NIMBY
NIMBY (an
initialism for
Not
In
My
Back
Yard) is an
acronym for the phenomenon in which residents oppose a development as being inappropriate for their local area. It is used to signify protest by people whose major concern about some development or activity is for it not be associated with or developed within their locale.
Such protesters are often known as
NIMBYs or
NIMBYists. While they may protest many kinds of development, they are primarily encountered when a developer or local administration attempts to build or expand
housing,
shopping,
office space, or a major
road. However this is also used to describe protesters who protest against other forms of developmental activity in their area, such as infrastructure projects (
power plants, electrical transmission lines, wastewater treatment plants, quarries,
landfills and
prisons), new
housing developments,
cult-like or
alternative lifestyle communes, religious buildings, and the like.
The
Oxford English Dictionary describes the phrase as originating in the
United States, with the first recorded usage being in 1980 in the
Christian Science Monitor.
NIMBYs advance several arguments against the proposed development. While sometimes acknowledging the need for such development, NIMBYs may claim that new development will increase local
traffic, hurt
small business, decrease property values, degrade the
environment, spoil a community's small-town feel, or generally strain public resources. NIMBYs also often argue that the proposed development will overwhelm public schools; since many fast-growing suburbs already experience crowding in public schools, that argument often carries considerable weight. Other times, if a
big-box store or similar development is planned, NIMBYs object that the store will be disproportionately used by non-locals, while degrading the quality of life for locals. In the case of essential infrastructure, although the wider community as a whole may agree to the need for such infrastructure, it is frequently difficult to find a suitable location due to objections of the local community in any location. Frequently, these objections are related to earlier issues discussed as well as issues of safety.
Critics claim that the new developments are needed, and they may accuse the NIMBYs of
elitism, parochialism, or a
drawbridge mentality. In the case of new commercial developments, critics often also claim that the community needs the resulting jobs and tax revenues and that NIMBYs demand expensive local services without regard to how the local government will pay for them. For example, in
Alexandria, Virginia, people who opposed the original proposals for high-density development in
Potomac Yard were faulted for demanding a
Washington Metro station while simultaneously opposing the scale of development that would provide either sufficient funds for the station or sufficient ridership to justify its construction. Moreover, some critics of NIMBYism see it as a cover for opposition to
diversity and a desire to preserve neighborhood homogeneity, particularly when the development being opposed is public housing or the like. In the case of essential infrastructure, it may be possible to build the infrastructure in a more isolated location, but critics point out that frequently this will increase the costs and backbone infrastructure required to service the main infrastructure. In the case of power plants, integrated hot water or home heating may be possible in the vicinity surrounding the power plant but not at a distance. Furthermore, many critics point out that there is frequently criticism from the local community even in a fairly isolated location.
Ironically, while NIMBYs often claim that they are trying to prevent
urban sprawl, NIMBYism can in certain circumstances accelerate rather than reduce such sprawl. Because population grows continuously, new developments must be built somewhere. If suburban NIMBYs demand a reduction in the density of a proposed development, one foreseeable result is that the same amount of development, when built at a lower density, will simply occupy more land. When many developers build large developments on the outskirts, they fuel the pattern of low-density development. The problem is therefore, one of patterns and locations of development, not merely density. Opposition to industrial, commercial, or specific types of residential development is less when the pattern is expanded adjacent to similar forms of land use.
Smart Growth has been proposed as a way of addressing NIMBY concerns without halting needed development. However, smart growth itself can face NIMBY opposition in the community for which it is proposed.
*
Sim City - The manuals in the Sim City series repeatedly mention NIMBY effects with structures that help the city overall but also cause negative effects to the area in which they are built.
* In his book
Napalm and Silly Putty,
George Carlin criticizes the idea of NIMBY and the usefulness of neighborhood prisons and homeless shelters, to an extent. Also, he mentions golf courses with their large areas as an obvious place for housing projects.
*
Drawbridge mentality*
BANANA*
CAVE People*
YIMBY*
"Sprawl Is Like the Weather," Planning Commissioners Journal, discussing the role of opposition to high-density development in promoting sprawl
*
Environmentalists: Left, Right or Out in Front?