It's a Small World, After All

I want to live in safety. I want to live in a place with good neighbours and clean streets. I want to live somewhere where the sun is always shining and the people are happy. Where the sense of community is priority number 1 and no one has heard of road-rage. I want to live where the local school and hospital have the latest equipment to help me through my life. Yes, I want to live in Celebration!

The town of Celebration in Florida, USA is currently being built by the Disney Corporation (wouldn't ya just know it?) and promises to provide all of the above. Families are clamouring to live there and I can well understand why. The town of Celebration will have that most rare thing in American life: a community. There is to be a town hall, sidewalk cafes, small individually owned shops (rather than the bland franchise malls I hate so much there) and the whole town will be walkable (if you can take the Florida heat). Residents will be able to walk or cycle from their homes to the town centre (yet another thing seldom seen in the USA). No more driving for hours on concrete freeways past garish advertising hoardings and neon signs just to get to the local restaurant. Of course, to us in England and in Europe, this is nothing new. Our towns and cities for the most part are foot-friendly. We can walk to shops, restaurants, bars, and we take the quaint bakery shop on the corner for granted. Americans have none of this. What we don't have in the UK, however, is safety, good neighbours and sunshine. In Celebration, they're almost guaranteed. If crime should raise it's ugly head, it'll be dealt with. Fast. Undesirables won't even be allowed in through the mouse shaped electronic gates that will undoubtedly guard the entrance to the town. Everything will be hunky-dory, peachy keen.

When I first heard about Celebration, I cringed. The thought of living amongst all that Disney cheesiness seemed too much to bear. I used to live close to Disneyland in California and after visiting the place as often as I did while living there, I feel nauseous every time I see that big black mouse these days. I always felt pleased to leave the theme park at the end of the day, and get back to the real world, to people with facial hair and grumpy faces.

But now I've learned more about this new town in central Florida, I'm hooked. Yes, I'd live there (that's if I could afford it, which I can't). Yes, I'd send my children to the Disney school (that's if I had some, which I don't). If security, peace of mind, ease of life, great neighbours and a strong community come at a price then I'm willing to buy into it. And you know they will be good neighbours as Disney organise seminars where the residents go along to learn how to be that good neighbour, and find out what's expected of them. Okay, so there may be rules to live by in this corporate utopia but surely these guidelines can only ensure the town of Celebration doesn't become a graffiti covered, crack-smoking ghetto.

Demand to live in Celebration has been so great that a lottery was held to determine which lucky families would move into the first 500 houses being built. I `m full of optimism for Celebration. I truly hope it works and that the people who are fortunate enough to live there respect the unique situation in which they're living. Somehow, I get the feeling that they will.


Glenda Young is also the writer of the weekly Coronation Street Update on the net, and can be contacted at:

glenda@londonmall.co.uk

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