This is a weird time to be a dedicated urbanist. Cities are popular again -- everyone is finally acknowledging what I always knew to be right! Real development is happening in them again, with a focus on walkable, liveable neighborhoods. That's great... except for how it is pushing out all the diversity which made the cities interesting in the first place. The new construction is all so bland and safe and boring, and every few days we lose another neat old building to it just here in Seattle alone. I know I will never have the cool shop I've always wanted, in some old brick industrial building. They're all condos already.
I don't see any way around it, unfortunately. We failed to invest in cities for the entire second half of the 20th century in this country, during which the population more than doubled. They have a huge technical debt which will take decades to pay off. Even if there was some way to stop it (if you know how to reliably, easily subvert market forces on this scale, please let me know!), it would just mean continuing to throw resources in the cultural, environmental, psychic pit that is the American suburb at the expense of cities. No thanks.
Eventually, hopefully, we'll get back to balanced cities which have enough housing for everyone, with strong transit systems that help the poor instead of gentrifying them out into the exurbs. The current overwhelming sameness of the new construction will fade as things age and get remodeled. We'll end up with a healthy blend of buildings in various states of disrepair, supporting a wide range of uses like Jane Jacobs talked about. For much of my life, cities were seen as mostly for poor people. Now suddenly they're only for rich people. But both of those are anomalous on the scale of human history. Cities used to be for everyone, and I see no reason they can't be once again.
But it does really kind of suck right now, and likely will continue to for at least the next 20 years.
ETA: This was partly inspired by reading Happy City, and partly as a reminder to myself to walk the walk. The University District in Seattle is about to be considerably upzoned, since the light rail station will be open in a few years and students don't form NIMBY coalitions. Which is great -- creating a second area of truly dense urban living in the city is huge. But it'll inevitably destroy the squalid charm of the Ave, which I unironically love. There is also a good chance it will push away two of my favorite retail establishments of all time, Hardwick's Hardware and Thai Tom's. I can't help but feel conflicted, so I need to focus on the big picture.
I don't see any way around it, unfortunately. We failed to invest in cities for the entire second half of the 20th century in this country, during which the population more than doubled. They have a huge technical debt which will take decades to pay off. Even if there was some way to stop it (if you know how to reliably, easily subvert market forces on this scale, please let me know!), it would just mean continuing to throw resources in the cultural, environmental, psychic pit that is the American suburb at the expense of cities. No thanks.
Eventually, hopefully, we'll get back to balanced cities which have enough housing for everyone, with strong transit systems that help the poor instead of gentrifying them out into the exurbs. The current overwhelming sameness of the new construction will fade as things age and get remodeled. We'll end up with a healthy blend of buildings in various states of disrepair, supporting a wide range of uses like Jane Jacobs talked about. For much of my life, cities were seen as mostly for poor people. Now suddenly they're only for rich people. But both of those are anomalous on the scale of human history. Cities used to be for everyone, and I see no reason they can't be once again.
But it does really kind of suck right now, and likely will continue to for at least the next 20 years.
ETA: This was partly inspired by reading Happy City, and partly as a reminder to myself to walk the walk. The University District in Seattle is about to be considerably upzoned, since the light rail station will be open in a few years and students don't form NIMBY coalitions. Which is great -- creating a second area of truly dense urban living in the city is huge. But it'll inevitably destroy the squalid charm of the Ave, which I unironically love. There is also a good chance it will push away two of my favorite retail establishments of all time, Hardwick's Hardware and Thai Tom's. I can't help but feel conflicted, so I need to focus on the big picture.
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(It seems to me that there is also a narrow tier of cities built up in the latter half of the 20th Century which, rather than being for the poor (since that happened to primarily extant urban centres, or to ones which were built up and followed a similar downward arc, as some of the newer build-ups in the Rust Belt), were for the rich, just not at night. Financial and knowledge-industry centres which housed very few people in their urban core. While there's not a huge number of those, there are some cities which house disproportionately few people, and which seem like they could be redeveloped to support human habitation.)
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I'm certainly eager to see how they develop as Link expands over the next 30 years, though! Expanding things like has to be part of the solution.
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I mean hi, I'm currently living in a city that is still hanging out at about half of its peak population. And it's coming back, and doing okay - but there's a huge amount of porosity where other cities have density, and razing blighted old homes, and turning them into urban farms and other craziness. Also, our incredible diversity of wildlife. We still have a lot of cool old buildings in decent thought needing to be rehabbed sort of shape, and the cost of living is cheap, and because of all the old endowments from when this place was wealthy, there's a crazy arts scene.
...I have deeply mixed feelings, because while it makes me happy to see this place coming to life, and to know that this is becoming a place where young crazy folks can afford to do interesting things, culturally, I'm much more comfortable out west. Or in coastal cities. Still, I think it's easy and deeply myopic to think too much about places that are already crazy expensive.
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I'm not really intending to stay here, at least not unless I can get some serious community, and even then there's the job thing. And there's *room* here that will take a while to fill it - oh, there are already trendy neighborhoods, but there's just so much porosity.
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I keep suggesting we form a group of ~20 people and buy a bunch of industrial wasteland in the rustbelt. To me, if you have enough friends with you, and bring in good internet, who cares where you are? But so far, that view has been distinctly in the minority.
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I'd also like to see areas zoned for art & noise, or at least a percentage of art and noise - and ixnay on the bogus noise complaints. I'm tired of seeing artists pushed out of venues, e.g. the Josephine and CHAC.
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OTOH, zoning laws can be adjusted to require a mix of market rate and affordable housing. Often called "inclusionary zoning". Usually hated by developers; if applied porrly it can result in the developer having to sell/rent the affordable units for about what it cost to build them in the first place (if not less), meaning they have to increase the prices on the supposedly market-rate units to make any sort of profit, even a modest one.
[Note: I work with building codes for a living.]
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I bet we could get a lot of support from the Boeing Engineer's Union...
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