This project is composed of two triptychs, each depicting on aspect of the suburban built environment. The first depicts the residential side, with Google Earth captures showing the similarity between the individual residences and the extent to which they sprawl out. It also captures the lack of foliage or open green spaces, or spaces comfortable to walk through. This is because suburbs were created to be strictly residential, making cars an absolute necessity. The counterpart to the residential aspect of suburbs is the commercial box stores, which the second triptych captures. Each images shows the lack of walkability and wasted space in massive parking lots and an intersection that is certainly not pedestrian friendly. My project poses questions relating to community, space management, and inequality. Are there community gathering locations in a sea of cookie-cutter houses? Is it necessary to have such large parking lots when so little of them are being utilized? Why is the necessity of a car, or other private transportation so problematic- who does the burden fall onto?