A national movement toward the revitalization of the heart areas of our cities is under way. Redevelopment projects in dozens of American cities, dealing partially or totally with core areas, are now in progress. I, personally, know of about forty major ones, but I am sure the number is much greater, because many of those projects have not yet come to public attention.
In and even greater number of cities, citizens' groups formed specifically for the purpose of redevelopment of the core areas are discussing this goal.
If one were to accept the quantity of efforts as a measuring stick, one would conclude that the outlook for a rosy future of the city is excellent. In any case the impressive quantity proves that there is a popular desire for urban improvement.
What is questionable is whether the quality of all these undertakings is such as to give hope that the deep desire will be fulfilled. In this respect, revitalization efforts vary widely. Though all of them deal with the problem of the core, few of them go to the core of the problem...
Our problem...is that past and still-existing trends are working in the opposite direction. In most cities in the United States desirability of the city core has steadily decreased and difficulties in reaching the core have mounted at an even faster rate. Thus our task is one of reversing trends. We have to reverse the trend toward decentralization, which has been spreading urban functions all over the regional countryside, simultaneously robbing these functions of much of their potency. We have to reverse the trend toward residential scatterization, by bringing residence population into the core areas of cities. ...We have to reverse the trend toward decreased use of mass public transportation and increased use of private automobiles for travel to and from the city core because, ...a compact city area cannot be served effectively by automobile transportation only.
...In a free democratic society this task cannot be accomplished by decree. We cannot force people into any action they don't deeply desire. If they don't wish to use public mass transportation because it is overcrowded, undignified, and inconvenient, they just won't do it. If they don't wish to drive bumper to bumper in and out of the city core and then hunt for a parking space, they just won't do it. If they don't wish to come to a place that has little to offer in opportunities, attractiveness, and human experience, they will stay away in droves.
Thus, from a practical point, two sets of measures have to be planned and implemented: [1] those that will make movement to and from the city center as convenient, speedy and comfortable as possible, and [2] those that will lift the environmental qualities of the urban core to the highest attainable level. The aim must be to reshape the heart of the city into a place that offers more than an opportunity for merely one type of activity such as earning one's livelihood; it should be a place where opportunities for self-fulfillment are multiplied a thousandfold.
I tend to agree, and as I read this passage I am struck by how it seems to capture many of the contemporary city planning issues that designers, planners, developers, and activists of my generation are seeking to address. It is therefore disheartening to think that this passage is from "The Heart of Our Cities," a book written in 1964 by Victor Gruen. (Many may know that Victor Gruen is also typically identified as the "father of the mall.")
The disheartening part is the implication that in my entire lifetime to date (having been born in 1963) there apparently has been very little progress in revitalizing the urban cores of most American cities. We are still identifying the same "problems" and suggesting many of the same solutions. Are we at last "reversing trends" as Victor Gruen hoped we would? Should we be moving on to a different conception of what a city is? Or is this a perpetual situation?
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While it is uncanny that the issues Gruen so articulately describes remain, it does not follow that little progress has been made since 1964. Boston is a great example: as late as the early 1980's Boston was still a poor city, suffering with flight from the city core, a shabby waterfront, a noisy elevated highway, an empty South Boston, redlining in the neighborhoods leading to arson, and a myriad of urban woes shared by other cities. A subsequent boom in financial services , education, health sciences and other business sectors together with changing social values have played a role in a tremendous revitalization. Beyond Boston, there are few cities that have not seen a growth in demand for luxury housing downtown prior to this recent economic downturn, and that list of cities with housing growth downtown includes struggling Flint, MI, where the downtown is the only area seeing investment. This re-centralization in cities fits Manuel Castells' model for the city in the Information Age, with simultaneous recentralization in the core tied to the growing premium on face-to-face contact and relationships, in conjunction with and parallel to the dispersion of settlement due to reduced need of transportation with expanded communications technologies. The drive for "green" and sustainability is already accelerating people's acceptance of and demand for urban living patterns. As for a new concept of what a city should be, that concept is ever fluid and evolving to meet changing times.
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