Atlanta •
Adair Park started developing in the 1890s as an all-white streetcar suburb and is now a majority-black area, with strong community commitment to preservation.
The Wren's Nest, the home of
Joel Chandler Harris, the writer of the
Uncle Remus stories, can be visited here. •
Inman Park is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places and became Atlanta's first streetcar suburb in 1889. The trolley line is gone, but the trolley barn is still standing and has been renovated •
Virginia Highland developed starting in 1911, located at the end of Atlanta's legendary
Nine-Mile Circle trolley line •
Kirkwood was founded in 1899 as an independent city, which grew around a streetcar line between Atlanta and
Decatur Austin, Texas •
Hyde Park, which traces its origins to 1891, is considered to be the first suburb of
Austin, Texas. Developed by
Monroe Martin Shipe in 1891 as a "
white only" streetcar suburb with a large artificial lake, it has become one of the most densely populated areas in the city's urban core.
Baltimore •
Roland Park • East
Catonsville Berkeley, California • The
Elmwood District in Berkeley, California, was located in open land away from the city. It was eventually integrated into the
East Bay metropolis by decades of
urban expansion and
infill development.
Boston •
Roxbury •
Dorchester •
Brighton became a streetcar suburb when transit lines were laid in 1889. •
Roslindale •
Brookline •
Somerville was studied with respect to the
social mobility in streetcar suburbs. •
Chestnut Hill is a particularly affluent railroad/streetcar suburb, and has been home to Boston’s wealthy elite for two centuries. •
Winchester •
Arlington •
Belmont •
Newton •
Melrose •
Malden Cleveland •
Bratenahl •
Cleveland Heights •
East Cleveland •
Euclid •
Fairview Park •
Lakewood •
Rocky River •
Shaker Heights was initially planned by the
Van Sweringen brothers. Known chiefly for their railroad interests, the brothers linked their community to
Downtown Cleveland with their
Shaker Heights Rapid Transit, which operates to this day •
West Park (Annexed into Cleveland 1923) Columbus, Ohio •
Bexley is the location of the Ohio Governor's Mansion, along with a number of other large Tudor and Colonial style mansions. •
Grandview Heights • Old Beechwold •
Upper Arlington, specifically the original section south of Lane Avenue, was mapped out and developed around the Scioto Country Club, beginning just after WWI.
Dallas • The neighborhood of
Highland Park was mapped out specifically for such reasons, and attracted the wealthiest citizens of the city at the time.
Detroit • The
Grosse Pointe neighborhoods were conceived of in the early 1890s as a retreat for wealthy
Detroit businessmen and families. A passenger rail line that connected Detroit to
Mt. Clemens, along the coast, was operational by the late 1890s, passing through what would become Grosse Pointe, making the area more accessible. • Many of the neighborhoods of Detroit were built as streetcar suburbs. They are characterized by mostly single- and 2-family houses on 30 or 45-foot lots with a few townhouses and multifamily apartments scattered about. These include
Springwells Village,
Southwest Detroit,
Michigan-Martin,
Arden Park, and
Boston–Edison.
Edmonton •
Alberta Avenue began development in the 1890s before the arrival of the
Edmonton Radial Railway, however much of the neighbourhood's development occurred after the streetcar's introduction on 95th Street. •
Central McDougall is bisected by 107th Avenue, which remained a streetcar route until the system's closure, and by then most of the neighbourhood had been developed. •
Highlands was initially isolated from Edmonton's developed area in the early 1900s, however developers negotiated with the city to extend the electric streetcar line, which made development in an otherwise isolated area possible. Much of the neighbourhood developed upon the Streetcar's introduction along 112th Avenue. •
McCauley had been largely subdivided by 1892 upon Edmonton's incorporation as a town, however little development occurred until 1912, when multiple streetcar services ran through the heart of McCauley on 97th and 95th Streets. •
Westmount developed early due to its proximity to downtown Edmonton, with access further enhanced by the extension of the streetcar in 1910 and commercial space developed along 124th Street along the line. •
Wîhkwêntôwin (formerly Oliver) was initially disconnected from the remaining town of Edmonton. Development was accelerated by the introduction of streetcar service in 1908 along Jasper Avenue.
Houston • The
Houston Heights neighborhood was created in 1891 by millionaire Oscar Martin Carter and a group of investors who established the Omaha and South Texas Land Company. It was its own municipality until the City of Houston annexed the Heights in 1919. •
Neartown was originally envisioned as a planned community and streetcar suburb dating back to the early 20th century before the development of
River Oaks by developer J. W. Link and his Houston Land Corporation. Link built his own home in Montrose, known as the Link-Lee Mansion, which is now part of the
University of St. Thomas campus.
Indianapolis •
Irvington, founded in 1870 five miles (8 km) east of
downtown Indianapolis, prospered as a streetcar suburb in the 1890s, leading to Indianapolis annexing the community in 1902. •
Riverside, founded in 1902 three-and-a-half miles (5.6 km) northwest of
downtown Indianapolis, was developed in the style of the
City Beautiful movement with tree-lined streets, landscaped medians/traffic circles, generous setbacks, and glacier boulder retaining walls.
Jacksonville, Florida • The combined
Riverside and Avondale neighborhoods were served by streetcar lines starting in 1887 until the 1930s, with ridership peaking at over 13 million riders in 1913.
Knoxville, Tennessee •
Fourth and Gill, established in the 1880s, still contains most of its original houses and streetscapes. •
Oakwood,
Knoxville, was studied as an example of a working-class, as opposed to middle-class, streetcar suburb. •
Old North Knoxville, established as a separate town in the 1880s.
Los Angeles •
Angelino Heights, built around the Temple Street horsecar (later upgraded to electric streetcar as part of the
Los Angeles Railway Yellow Car system), was the first suburban development outside of downtown Los Angeles. •
Glendale, California, served by the
Glendale–Burbank Line •
Highland Park developed along the
Figueroa Street trolley lines and railroads linking downtown Los Angeles and
Pasadena. The old right-of-way was reopened in 2003 as part of the Los Angeles County Transit Authority
Metro Gold Line light rail. •
Leimert Park, a later streetcar suburb planned by the Olmsted Brothers firm, touted both its automobile accessibility and location along the 6 line of the Yellow Car. • Much of
South Central Los Angeles first developed as streetcar suburbia, served by the Yellow Car's Vermont Avenue, Broadway, and Central Avenue lines. • Southeast Los Angeles, including the neighborhoods of
Huntington Park and
Walnut Park, also served by the Yellow Car lines. •
West Hollywood was marketed by developers in the late 19th and early 20th century for its proximity, by streetcar, both to downtown Los Angeles and
Pacific Ocean beaches. •
Los Cerritos, Long Beach Miami Miami's
Coral Gables neighborhoods were built in the 1920s as the earliest suburbs of
Downtown Miami by early Miami developers. Coral Gables was connected to Downtown, by a series of streetcars down
Coral Way. Today, Coral Gables homes are some of the most expensive
single-family homes in Miami, as the vast majority of them have been preserved since the 1920s. Within Coral Gables,
Miracle Mile has
urbanized over the decades, becoming a dense, urban neighborhood with numerous
high rise apartment and office towers.
Milwaukee •
Shorewood was served by the numbers 10 and 15 streetcars on the north side until the mid-1950s, when it was converted to bus. •
Whitefish Bay was served by the number 15 streetcar on the north side until the mid-1950s, when it was converted to bus. •
Cudahy was served by the 15 and 16 streetcars on the south side. •
South Milwaukee was served by the 15 and 16 streetcars on the south side. •
Wauwatosa was served by the 10, 16 and 17 streetcars on the west side. •
West Allis was served by the 10, 18 and 19 streetcars on the west side.
Montreal Most of Montreal's streetcar suburbs feature a mix of attached red-brick or greystone duplexes, triplexes, fourplexes and multiplexes with exterior staircases instead of narrow-lot single-family homes. These areas usually feature a vibrant main street, usually the one where the trams traversed, that contains most of the shops, businesses and services, while smaller
dépanneurs (Convenience stores) line the intersections of the smaller residential streets. •
Park-Extension: Tramways 80 & 95 •
Hochelaga-Maisonneuve: Tramways 84,87, 3, 5 & 22 •
Rosemont: Tramways 7,52 & 54 •
Verdun: Tramways 25 & 58 •
Notre-Dame-de-Grâce: Tramways 70, 83, 3 & 31 •
Villeray: Tramways 24, 35 & 72
Newark, New Jersey Many communities in
Essex County, New Jersey were served by the
Public Service Railway lines that fed into the
Newark City Subway and the
Newark Public Service Terminal including Irvington, Maplewood, Montclair, Bloomfield, Glen Ridge and The Oranges. Some of these routes remain today as
NJ Transit Bus routes including the 21, 25, 27, 29 and 39.
Oakland, California •
Piedmont, California real estate developments and the
Key System (or Key Route) street car lines were built and managed by
Francis Marion Smith and
Frank Colton Havens.
Omaha, Nebraska Soon after the city's founding in 1856, many different
companies provided horse-drawn cars, streetcars and eventually busing throughout the city.
Streetcar service stopped on March 4, 1955. Some of the communities served exclusively as streetcar suburbs included: •
Kountze Place •
Dundee •
Benson •
South Omaha Ottawa • After the
Bank St. streetcar to Lansdowne Park was installed,
the Glebe began attracting upper-middle class residents, particularly those whose homes were destroyed in the
Great Fire of 1900. • The extension of the streetcar system along
Richmond Road from Rochesterville to Britannia Park created the streetcar suburbs of
Hintonburg,
Westboro and
Britannia Village.
Philadelphia •
Aldan • Beechwood •
Brookline •
Camden •
Cheltenham •
Clifton Heights •
Collingdale •
Collingswood •
Darby •
Haddonfield •
Llanerch •
Media •
Merchantville •
Millbourne •
Norristown •
Oakmont •
Penfield •
Sharon Hill •
Springfield (Delco) •
Upper Darby •
West Philadelphia Streetcar Suburb Historic District Phoenix • The
F. Q. Story Neighborhood Historic District was developed in the 1920s as one of Phoenix's streetcar suburbs.
Pittsburgh s in Mt Lebanon, on narrow lots backing onto the streetcar line • Many of Pittsburgh's more affluent areas began as streetcar suburbs, including
Friendship,
Highland Park,
Squirrel Hill, and
Regent Square, primarily residential neighborhoods located east of the city's center. Outside city limits, the construction of streetcar tracks caused communities such as
Edgewood,
Sewickley, and
Aspinwall to become heavily developed sanctuaries for the city's upper middle class. •
The T light rail, Pittsburgh's only current rail transit, encompasses former streetcar lines and connects the streetcar suburbs of
Dormont,
Mt. Lebanon, and
Castle Shannon. Although the communities at the end of the line (
Bethel Park and
South Park) are mainly 1940s-60s automobile-dependent suburbs, some neighborhoods within them near the rail line reflect the character of streetcar communities, such as the neighborhood of
Library. • A streetcar in Pittsburgh also is known as a "trolley," and
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, a children's public television show (1968–2001) originating in Pittsburgh, used a toy trolley as transition between reality and a "Neighborhood of Make-Believe" show segment, as trolleys would be familiar to local children in 1968.
Portland, Oregon •
Lents was a separate community connected to Portland by streetcar when it was platted in 1892. •
Laurelhurst was a planned community designed around the streetcar lines along Glisan Street.
Richmond, Virginia •
Barton Heights • Bellevue •
Ginter Park •
Hermitage •
Laburnum Park •
Highland Park •
Highland Springs •
Sherwood Park • Springhill •
Washington Park •
Westover Hills •
Woodland Heights St. Louis •
Maplewood began as a bedroom community at the end of a streetcar line from
St. Louis. An early suburb of the city, it was touted for its fresh air in an era when
coal burning gave St. Louis
smog. •
University City was formed in 1903 at the end of a streetcar line from St. Louis, one year before the
1904 World's Fair opened in nearby
Forest Park. A turnaround loop near
City Hall gave its name to a prominent shopping district still known as "
The Loop" and to the
Loop Trolley, a new "historic" streetcar line opened in 2018.
Salt Lake City •
Sugar House is a neighborhood southeast of downtown Salt Lake City. Established in 1853, it expanded upon the completion of the Salt Lake City streetcar system. It was originally isolated from the region, as much of the city's growth took place in and around downtown Salt Lake. But after the Utah Prison moved to the area and retail development took over 2100 South it become one of the most active areas of the city. Today it is home to SugarHouse Park,
Westminster College, and a revived downtown area filled with mostly local and regional businesses. A modern streetcar line, the
S-Line, was opened in 2013 by the city and the
Utah Transit Authority, with plans to build a whole streetcar "Park" and modern
transit-oriented development.
San Jose, California • Hanchett Residence Park was San Jose's first streetcar suburb. It was built in 1907 by Lewis E. Hanchett, who connected his streetcar system directly into the neighborhood using formal entrance gates, separate automobile entrances, and two of the earliest roundabout traffic circles built in America. The layout was designed by famed San Francisco Golden Gate Park designer
John McLaren. San Jose's Alum Rock Park and Venodome Hotel were also on different spurs of the streetcar line connecting downtown. • Willow Glen was originally an independent town, until it voted to be annexed by San Jose in 1936. The Southern Pacific Railroad operated the Peninsular Rail line, which ran “Big Red Cars” down Bird, to Coe, to Lincoln, with a turn at Willow Street, then to Meridian Avenue. The line covered areas out to Saratoga and elsewhere, and Southern Pacific operated it at a financial loss from about 1918. In the 1920s, the city of San Jose ordered Southern Pacific to change the route’s alignment, which led to Willow Glen incorporating as a city in 1927 as an attempt to stop the realignment from going through. The railroad would ultimately end up being rerouted through nearby North Willow Glen.
Seattle •
Columbia City was established as an independent town in 1891 along the
Rainier Avenue Electric Railway. •
Eastlake •
Ravenna was established adjacent to
Ravenna Park after a streetcar line was built by the Rainier Power and Railway Company in 1891. •
Wallingford •
Alaska Junction (West Seattle) Toronto •
West Hill,
Cliffside,
Birch Cliff,
Riverdale,
The Beaches,
North Toronto,
Parkdale,
New Toronto,
Mimico and
Long Branch are all streetcar suburbs. The
Scarborough neighbourhoods of West Hill (c. 1906) and Cliffside (c. 1901) lost their service in 1936 under the
Toronto Transportation Commission (TTC). Birch Cliff lost its streetcar service (began in 1897) by the TTC in 1954. Streetcar service was also provided far outside of the modern Toronto areas as interurbans, into Port Credit west of Long Branch on the lakefront, which is now part of the city of Mississauga.
Washington, D.C. Beginning in the late 1800s, streetcars spurred development in numerous villages in
Washington County, D.C., including
Brightwood,
Mount Pleasant,
Tenleytown,
LeDroit Park,
Uniontown, and
Brookland. One developer built a
streetcar line to support his creation of the
Chevy Chase neighborhoods in D.C. and Maryland. Transit lines also spread out of Washington and into the surrounding areas of
Montgomery and
Prince George's counties in Maryland, heading out to
Rockville,
Forest Glen,
Kensington,
Takoma Park, and
Berwyn Heights. The streetcar helped shape the development of the Gateway Arts District from
Mount Rainier through
Hyattsville and
Riverdale Park and beyond through
College Park to
Laurel. Streetcar operations in the region dwindled after the 1920s and ended altogether in the 1960s.
Clarendon, Virginia, was built as a streetcar suburb around 1900, by the same developers who developed East Catonsville, near Baltimore. ==Australasia==