Gated community

A gated community (or walled community) is a form of residential community or housing estate containing strictly controlled entrances for pedestrians, bicycles, and automobiles, and often characterized by a closed perimeter of walls and fences. Gated communities usually consist of small residential streets and include various shared amenities. For smaller communities, these amenities may include only a park or other common area. For larger communities, it may be possible for residents to stay within the community for most daily activities. Gated communities are a type of common interest development, but are distinct from intentional communities.

For socio-historical reasons, in the developed world they exist primarily in the United States.[1]

Given that gated communities are spatially a type of enclave, Setha M. Low, an anthropologist, has argued that they have a negative effect on the net social capital of the broader community outside the gated community.[2] Some gated communities, usually called "guard-gated communities", are staffed by private security guards and are often home to high-value properties, and/or are set up as retirement villages.

  1. ^ Lang, Robert E.; Danielsen, Karen A. (1 January 1997). "Gated communities in America: Walling out the world?". Housing Policy Debate. 8 (4): 867–899. doi:10.1080/10511482.1997.9521281. ISSN 1051-1482.
  2. ^ Low, S (2001) "The Edge and the Center: Gated Communities and the Discourse of Urban Fear" Archived 29 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine, American Anthropologist, March, Vol. 103, No. 1, pp. 45-58. Posted online on 10 December 2004.