Marginal Activities Belong on the Margins

The New York Times ran an op-ed piece today entitled What Tech Hasn’t Learned from Urban Planning. Allison Arieff catalogs the recent trend of tech companies moving from the suburbs of Silicon Valley into the city of San Francisco, while simultaneously adopting the terminology of urban planning such as town hall, public square, etc.

As she points out, these businesses are often failures from the perspective of good urbanism, given that as they enter an area they take over huge pieces of real estate, thus driving up rents and driving out the local businesses like coffee shops, cafes and restaurants that make up the current life of the street. There’s some excellent photographs in the article, showing these places, once alive with foot traffic, that are now deserted.

While I admire her for calling on tech companies to be more community minded as they move from the suburbs to the city, I think the very idea of tech companies being located in the heart of the city is a bad idea. To quote James Howard Kunstler: Marginal activities belong on the margins. What these companies do is a marginal activity, not from an economic perspective necessarily (because obviously these are multi-billion dollar businesses), but from what they provide directly to the public from their day-to-day activities, yes. A room full of code-monkeys churning out software, websites and apps can never really contribute to the vibrancy of street life, because they will always be holed up in front of computer screen. Couple that with the fact companies like Google offer their employees all of the amenities they could ever want within the company walls (restaurant, gym, daycare, etc.), and you have the perfect storm of anti-social business behavior.

The suburbs really are the best place for these businesses to exist in their current form. Their operations are what I would call the spaceship model: everything is self-contained, so that the employees never have to leave. It’s not sustainable, and we need to replace the Star Trek meets the Jetsons mentality that drives these businesses, but having them move into the cities is not the way to do that. While it is admirable (in a strange, “aren’t you so hip to the aesthetic zeitgeist sort of way”) that these companies want to leave the suburbs behind so that they can be part of the life of the city, they’re causing more harm than good in doing so because they haven’t altered their core operating principles. Urbanism is just as much a state of mind as it is the physical realm, and as the pictures from this piece show, with the wrong state of mind, even the best designed places will become lifeless hulks.

Don’t salute these companies for moving into the city based on their bogus ideals and sapping the life out of the great spaces they’re trying to co-opt. Salute them when they change their way of thinking about how those spaces work. Until they do, let’s keep their marginal activities safely on the margins.

We welcome the new mayor.

garcetti inaug

LA is getting a new mayor!  This Sunday evening Eric Garcetti will be sworn in as mayor.

Throughout the campaign and his work as a councilman, Garcetti has touted what we know as traditional neighborhood development.  He is also well versed on a lot of topics facing LA.

Read his reddit conversation about LA.

The new mayor will be inaugurated and then host a city wide block party.  A much more low-key celebration than his predecessor.  Read this article by LA Times to see why we call him No-Glitz-Garcetti.

All in all we look forward to a new shift in LA politics and to a pretty good party.  We will be there live tweeting the event and hopefully meeting up with some of you!

 

 

Farming in South LA

Where can you do some farming?  How about right outside your house?

The strip of grass on the other side of the sidewalk is owned by the city, but must be maintained by the property owner.  So if you have to maintain it, why not do it how you want?

That’s what Ron Finley thought.  Instead of a 4 foot wide strip of grass for dogs to poop on, why not turn it into a four foot wide garden.  Why not line the streets with 9ft tall sunflowers?  WHy not grow food otherwise unavailable in South LA?

2012 Year In Review

2012 was the first full year of operation for our group Noodles and New Urbanism.  So we thought we’d take a moment to highlight some of the things we’ve been doing.

– We got this blog and facebook page and domain.  An online presence is crucial is solidifying us as an active advocacy community, not just a book group.

– Pastry Walk! We held our first open community event.  Bringing together local business, community groups, and random people for an event promoting walkable neighborhoods!

– We were invited to give a presentation and lead a discussion at a local church group.  Seeing new urbanism from a faith based perspective was refreshing for people on both sides.

– We attended the Fresno  new urbanism film festival.  Met the mayor and many advocates for community building and development.  Very inspirational and educational event. Our blogs about the development there generated online comments and discussion that even included the general planner.

Hopes for 2013:

– Another Pastry Walk!  Some people loved the idea but couldn’t make it and others couldn’t wrap their heads around walking and eating pastries.  We got a lot of community involvement from the bakery owners and from local bloggers.  So we hope to capitalize on that with another walking tour of local bakeries.

– Representing at CNU! We don’t have tickets but  we’re going to go anyway and have a little faith that we can sneak into some events or at least the after parties.

– Our own New Urbanist Film Festival in LA? We’re toying with the idea… stay tuned for more info!

– Bike Wash!  Like a car wash, but bring your bike!  Get out your bike and get it all shiney for summer riding!

-We’re also talking about “chair-bombing” and hosting our own “parking-day” event.

Stay tuned for updates on all these activities.  Or join us at Mao’s Kitchen for tasty singapore noodles and invigoration discussion about new urbanism!

Sustainable Street Network Principles

2012 marked the 20th anniversary of the Congress for the New Urbanism. Drawing on the research and discussion that has gone on over the past 20 years, they recently published a small booklet entitled Sustainable Street Network Principles in conjunction with the Institute for Transportation Engineers and the Federal Highway Administration. They offer 7 principles for laying out a transportation network that takes into account all of the modes of transportation someone might choose.

  1. Create a street network that supports communities and places
  2. Create a street network that attracts and sustains economic activity
  3. Maximize transportation choice
  4. Integrate the street network with natural systems at all scales
  5. Respect the existing natural and built environment
  6. Emphasize walking as the fundamental unit of the street network
  7. Create harmony with other transportation networks

You can read more about the background of the project here.

You can download the PDF of the full booklet here.

More Urban Farming

A few months ago, we posted a TED Talk by Pam Warhurst about the town of Todmorden, England, who have been re-purposing their public lands for growing food. This video shows a bit more of what the town is like and the effects that the whole Incredible Edible project has been having on their community. Their idea offers some great ways that we can maximize the usefulness of the land in our cities, and create a greater sense of community. They have created a site dedicated to the project: http://www.incredible-edible-todmorden.co.uk/

The site has resources for anyone interested in starting a community gardening project, links to more videos, the history of their movement, and more.

The first Todmorden Talks from Incredible Edible Todmorden on Vimeo.

Window Farming

Most of us who live in cities live in apartments, which don’t tend to lend themselves well to farming. But as Britta Riley explains in this video, it is possible to build simple hydroponics systems out of readily available (and mostly free) items that are suitable for food production in compact urban settings.

http://www.ted.com/talks/britta_riley_a_garden_in_my_apartment.html

There’s a whole online community dedicated to further refining the concepts of window farming, based on the open-source software model. You can find the instructions for building your own window farming units and their discussion forums here: http://our.windowfarms.org/

Out of the Desert…

If you’ve ever been to Las Vegas, you’ll know that it is a new urbanist’s nightmare: streets 15 lanes wide, towering hotel casinos, concrete everywhere, cars filling every inch of roadway, with no walkable spaces to be seen; it’s the perfect distillation of everything about American excess and vanity that has upended the urban environment. It’s not unexpected, especially of a city that has based its international reputation on the old maxim that “a fool and his money are soon parted.” There is a certain amount of anonymity that that environment demands: people go to escape, and part of that escape demands that you remain unknown.

And whether or not you agree with that assessment or not, there is the possibility of something great happening in Las Vegas. Tony Hsieh (pronounced shay), founder and CEO of Zappos.com has a plan for revitalizing the downtown core of Las Vegas.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/21/magazine/what-happens-in-brooklyn-moves-to-vegas.html

Fremont Street, Downtown Las Vegas

As I began reading the article, I was skeptical, and rightly so. When I hear the words “urban revitalization” coupled with funding coming from big corporations, it brings to mind images of smooth-talking real estate agents bulldozing the ghetto to make way for some antiseptic steel and glass monstrosity. There is no true revitalization that really happens, except in the esoteric economic sense: the company gets cheap land, builds a monstrosity and increases the property tax base, throwing out all the poor unfortunate souls that called this place home.

Not so Tony Hsieh. As I read the article, even I started to get excited about the possibilities that his project presented. His vision is to turn downtown Las Vegas into a community. Not a shiny bauble that has limited use and dwarfs human scale, but a place where people can live, work, walk, bike, and have, as he puts it, “serendipitous encounters” with one another.

Can this be transformed into an urban landscape worth caring about?

At the center of his plan is the Zappos headquarters, now located in the old Las Vegas city hall. When the company was looking for a place to relocate their headquarters, they initially considered building a campus like Google, Nike, or Apple, where anything the employees might need or want was available. A closed campus. One that didn’t interact with the community at all. Hsieh made the decision to locate his headquarters somewhere where it could be a part of a community. Where his employees could have those serendipitous encounters and enhance their own lives and the lives of the people in the surrounding community.

Take a look at the website for the Downtown Project for more info about what their plans are for Downtown Las Vegas.

The More Things Change, The More They Stay the Same

A friend of mine sent me this video the other day (mainly for it’s similarities to this comedic gem). It’s the intro to a French TV documentary about the city of Los Angeles, and it perfectly relates a number of the problems inherent in sprawl based development. The only problem is, this is a film from 1969. Here we are 43 years later, not only still facing these same problems (sprawling development, auto dependence, alienation from our neighbors, class segregation), but in most cases, still only marginally aware (at best) that there are any problems.


http://youtu.be/7-R1b2Tz9fY

“The people of Los Angeles love to think that they live in the city of the future, but it is rather a city of the present incarnation of past times, and as a consequence, the very thing that unknowingly empties our cities once the outskirts begin to grow. If you would like to know what the outskirts of Paris, London, or even Moscow will soon look like, what their problems will be, what is waiting for us, threatening us, you must go to Los Angeles.”

Ouch.