Penurbia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Penurbia describes country districts close to metropolitan areas in the U.S.
Penurban districts look like rural areas. They are, however, heavily influenced through outmigration by metropolitan settlers.
Settlers to penurbia are attracted by rural ambience. Many incomers, though, carry metropolitan ideas with them in their journeys from built up urban areas, even as they build a new-country self conception. Consequently, penurbanites construct a unique mindset which blends an appreciation of country values with reliance on metropolitan incomes.
Further references to penurbia are available in the Encyclopedia of Urban History, Edited by Professor David Goldfield and published by Sage, published December 2006, and in a 2006 doctoral dissertation, A Geography of the Heart: Penurbia in America, by Joseph Goddard, University of Copenhagen.