What are Swedish suburbs like?

What are Swedish suburbs like? Do they have reputations more like the Americans or French? What’s transportation like? Do house have basement?

Here is a lovely cozy Swedish suburban home with basement.

A roomier option in Sweden.

Are you interested in a particular city, town, or area? Plan on moving soon?

I doubt there’s a factual answer to the OP, as written. The question is more subjective than objective.

As said, there’s no way this belongs in Factual Questions. But I have to ask; how does the reputation of French suburbs compare to American ones?

Umm, that is the town of Sweden, in the state of Maine.

I am a veritable whoosh machine.

At one level its ‘nice’ but seems utterly charmless, and was 3D printed by a giant machine yesterday.

Relevant to the OP, in what way would you know it was not from outer Uppsala instead of Maine? [more obvious Ikea furniture? Volvo in the driveway? ABBA on the stereo?manically depressed detective investigating a decapitated body fished out of the lake?]

There are a lot of mosquitos around in the summer.

France is much more densely populated than Sweden. Swedish cities tend to be small, though there are reasonably-sized cities like Stockholm and Göteborg.

Swedish suburbs are layed out in a “fixed path” design — there’s a designated road that you must follow, and it guides you through the suburb in one direction. While traveling through suburbs in other parts of the world, a motorist will only see a small fraction of the houses while passing through. But the Swedish fixed path approach means you stay in the suburb longer, and you get exposed to most of the houses located there.

As a person born and living in Sweden, I have to ask

Whut
:question:

That is a reference on the typical setup of IKEAs.

Ah, thanks, now I got it.

Moved to IMHO, as this seems to be a question about opinions.