Up Sucker Creek

Up Sucker Creek
Photo Courtesy of the Lake Oswego Library

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Creating and preserving more humane cities

This article explains exactly why this blog was created - to save the suburbs as a humane place to live, create a community, be healthy and raise a family.  It seems crazy that people should be arguing about the need for and value of such places, but we are now part of a world-wide rebellion against density, and against becoming a city that has lost its uniqueness and human scale.  This is worth fighting for.

Urbanization: Protest against gigantism
By Joel Kotkin
Mandan.org


Excerpts from a longer article.  See website for full version.

People care deeply about where they live. If you ever doubt that, remember this: they staged massive protests over a park in Istanbul. Gezi Park near Taksim Square is one of that ancient city’s most beloved spots. So in June, when Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened to demolish the park to make room for his grandiose vision of the city as “the financial center of the world,” the park’s neighbors and supporters took to the streets. The protests were directed against what has been described as “authoritarian building”—the demolition of older, more-human-scaled neighborhoods in favor of denser high-rise construction, massive malls, and other iconic projects.

There’s just one problem with this brave new condensed world: most urban residents aren’t crazy about it. In the United States and elsewhere, people, when asked, generally say they prefer less dense, less congested places to live. The grandiose vision of high-rise, high-density cities manifestly does not respond to the actual needs and desires of most people, who continue to migrate to the usually less congested, and often less expensive, periphery. And as the people’s desires continue to run counter to what those in power dictate, the urban future is likely to become increasingly contentious.

The growing disconnect between people and planners is illustrated by the oft-ignored fact that around the world the great majority of growth continues to occur on the suburban and exurban frontier, including the fringes of 23 out of 28 of the world’s megacities. This, notes NYU professor Shlomo Angel in his landmark book A Planet of Cities, is true both in developing and developed countries.

All of this flies in the face of the argument, made by a well-funded density-boosting industry, that people want more density, not less. Lobbies to force people back into cities enjoy generous funding provided by urban land interests and powerful multinationals that build subways and other city infrastructure to bolster the cause of ever greater density.

Yet rather than re-think density, planners and powerful urban land interests continue to force ever higher-density development down the throats of urban dwellers. In the already pricey San Francisco Bay Area, for example, municipal planners have embraced what is known as a “pack and stack” strategy that will essentially prohibit construction of all but the most expensive single-family homes, prompting one Bay Area blogger to charge that “suburb hating is anti-child,” because it seeks to undermine single-family neighborhoods.

Rather than concocting sophisticated odes to misery, perhaps we might consider a different approach to urban growth. Perhaps we factor in what exactly we are inflicting on people with “pack and stack” strategies. Planners often link density with community, notes British social critic James Heartfield, but maintaining that “physical proximity that is essential to community is to confuse animal warmth with civilization.” When University of California at Irvine’s Jan Brueckner and Ann Largey conducted 15,000 interviews across the country, they found that for every 10 percent drop in population density, the likelihood of people talking to their neighbors once a week goes up 10 percent, regardless of race, income, education, marital status, or age. In 2009, Pew recently issued a report that found suburbanites to be the group far more engaged with their communities than those living in core cities.

A market—or simply human—approach would permit a natural shift towards smaller, less dense cities and, yes, the suburbs, where more people end up wanting to live. Those who prefer high-density living would still have their opportunity if they so desire. 

The primary goal of a city should not be to make wealthy landlords and construction companies ever richer, or politicians more powerful. Instead, we should look for alternatives that conform to human needs and desires, particularly those of families. Urbanism should not be defined by the egos of planners, architects, politicians, or the über-rich, who can cherry-pick the best locales in gigantic cities. Urbanism should be driven above all by what works best for the most people.

2 comments:

  1. Having lived in NYC I can attest to the lack of community in the stack & pack. My first residence was on the 21st floor of a 30 story building. We only knew one couple who lived down the hall. Everyone else in the building barely made eye contact, yet alone said anything.
    We moved across town to a building with only 2 apartments per floor and only 15 stories tall. There was much more community. Later in the suburbs we found even more community!
    How long are we in Lake Oswego going to let thew planners in City Hall foist their visions on us like Wizers?

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    1. The suburbs act like the planners' guru, Jane Jacobs, advocated - a close-community where people know and interact with one another. In the suburban neighborhoods I have lived in, you get to know everyone on the street- even the grouchy ones who don't like anybody. You know who belongs and who doesn't. You have more of an investment in the neighborhood because of the human connections. You know who to go to for help in an emergency. Research backs up the claim that suburbs have more "sense of place" and "community" than cities.

      My theory about why this doesn't happen in cities is that when people are packed closely together, a basic need for privacy and personal space is thwarted. People cope by avoiding close contact with their close neighbors, probably to create emotional distance when physical distance is impossible. I will do some research on that and see why urban dwellers are less likely to have a sense of community.

      Why do planners not take residents and real people into account when they make their plans? Probably because they don't have to. How many actually have skin in the game and live in the jurisdiction they are planning for? How many live in the cracker boxes with no parking they approve right next to a single family neighborhood? How many live in (and own!) a house in one of the neighborhoods impacted by the crapartments they think are so good for everyone else? I bet the percentage is 0 or not significant enough to count.

      The other thing about planners is that they work in city hall for years and years - through many administrations and changes in Mayors and Councils. It is they who have the power. Bureaucrat accountability and longevity is a real problem, along with respect for the people they are planning for. It would help if they actually lived among us.

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