The Suburban Ideal
Image:
Winnipeg Architecture Foundation. Silver Heights Digital Tour.
https://winnipegarchitecture.ca/digital-tours/silver-heights/ Accessed 31 Mar. 2026.
Caption:
Figure 1. As photographed from above, this neighbourhood clearly demonstrates the extensive replication that became suburban development in the postwar years. Streets and houses are all predictably similar. It was a geographical effort that echoed other methods aimed at regulating life within these homes and domesticating the spaces and behaviours of Canadians. Contrasting these qualities of repetition and order, suburbs became synonymous with stability, conformity and middle-class homeownership throughout postwar North America.
After World War II, suburban growth engulfed neighbourhoods across Canada. Promoted as quiet, orderly, and ideal places to raise families, suburban expansion nevertheless exhibited clear patterns of regulation. As Figure 1 illustrates, this impression of homogeneity was by design. The suburbs were constructed through networks of planning schemes, architectural styles, and governmental policies that valued conformity and sameness.
Drawing on this designed similarity, this exhibition posits that suburban spaces of the postwar years were manufactured to produce docile citizens through the regulation of everyday activities, including domestic practices, social norms, and mobilities.