Synopsis
 
 

Sprawling From Grace; Driven To Madness is a documentary feature film about the unintended consequences of suburban sprawl. It illustrates the importance of altering the course of how we develop our nation’s cities. It communicates the dangers of continuing to invest in the inefficient horizontal growth patterns of suburban communities, and details how they threaten to bankrupt the remaining wealth of our nation. It explores how the depletion of fossil fuels will impact this living arrangement, and investigates the viability of alternative energies that are currently available. This film sounds the alarm that the cheap fossil-fuel-dependant suburban American way of life is not just at risk. It is in peril!.

After interviewing close to thirty experts on the subject, one reoccurring theme has revealed itself. We can no longer continue building our cities in the same way we have over the last half-century. The suburbs, while being an integral part of our nation’s maturation, contribute substantially to our problems of air and water pollution, increasing our health risks, and decreasing our quality of life. Suburbia has trapped Americans behind the wheels of their automobiles, as they commute further and further distances to find good paying jobs. Given the inevitable depletion of non-renewable fossil fuels, such as oil and natural gas, it’s clear that this 50 year suburban experiment has created a host of unintended, unlivable consequences. Consequences we will have to find solutions for if we want a sustainable future in a post-fossil-fuel world.

This nation and its citizens have been lulled into a false sense of security. We are blissfully unaware of the impending ramifications of continuing the patterns of growth that have locked us behind the wheels of our cars. Like Nero, we are fiddling away, confident that tomorrow will be as promising as today. We don’t realize that with each new suburban subdivision, with each new strip-mall, each new corporate office park, that promise slips further and further away.

Wrestling with these emerging realities, state and city governments are finding that they can no longer encourage these patterns of growth by further investing in highway and utility infrastructures. They are now forced to find viable alternatives by investing in public transit in the form of BRT (Bus Rapid Transit), commuter rail, and light rail to serve their community’s transportation needs. Through this process they are gaining an historical understanding of the relationship between land use and transportation. They are rediscovering how well designed, walkable, mixed-use communities, that are served by transit can build and support local economies, aid in defining and creating communities, provide for diversity, improve accessibility, provide transit choices, reduce pollution, and improve health. These many benefits ensure a successful and sustainable solution to the problems associated with their growing populations. In our interview with former Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis, he quoted Albert Einstein saying, "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, and each time expecting a different result." He clarified this quote by adding, "Continuing to develop our cities in these ever increasing suburban sprawl patterns will increasingly diminish our quality of life, both physically and mentally. We simply have to stop building more highways!"

How we build our cities will determine the future of how we live our lives, how we form our values, and will determine what we leave for our next generation. It’s time we answer the wake up call.

Credits
 
 

This film was made possible through
generous contributions made
by:
 
 
Forest City
 
JE Dunn
 
Reconnecting America
 
AIA 150
 
Transit Alliance
 
4240 Architecture
 
Barber Architecture
 
David Owen Tryba Architects
 
Davis Partnership
 
Nielson Wilson Design
 
Klipp Professional Corporation
 
~
 
Written, Produced, and Directed
By
 
David M. Edwards
 
~
 
2nd Unit Director/Producer
Nancy Hart-Edwards
 
~
 
Co-Produced
By
 
Page B. Ostrow
Ostrow and Company
Producer’s Representative
 
Niccolo Casewit
 
Jesse Taylor
 
~
 
Director of Photography
David M. Edwards
 
~
 
Camera Operators
Gary Otte
H. Scott Stevens
 
~
 
Editor
David M. Edwards
 
~
 
Music Composer
Bob Studinger
 
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Narration
Charlie Samson
 
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Production Assistance
Aaron Kopp
 
~
 
Additional Footage Provided
By
 
Thought Equity Motion
 
DV Archive
 
Stock Footage World
 
TVDays.com
 
The Wrightwood Group
 
Buyoutfootage.com
 
Minneapolis Bridge Collapse Courtesy of:
KARE TV 11
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis Star Tribune
 
The Road Warrior
Courtesy of Warner Brothers Entertainment
Kennedy Miller Entertainment Pty, Ltd.
 
Boom Town
Courtesy of Warner Brothers Entertainment
Turner Entertainment, Inc.
 
~
 
Aerial Support
By
 
Rotors Over The Rockies
 
Bay Aerial Helicopters
 
Precission Hellicoptors
 
~
 
Interviewees by Alphabetical Order
 
Thomas S. Ahlbrandt
 
Justin Barr
 
Dena Belzer
 
Peter Calthorpe
 
Hon. President Bill Clinton
 
David Dixon
 
Gov. Michael Dukakis
 
Mark Falcone
 
Jan Gehl
 
Jan Kreider
 
James Howard Kunstler
 
Mayor Jon Hickenlooper
 
Martin Johnson
 
Rudy Kadlub
 
Mayor Pat McCrory
 
Bill Millar
 
Shelley Miller
 
Peter Park
 
Katherine Perez
 
Shelly Poticha
 
John “Tad” Read
 
Randy Udall
 
~
 
Special Thanks To Contributing Interviews
 
Flodie Anderson
 
GB Arrington
 
Dan Bloom
 
Kelly Bloom
 
Chris French
 
Louis Irvin
 
Bonnie Kooken
 
J Lubischere
 
Mary Priester
 
Jeane Robb
 
Patricia Zingshiem
 
Mickey Zeppelin
 
~
 
 
 
Special Thanks
 
President Bill Clinton’s footage
Generously provided by
AltWeeklies.com
 
Ashley Allison & Grassroots TV
Aspen, CO
 
Tom Russell
 
Andrea Morgan Russell
 
~
 
 
 
Copyright © 2008, EMotion Pictures Productions, LLC
All Rights Reserved