Sense of Place-Lewisville, NC

Burlington is a lovely town filled with many places and things and people that make it the place it is. It really has a sense of place beyond the suburban sprawl of South Burlington. My town at home is similar in that it tries to maintain its sense of place next to a blocks of block stores and the same chain stores and restaurants you’d see in any town. Lewisville, North Carolina is the town that I call home. Our small population of around 15,000 people allows for a rural sprawl of residential, private land as opposed to the suburban neighborhood “glory-land” of the neighboring town, Clemmons. The sense of place is readily apparent throughout Lewisville, except for two of its shopping centers, which house all block stores. The history of Lewisville is short, as it was only recently incorporated in 1991, but a focal point of that history is the creation of the town square, dubbed “Shallowford Square,” which set the tone for the design of the rest of the town, making it pedestrian-friendly and giving the town more of a sense of place. The “downtown” area was designed to keep the same original style of buildings, meaning many homes along the main strip were just converted into business, while maintaining the aesthetic that the town planners aimed to keep. Beyond the “downtown” area, the town was and still is comprised of mostly farms. There is little enough population to keep from too many close-quartered neighborhoods that frequently pop-up in the suburbs. Most of Lewisville is treated as a rural area, so the sense of place outside of downtown is typically that of nature and the trees in a particular area. A place in Lewisville that is particularly well-known for its sense of place is Conrad Rd. The road is lined on either side with maple trees and beyond those is just a field and it creates a tunnel of leaves that changes colors throughout the season. There are multiple ways to get to my house, but this one is the most beautiful. Even though it takes longer if I take Conrad Road, it makes me feel more at home.

The sense of place in my hometown has not really changed much since I have moved there from San Marcos, California in 2008. While the town has a nice aesthetic by maintaining so many trees and forested areas around the stylistic houses and businesses, it is mostly older folks who live in the town and run the government. This makes for a stagnant sense of place as the actual aesthetic never really changes, but with the seasons change, the trees and surrounding forest make some aspects of the architecture pop throughout spring and summer. The place that has been developed by Lewisville town planners throughout the years helped develop me into feeling like I grew up in a small southern town. It felt smaller than it was which made me feel a little bit bigger in the world. Lewisville has linked itself with a stale pattern of sluggishness in my mind, but will always be a place for me to feel at home again.