The word "home" originates from the Greek word ‘kome’, meaning ‘village’. From this sense, home extends its ties of belonging and meaning beyond the house to include the community that holds it.
Table of Contents

Forward by Sarah Susanka
Introduction

Part One: Pocket Neighborhood Precedents
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  Setting Up Camp
  Gardens of Compassion
  Visions of Garden Cities
  Bungalow Courts, Walks and Walk Streets
  Cottage Court Revival

Part Two: Contemporary Pocket Neighborhoods
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  A New Cottage Court
  A Neighborhood within a Neighborhood
  A Pocket Neighborhood on a
  Challenging Site
  The Neighborhood Neighbors Built
  A Floating Neighborhood
  Lanes, Woonerfs and Mental Speed Bumps
  Back House, Front House, Lane
  New Urban Pocket Neighborhoods
  Lines of Enticement
  Pocket Neighborhoods within a Village

Part Three: Cohousing Communities
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  Danish Origins
  Cohousing in America
  Greening the Neighborhood
  Saging Communities

Part Four: Pocket Neighborhoods in Existing Communities
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  Infill in a First-Ring Suburb
  Urban Homesteads
  Cultivating Community in a Garden
  Taking Down the Fences
  Taking Back the Alley
  Taking Back the Street

Afterword: The Fabric of Community
Resources
Credits
Index