easement for workers to travel to it, maintain it, replace or remove it, but you are the one maintaining the area.

    • @TwoBadBassist
      @TwoBadBassist Год назад

      That’s what we call it in Michigan as well (suburban Detroit).

    • @mikemilne
      @mikemilne Год назад

      Texas- Yes, we call it either the easement or "that grassy thing between the sidewalk and the street".

  • @APaganPerspective
    @APaganPerspective Год назад +11

    love your doggie.. want more cameos with him

  • @odqstr2
    @odqstr2 Год назад +6

    I've lived in New Jersey my entire life and I've never heard the term "grass bay". In South Jersey (near Philadelphia) we call it a "tree lawn". Lawrence, you always bring a smile to my face please keep it up!

    • @marielg9143
      @marielg9143 Год назад +1

      Tree Lawn

    • @matman730
      @matman730 Год назад

      I've lived in Northern California most of my life and have never heard of a "mow strip". I've always known it as "the parking".

  • @markh.6687
    @markh.6687 Год назад +5

    In a suburb of Chicago, we call the grass between the sidewalk and the curb a "parkway". Just like you, I'd never heard of many of the other names. I've learned in Australia they call them "nature strips" (or at least Tim the Lawnmower Man calls them that; good man donating free lawnmowing services to persons needing a bit of help).

  • @johnlonnevik5917
    @johnlonnevik5917 Год назад +7

    Here in North Texas, it's called an easement where the city plants telephone poles and water meters.

  • @baystated
    @baystated Год назад +8

    Verges? My parents called our grass strip a "betterment". (Massachusetts) It was harder to grow nicer grass on it because of the heat of the street asphalt would bake the soil in the summer and weed seeds would blow across the pavement and get lodged and germinate right on its edge.

  • @jamesburton1050
    @jamesburton1050 Год назад +9

    Less cloud cover in the US also means the sun can shine through the leaves, making it appear that much greener.
    Btw, i did grow up in a suburb, and ours had no grassy strip as its a 40+ year old neighborhood with no sidewalks. Or curbs even. But it is very green with many mature trees. Which i absolutely love!!

  • @discopants68
    @discopants68 Год назад +1

    In Chicago, we call that strip of land between the street and sidewalk a parkway. I’m surprised Laurence didn’t know that.

  • @missaring9456
    @missaring9456 Год назад +12

    Grew up in Minnesota and spent copious amounts of time in Eastern North Dakota, and while there were a few who called that grassy strip between sidewalk/pavement and the roadway a verge, most often it was called the boulevard. I still call it a boulevard. Some of these other names make me shake my head or giggle.

    • @aaron74
      @aaron74 Год назад +4

      First comment I found on this video calling it a boulevard. I live in St. Paul. lol

    • @413smr
      @413smr Год назад

      Boulevard? That's a multi-lane two-way street in NYC.

    • @junedunne
      @junedunne Год назад

      That was curious to me because in NY, a boulevard is an extra wide street lined with trees.

    • @jackmandu
      @jackmandu Год назад +2

      Definitely a boulevard, but then I’m in a southern suburb of the Twin Cities so maybe it’s a Minnesota thing.

    • @aaron74
      @aaron74 Год назад

      @@413smr Yeah, we have a few multi-lane two-way streets here we call "boulevard" too

  • @MarisaAndChew
    @MarisaAndChew Год назад +25

    I am Canadian. I call it "that annoying thing no one owns but is forced to care for". Fortunately... my town has largely removed them and replaced them with trees and cobblestones so essentially, it just makes the sidewalk wider, they obviously mulch around the tree a little bit so the tree can get water but I like the cobblestone patches... We have a lot of pesticide restrictions here so grass is often mostly a whole lot of different green weeds, so it's not as lovely close up.

    • @patriciawenzel3871
      @patriciawenzel3871 Год назад +2

      🇨🇦 It’s a good place to put the snow mountains that the snow plows create.

    • @MarisaAndChew
      @MarisaAndChew Год назад

      @@patriciawenzel3871 it is, but the other three months it's really just a why

    • @revcrussell
      @revcrussell Год назад +1

      Technically it is owned by His Majesty in Right of the province. I let his Majesty worry about maintaining it.

    • @MarisaAndChew
      @MarisaAndChew Год назад

      @@revcrussell yeah I think most ppl in my town who have it only maintain it if they're having to walk through it and the city doesn't do it often enough. I would be quite roar if I HAD to do it but also couldn't use it for anything, like a chair or a pot of flowers etc... I like that most of ours are cobblestone though, geese would have it nasty all summer if it was grass.

  • @responder3435
    @responder3435 Год назад +19

    Grew up in the NW Chicago suburbs and always heard the strip of grass by the street called a parkway.

    • @pat2562
      @pat2562 Год назад +2

      Parkway in Los Angeles as well.

    • @Basicbill
      @Basicbill Год назад +4

      Yep... parkway. Chicago area suburbanite. Behind the lawn of a house is the easement.

    • @richbellino3894
      @richbellino3894 Год назад +3

      Also from Chicago nw suburbs. It's always been the parkway.

    • @Fuzzy-m2r
      @Fuzzy-m2r Год назад +1

      In the southwestern Chicago suburbs, we call the 'verge' the parkway.

  • @drdtexan
    @drdtexan Год назад +1

    I grew up in a northern suburb of chicago- Mt Prospect, and we called the grassy area between the sidewalk and the road, a “parkway”

  • @joannemckinley2487
    @joannemckinley2487 Год назад +6

    An interesting video. I just call it the strip of lawn between the sidewalk and street. I never thought about how the frequent cloudiness in the UK would affect the greenliness of the plants and trees, though it makes perfect sense. Your puppy dog, Arthur, isd so cute and adorable!

    • @PiousMoltar
      @PiousMoltar Год назад

      The thing is, in periods of no cloud, and therefore no rain, the grass just dries out and yellows and dies.

  • @Jeff_Lichtman
    @Jeff_Lichtman Год назад +4

    In the San Francisco Bay Area we call it a parking strip.
    I suspect the vibrancy of the greenery in America depends on where one lives. Chicago gets rain in the summer, so things tend to stay green. Where I live, we get very little rain for six months out of the year, so things tend to not be as green a lot of the time.

  • @joannshupe9333
    @joannshupe9333 Год назад +32

    I'm 76 and have lived in Connecticut all my life; I only recently found out "that bit of grass" was called a verge. Also, it's not Just suburbs that have this. I grew up in Hartford which is the capitol of Connecticut and all streets have this bit of grass and usually small/tiny front lawns. I was terribly shocked the first time I was in a "real" city and people's front rooms were literally on the sidewalk.

    • @cupcake8867
      @cupcake8867 Год назад +1

      They’re common in Chicago, too.

    • @Anonymouse428
      @Anonymouse428 Год назад +2

      I grew up in a real city and we had these it’s of grass between the sidewalk and the street.

  • @tomallred9735
    @tomallred9735 5 месяцев назад +1

    I call it the parkway strip.
    Also homes in the East Coast usually don't have fences between yards. In the West, homes always have fenders between their yard.

  • @frednorman1
    @frednorman1 Год назад +32

    I live in Northern California, and am an Anglophile, have visited the UK many times.. while English villages are very beautiful and charming. I think American suburbs are much more tractive than UK suburbs for some of the reasons you mentioned.. they have large lawns in front of them, and they have verges which gives you protection from traffic. But there are regional differences. I remember visiting the Midwest several years ago, and noticing that they tend not to have fences between their houses - everything is open I think that’s because Midwesterners are very trusting of their neighbors, and very open to their neighbors. Nor do they have backyard fences . All ready to go in California everybody has a fence or a wall around their property. Or at least a hedge between their house and their neighbors.

    • @ashleijade562
      @ashleijade562 Год назад +5

      Midwesterner here. I mean, the fence isn't necessary unless you have a dog. You'd have to be insane to just wander into someone's yard, and anything of value is either in the house or in a (generally locked) shed or garage. (Really anything you don't want destroyed over the winter or knocked over by deer goes in the shed) Unless you're just worried about your neighbors stepping on your plants or something. But why would they do that? Plus a fence means no one can park on the lawn when there's a big get-together. It's much more common to fence your backyard for privacy and to let your dogs run in it, but by no means is it necessary. Front yard is mostly for show, or to stand on and look at your neighbor's yards from. Most stuff happens in the backyard. I don't understand why no fences is a sign of trust though. Anyone insane enough to walk on random people's lawns could just open the gate. Unless you guys put locks on your fences???

    • @ashleijade562
      @ashleijade562 Год назад +2

      Also if you like your neighbors you might even add an empty spot or gate to a fence so you can hang out easier. Otherwise just lean against the fence and talk.

    • @tomdavis3038
      @tomdavis3038 Год назад

      Californians need fences because they let the thugs win. Criminals have more rights than homeowners. It’s why people are leaving.
      Cheers

    • @Chuzini
      @Chuzini Год назад

      I'm from Syracuse NY, which I figure is the Gateway to the Midwest, culturally and linguistically. Right in the city there's a mix of fenced and unfenced properties, but out in the suburbs it's uncommon to fence the yards.

    • @dp-sr1fd
      @dp-sr1fd Год назад +2

      One of the big differences is that there is much more space in the US for people and housing. In Britain, England in particular, space is at a premium. We must be the most densely populated country on Earth. If ever the American proverb "good fences make good neighbours" applies anywhere it is England.

  • @critterscute3642
    @critterscute3642 Год назад +47

    Grew up far south side of Chicago. We referred to the strip of grass as the parkway. Interesting to hear all the different terms!

    • @markweaver1012
      @markweaver1012 Год назад +5

      It was the same in the northern suburbs

    • @archwombat9250
      @archwombat9250 Год назад +2

      Funnily enough I saw a video that explained that’s why cars ‘park’ and an area for leaving your car is called a ‘car park’ because when car ownership took off they were cluttering up the high streets so they removed the parkways and paved them as a zone to leave your car hence park way became a car park.
      I’m from the UK and we, as he said call them verges, but we still inherited the American terminology of parking and car parks.

    • @drbob3
      @drbob3 Год назад +2

      We called it a parkway in the West Suburbs as well.

    • @WooliestPuma
      @WooliestPuma Год назад +1

      Boulevard in my eastern South Dakota city

    • @evabalga6133
      @evabalga6133 Год назад +2

      Illinois, south of Chicago. It’s parkway or median. We love our grenness!

  • @HikariTheGardevoir
    @HikariTheGardevoir Год назад +30

    In Dutch we also call it a 'berm'. Different pronunciation of course, but very likely to be connected to each other. How lovely

    • @spoonergirl75
      @spoonergirl75 Год назад

      This is super interesting to me. I grew up in WI learning that a berm is a small hill or raised strip built on the property, behind the sidewalk in the yard, to dampen road noise or serve as a sort of fence.

    • @Erika1965
      @Erika1965 Год назад +1

      Berm is used for the grassy side of the road. Mostly there is no sidewalk for pedestrians in that case. I realize that in the Netherlands sidewalks are mostly directly adjacent to the road. So there is a berm or there is a sidewalk (trottoir or stoep)

  • @an01381
    @an01381 Год назад +1

    I've always called the verge the "planting strip" or the "parking strip" (from the Seattle area)

  • @dianefelice9730
    @dianefelice9730 Год назад +10

    I've lived my whole life in the northwest suburbs of Chicago and have only known that strip of grass as a "Parkway".
    Love all your videos, and your new word - grenliness!! 😊❤

    • @sherrygiambalvo2288
      @sherrygiambalvo2288 Год назад +1

      I've lived my whole life in Southern California, and we also call it the parkway. 🌳

    • @DandSmom
      @DandSmom Год назад +2

      Chicago western suburbanite here to say I’ve only ever heard it called a parkway.

    • @couldntthingofone269
      @couldntthingofone269 Год назад +1

      Where I am in Texas we've always called it a parkway. We have more than one horse in town so that could be because of our more urban nature here.

  • @MrVince8
    @MrVince8 Год назад +5

    I always look forward to your videos. They brighten my day.

  • @Purdey921
    @Purdey921 Год назад +7

    I grew up in the south suburbs and my dad called it an easement because in our suburb the city owns it. There was one behind the house for an alley which never went in. The one in the front yard between the sidewalk and the street was huge! Long after we moved out, a center turn lane was built into route 83 and the easement is not as huge anymore.

  • @fireutility21
    @fireutility21 Год назад +1

    Grew up in Northeastern Illinois, we called it the Parkway

  • @Amy-hs1qe
    @Amy-hs1qe Год назад +41

    I'm American but have spent a huge amount of time in England over decades, and you're absolutely right - the green in the US is more vibrant. Very observant! (I'm NJ born and bred - never heard of "grass bay").

    • @CaptainArloNJ
      @CaptainArloNJ Год назад +4

      Agreed. From NJ and never heard of "grass bay" either.

    • @doubleknots
      @doubleknots Год назад +2

      Another New Jerseyan chiming in to say I've never heard the term "grass bay" before. I've always called it "the grass near the sidewalk".

    • @thomasmacdiarmid8251
      @thomasmacdiarmid8251 Год назад +3

      The long straight border between US and Canada is the 49th parallel. This parallel also passes by Jersey, the Channel Island off the French coast - this every bit of Great Britain is considerably further north than the entire contiguous 48 states ( as well as Hawaii, of course). While it is warmed by the Gulf Stream, Great Britain does not get nearly the strength of sunshine that the US does. It will get longer days in the summer, but the rays are still at such a much lower angle, that they do not as effectively fuel photosynthesis.

    • @frankkelly2245
      @frankkelly2245 Год назад

      Me either!

    • @zuzanazuscinova5209
      @zuzanazuscinova5209 Год назад

      I think another thing about the US is that the sky is bluer, especially in the south, like Texas. I believe it has to do with proximity to the equator.

  • @garyi.1360
    @garyi.1360 Год назад +4

    In the Southwest it's called a parkway or easement.

  • @gerrychirgwin9342
    @gerrychirgwin9342 Год назад +44

    I'm an Englishman living in Australia. Much of what you observe in the US also applies to Aus.
    In Melbourne we call the verge a 'nature strip'.
    Love your work😁

    • @andrewretaylor
      @andrewretaylor Год назад +1

      Australians & New Zealanders do tend to pickup up most naming variants from the UK & USA on top of any local variants, you could use any of the common terms interchangeably and most people would understand you perfectly well. (it can be quite common to use multiple names for the same thing in a single statement), where as compared to a large number of my colleagues from America who would get stumped on certain terms/names that were not from their region when they first arrived.
      Berm/Verge/Nature Strip/Council Strip, Sidewalk/footpath, Trash Can/Rubbish Bin/Garbage Can/Dumpster, Boot/Trunk, Bonnet/Hood, Restroom/Toilet/Bathroom/Dunny/Shitter etc

    • @christianlibertarian5488
      @christianlibertarian5488 Год назад

      Having lived in Australia for 3 years, they should also call it a "parking strip."

  • @lundi44
    @lundi44 Год назад +6

    Informative video!
    I'm in Australia and I call these a green strip. In some coastal areas, the bushland separating a beach from a row of houses can be known as a nature strip.
    The concrete strip separating lanes of traffic going in opposite directions is known as a median strip - which can sometimes have grass and/or low-height plants on them.

  • @sherryheinrtiz7038
    @sherryheinrtiz7038 Год назад +5

    I live in NE Wisconsin and have only known the part of the grass between the sidewalk and the road as a terrace, it is also referenced that way on the property tax bill.
    Love your videos!!

  • @isilzhamir3725
    @isilzhamir3725 Год назад +11

    I grew up in Illinois and now live in Minnesota. I’ve never heard of it having a specific name. Just “that strip of yard next to the road” or “that bit of grass that’s annoying to mow.”

    • @ohcanada8084
      @ohcanada8084 Год назад +2

      I grew up in Minnesota and lived in Illinois and we never had a special name for the grass on the other side of the sidewalk except “best get it mowed, kids,” lol! 😂

    • @illuin__
      @illuin__ Год назад

      I was gonna say, lived in MN my whole life and I feel like most of the terms are used for other things, but the actual strip of grass doesn't have a concrete name

  • @richardbeckenbaugh1805
    @richardbeckenbaugh1805 Год назад +27

    The legal term for that strip is called a planting strip. This refers to the green space between the sidewalk and the road. I wondered as well, so I looked it up in the property law dictionary. Yes there IS such a thing. There are actually laws and regulations about how wide it should be and where it can and can’t be. Normally the sidewalk is the edge of the right of way minus one inch. Thus the sidewalk and planting strip are both in the right of way. Some localities specify a different margin, half an inch, sometimes 3 inches.

    • @squireltag1000
      @squireltag1000 Год назад +5

      Im curious when you say legal term, does that mean for american law? Federal or state? And is it uniform from state to state?

    • @juniper617
      @juniper617 Год назад

      Most property law is state law, though. At least pertaining to real property.

    • @orulz1
      @orulz1 Год назад

      Here in NC that is what it is most often called, I think

  • @thomaschefalo6481
    @thomaschefalo6481 11 месяцев назад +1

    In the suburbs of Chicago it's commonly called the parkway. In Upstate NY where grew up I was unaware it had a name.

  • @MattyClivingthedream
    @MattyClivingthedream Год назад +7

    Australia has multiple names for the grass strip as well. I have heard it called the verge, nature strip, council strip, council stripe council easement and grass strip.

  • @lisaruell4780
    @lisaruell4780 Год назад +4

    I've always called it a "tree belt", and that seemed to be the only term I heard used for it, I live in New England, specifically Maine :) Love your show !!

  • @devkanyarck
    @devkanyarck Год назад +69

    I have lived in neither country but visited both. I think English suburbs and nature look more ‘natural’ and beautiful to me, personally. USA suburbs have more of a strange flatpack effect, though they have some of the most beautiful natural spots in national parks etc.

    • @laurawendt8471
      @laurawendt8471 Год назад +11

      To be fair England has had much much longer for their natural greenery to get old and lush again, while US had most of its forests and prairies “settled” & “tamed” just a couple hundred years ago, and then modern neighborhoods put in 😅 speed was the main goal with the population boom post war, thus baby boomers.

    • @devkanyarck
      @devkanyarck Год назад +6

      @@laurawendt8471 that’s true.. considering that, they have done a great job

    • @entropyinreverse
      @entropyinreverse Год назад +4

      Thank you for standing up for our greenliness ❤

    • @amn0809
      @amn0809 Год назад +6

      Also, the desire to have huge empty lawns of mostly non-native species (one of the ways European tradition was kept up by the descendants of the colonists) as a status symbol remained for the majority that now live in the suburbs. That's the reason it looks unnatural and sparse there.

    • @jgkitarel
      @jgkitarel Год назад +1

      A lot of that is due to how most U.S. suburbs are fairly young and were designed to house as many people as possible with the square footage modern houses tend to get. I know, that's rich when you consider how much smaller properties tend to be elsewhere, but we also have a lot more properly habitable space than most places.
      A lot of it also depends on terrain, as suburbs is hillier areas do tend to follow the geography for practical (meaning it's both cheaper and faster) to generally follow the terrain. There is also the fact that there is a condition on the fact that roads also play a role, and roads follow the terrain and (usually) the path of least resistance where it comes to construction.
      And suburbs come in all varieties because of this.

  • @acallen101
    @acallen101 Год назад +1

    I've lived in the Chicago suburbs my entire life. My parents were born in the city. I've ALWAYS heard it referred to as a parkway.

  • @shelbywoo3229
    @shelbywoo3229 Год назад +7

    I live in the Pacific Northwest and I don’t recall ever leaning what that strip of grass is called. I call it a “curb strip” but still find myself using hand gestures when I try to explain. 🤷🏻‍♀️
    Since green is my favorite color I’ll be adopting your dictionary-worthy word “greenliness”. I think it’s brilliant!

    • @SheriLynNut
      @SheriLynNut Год назад +2

      Fellow PNW’er, and the hand gestures thing is hilarious because I know just what you mean 😅
      *gestures with hand* “that area right there”
      I think it’s hilarious that we as a nation don’t have a word to bestow upon 👋👋 that area over there 👋👋

    • @solarbirdyz
      @solarbirdyz Год назад

      I'm from Seattle. It's a planting strip or (less commonly) a parking strip. A _median_ is a planted bit in the middle of the road between opposite-direction lanes

    • @xessq1
      @xessq1 Год назад +2

      60 years in the PNW and always just called it that part the city owns but i have to take care of and pay taxes on.. or an easement ... or "you know that strip of grass over there" waves hand in general direction

    • @mollyp7559
      @mollyp7559 Год назад +1

      I’m in Portland and a couple of summers ago the city was giving free trees away for our “hell strips”. I had no idea there was a name for them, specifically that one.

    • @shaunasweet8335
      @shaunasweet8335 Год назад

      @@mollyp7559 I live in Vancouver, WA and we call it a hell strip, too.

  • @EllenRNPHN
    @EllenRNPHN Год назад +3

    I live in Southern California. We called the strip of grass nearest the street a parkway. I had no idea there were so many names for this plot of land. Glad you brought up the location of street signs. That is one of the first things I noticed when I first visited England. 😊

  • @nannerz1994
    @nannerz1994 Год назад +1

    We always called it a parkway in Naperville lol

  • @lachimiste1
    @lachimiste1 Год назад +14

    I live in Massachusetts, raised in New York. Most often, I call a verge “a verge,” except when there isn’t actually a sidewalk present, then it’s called “an easement.” The town technically owns the easements, and they have a right to do things like lay water mains or utility lines underneath them, or build sidewalks upon them (thus creating a verge). You still have to maintain and mow the portion that abuts your property, though.
    You mentioned a “Common,” and that is a uniquely New England thing, but it’s not a verge. In many New England towns, a “Common” was common land owned by the town and used for pasturage, meetings, commerce, and even as a burial ground. In my town, the Common is the parcel of green space associated with a large Unitarian Universalist church in the center of town. It’s jointly maintained by the church and the town, and it’s used for things like fairs, festivals, incredibly polite protests, official Christmas-tree lightings, and, with the addition of portable fencing, a Biergarten. Since it’s bordered on one edge by a public sidewalk, the Town Common ironically has its very own verge.

    • @here_we_go_again2571
      @here_we_go_again2571 Год назад

      @ lachimiste1
      .......And shovel the sidewalk during the winter months - requirement since it is considered common land.
      Yes! The village greens in NE and the old villages upstate NY are very nice. Some even have an elevated, roofed
      pavilion called a bandstand. Very nice ..... So long as the people in the community respect the common space
      (i.e. don't litter, clean up after their dogs, respect the older folks sitting on the benches, and walking along the
      sidewalks within the park etc.) A playground is usually nearby for the children to romp. Originally these places
      were where churches were built (and used as graveyards by the original settlers)[1], as well as the first school for
      the village being on one side of green.
      ________________________________________
      1.) In the 1800's the rural cemetery movement encouraged these churches to have their members buried in
      the new cemetery in the nearby the village. Some churches (most) opted to have their buried members
      removed and re-interred in the new cemetery

  • @JeansWithPockets541
    @JeansWithPockets541 Год назад +7

    In my part of Canada, verges are called boulevards. Which is nice in a way: we have a word for these areas. The frustrating thing is that there are also boulevards, which are streets with a median in the... median. The median of a boulevard (street) can be grass or concrete or whatever. You really have to watch context with 'boulevard' because of this.

  • @Bad_Meach
    @Bad_Meach Год назад +11

    That strip between the sidewalk and the street is part of the city’s ROW (right of way). It allows the city to widen roads if needed because of population growth or rezoning in the area. The part between the sidewalk and your house is your front yard, lawn, garden, etc. Typically flowers are planted in the front yard while gardens (vegetables, herbs, and fruits) are planted in the backyard.

    • @michelledeer7659
      @michelledeer7659 Год назад

      Captain Obvious!

    • @Bad_Meach
      @Bad_Meach Год назад

      @@michelledeer7659 Thank you, and have a blessed day.

  • @bethedinges5685
    @bethedinges5685 Год назад +1

    I live in north-central Illinois. The "verge" is called a "parkway" here.

  • @user-xn6zz3fm6t
    @user-xn6zz3fm6t Год назад +8

    In Denver, we called the tree lawn, the historic use of it was to plant trees. Like much of the Midwest trees do not naturally occur. We are high plains, so every tree has to be planted in. This was a way of providing a space for trees to help shade the sidewalk and to create a more beautiful Urbanspace. It’s interesting to see pictures taken around the 1900s of Denver and you’ll see small one to 2 inch caliper trees everywhere. Now those trees are fully mature and provide a beautiful canopy for the city.

    • @brettknoss486
      @brettknoss486 Год назад

      Denver is in the Midwest? I thought it was in the Rockies.

  • @liambean
    @liambean Год назад +6

    I grew up in areas that didn't have sidewalks at all, so we had no name for that grass strip. As an adult I moved to an urban area with no lawns, where the fronts of the houses are next to the sidewalk. I've since moved to suburbs where the most common pattern is that commercial/apartment building zones have sidewalk extending from building to road and single-family homes have small front yards but no sidewalk. All of these locations were in different regions of the US. I've seen the grass strips, but never lived around them somehow. I didn't know there was even any specific term for them until recently.

  • @thedemonchicken
    @thedemonchicken Год назад +4

    I never heard of the grass strip being referred to with a specific name until recently when someone called it a snow shelf. Doing some quick searching and found my city (Milford, CT) refers to it as a "grass snow shelf" in the city ordinances.

  • @coheberlein
    @coheberlein Год назад +1

    In the city of Seattle, Washington State, this area is called a planting strip. I've also heard it called a parking strip. A median is the area between 2 directions of a freeway. A swale is a planting strip that has been dug out to provide a rain garden for water running off of the street.

    • @zera6994
      @zera6994 5 месяцев назад +1

      Not a freeway here…